Irving Layton on McKenty Live, CFCF TV, Montreal, Quebec.
Irving Layton interviewed by B. Cameron for CityTV, Toronto, Ontario.
Irving Layton at Canadian Authors at Kelsey, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Interview with Carol Belkin in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Irving Layton at Humber College in Toronto, Ontario.
Irving Layton on The New Music: Rock & Roll & Reading on CityTV, Toronto, Ontario.
Dialogue directed by Janoo and produced by University of Toronto and the Department of Slavic Studies for the Instructional Media Centre.
Irving Layton interviewed by Brian Lineham. Interview produced by Bud Pierce for CBC TV, Toronto, Ontario.
Irving Layton interviewed on Toronto Today by Joan Sutton. Interview produced by Pat Murray for CFTO TV, Toronto, Ontario.
Produced by Peter Mallet and Media Productions in Toronto, Ontario.
Interview of Irving Layton on the Brian Gazzard Show, which aired on CFCF TV, Montreal, Quebec.
Irving Layton giving a poetry reading at Concordia University, Montreal Quebec.
Series contains video recordings relating to the Irving Layton fonds. Material consists of videocassettes and reels of interviews with Layton, poetry readings given by Layton, and different television, music and film personalities talking about the importance of reading and literacy, which includes a brief talk about Layton’s works.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about "The First Statement" and "Preview", and Layton's friendship with Louis Dudek and other poets.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about "The First Statement", his friendship with Louis Dudek and John Sutherland, his relationship with Betty Sutherland, and the influence of American and British poets.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about his years with Faye Lynch and Betty Sutherland, Layton's second wife.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about his years at Macdonald College, the RCMP, his friendship with Louis Dudek and his first wife, Faye Lynch.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about his political orientation, the Oxford-Cambridge debate, Layton's column in the Failt-Ye-Times, and the Social Research Club. Includes readings of "Days of wrath", "Epigraph for a common grave", "News of the phoenix", "Portrait of a pseudo-Socialist", and "Vignette".
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about the Montreal scene during the Depression and his political orientation.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about Suzanne Rosenberg and the Young People's Socialist League, A. M. Klein, and David Lewis.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Layton talks about his High school years.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Layton talks about his school years and his frienship with William Goodwin.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about his family, especially his memories of his mother, Klara Lazarovitch.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. It presents the organization of the book and a summary of each chapter.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Among other topics, Layton talks about his childhood and antisemitism in Montreal.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Irving Layton talkes about him as a child and teenager.
The interview was used for Irving Layton's autobiography Waiting for the Messiah. Discussed are, among other topics, Irving Layton's nomination for the Nobel Prize and the themes of the Gucci Bag.