Fiche Structure
Cinéma/TV
Téléfilm Canada

Statut : Etablissement public industriel et commercial (EPCI)
Genre : Production
Adresse : 360 St. Jacques Street
Suite 500 H2Y 1P5 Montréal, Quebec
Pays concerné : Canada
Téléphone(s) : +1 (514) 283-6363 | 1-800-567-0890
Fax : +1 (514) 283-8212
Site web : www.telefilm.gc.ca
Français
Mission
Téléfilm Canada
Pour le développement et la promotion de l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne
Téléfilm Canada est une société d’État qui relève du Parlement par le truchement du ministère du Patrimoine canadien. Téléfilm, dont le siège social se trouve à Montréal, offre ses services à l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne par l’entremise de ses quatre bureaux régionaux situés à Vancouver, Toronto, Montréal et Halifax.
Notre mandat
Téléfilm Canada est un organisme culturel fédéral voué au développement et à la promotion de l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne.
La Société s’avère l’un des instruments privilégiés du gouvernement canadien comme levier du secteur privé et apporte un soutien financier et stratégique aux industries du cinéma, de la télévision et des nouveaux médias. Le rôle de Téléfilm est de stimuler la création d’œuvres et de produits culturels reflétant la société canadienne, avec sa dualité linguistique et sa diversité culturelle, et d’en favoriser le rayonnement au pays comme à l’étranger.
Notre vision
En misant sur le financement d’œuvres de grande qualité et en renforçant son soutien à l’industrie audiovisuelle pour faciliter la transition vers le nouvel environnement multiplateforme, Téléfilm Canada vise la viabilité à long terme et l’épanouissement de l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne. Téléfilm estime que la principale mesure de son succès repose sur l’intérêt du public canadien pour les œuvres et les produits qu’elle a appuyés financièrement. Une deuxième mesure est liée à la capacité d’avoir une industrie vigoureuse et dynamique qui sait développer, produire et mettre en marché, avec succès, les oeuvres auxquelles elle participe financièrement.
Nos valeurs
En tant qu’organisme public et partenaire de l’industrie, Téléfilm Canada soutient six valeurs fondamentales :
* célébrer l’expression d’histoires canadiennes originales ;
* défendre activement une culture audiovisuelle canadienne dynamique et viable ;
* reconnaître la performance et favoriser une nouvelle façon de penser ;
* promouvoir la diversité dans ses politiques et programmes ;
* être ouverte, transparente et accessible pour ses partenaires, l’industrie et le public ; et
* offrir la meilleure valeur qui soit au Parlement et au public canadien.
Les orientations stratégiques de Téléfilm Canada
Dans son nouveau Plan d’entreprise, Du cinéma au téléphone cellulaire – Téléfilm Canada et le défi de l’environnement multiplaforme, la Société propose à l’industrie canadienne et à ses partenaires une solide vision d’avenir qui réitère la primauté du contenu canadien et la nécessité de tirer partie de toutes les plateformes numériques pour accroître ses auditoires.
Téléfilm Canada
Pour le développement et la promotion de l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne
Téléfilm Canada est une société d’État qui relève du Parlement par le truchement du ministère du Patrimoine canadien. Téléfilm, dont le siège social se trouve à Montréal, offre ses services à l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne par l’entremise de ses quatre bureaux régionaux situés à Vancouver, Toronto, Montréal et Halifax.
Notre mandat
Téléfilm Canada est un organisme culturel fédéral voué au développement et à la promotion de l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne.
La Société s’avère l’un des instruments privilégiés du gouvernement canadien comme levier du secteur privé et apporte un soutien financier et stratégique aux industries du cinéma, de la télévision et des nouveaux médias. Le rôle de Téléfilm est de stimuler la création d’œuvres et de produits culturels reflétant la société canadienne, avec sa dualité linguistique et sa diversité culturelle, et d’en favoriser le rayonnement au pays comme à l’étranger.
Notre vision
En misant sur le financement d’œuvres de grande qualité et en renforçant son soutien à l’industrie audiovisuelle pour faciliter la transition vers le nouvel environnement multiplateforme, Téléfilm Canada vise la viabilité à long terme et l’épanouissement de l’industrie audiovisuelle canadienne. Téléfilm estime que la principale mesure de son succès repose sur l’intérêt du public canadien pour les œuvres et les produits qu’elle a appuyés financièrement. Une deuxième mesure est liée à la capacité d’avoir une industrie vigoureuse et dynamique qui sait développer, produire et mettre en marché, avec succès, les oeuvres auxquelles elle participe financièrement.
Nos valeurs
En tant qu’organisme public et partenaire de l’industrie, Téléfilm Canada soutient six valeurs fondamentales :
* célébrer l’expression d’histoires canadiennes originales ;
* défendre activement une culture audiovisuelle canadienne dynamique et viable ;
* reconnaître la performance et favoriser une nouvelle façon de penser ;
* promouvoir la diversité dans ses politiques et programmes ;
* être ouverte, transparente et accessible pour ses partenaires, l’industrie et le public ; et
* offrir la meilleure valeur qui soit au Parlement et au public canadien.
Les orientations stratégiques de Téléfilm Canada
Dans son nouveau Plan d’entreprise, Du cinéma au téléphone cellulaire – Téléfilm Canada et le défi de l’environnement multiplaforme, la Société propose à l’industrie canadienne et à ses partenaires une solide vision d’avenir qui réitère la primauté du contenu canadien et la nécessité de tirer partie de toutes les plateformes numériques pour accroître ses auditoires.
English
Mission
Telefilm Canada
Developing and promoting the Canadian audiovisual industry
Telefilm Canada is a Crown corporation reporting to Parliament through the Department of Canadian Heritage. Headquartered in Montréal, Telefilm provides services to the Canadian audiovisual industry by means of four regional offices located in Vancouver, Toronto, Montréal and Halifax.
Our mandate
Telefilm Canada is a federal cultural agency dedicated to the development and promotion of the Canadian audiovisual industry.
The Corporation acts as one of the Canadian government’s principal instruments for providing strategic leverage to the private sector, supplying the film, television and new media industries with financial and strategic support. Telefilm’s role is to foster the production of films, television programs and cultural products that reflect Canadian society, with its linguistic duality and cultural diversity, and to encourage their dissemination at home and abroad.
Our vision
By funding high-quality productions and strengthening its industry support to facilitate the transition to the new multiplatform environment, Telefilm Canada is aiming for the long-term viability and development of Canada’s audiovisual industry. Telefilm believes that the main measure of its success lies in the Canadian public’s appetite for the works and products it funds. A second measure concerns the capacity to have a vigorous, dynamic industry able to successfully develop, produce, and market the funded works.
Our values
As a public sector agency and a partner to the industry, Telefilm upholds six core values:
* Celebrate the telling of unique Canadian stories;
* Actively champion a sustainable Canadian audiovisual culture;
* Reward performance and encourage new thinking;
* Promote diversity in all its forms in programs and policies;
* Be open, transparent and accessible to stakeholders, the industry and the public; and,
* Deliver best value to Parliament and to the Canadian public.
Telefilm Canada’s strategic directions
In its new corporate plan titled From cinemas to cell phones: Telefilm Canada responds to the multiplatform challenge, the Corporation offers the Canadian industry and its partners a solid vision of the future that reiterates the vital importance of Canadian content and the need to take full advantage of digital platforms in order to reach wider audiences.
Board Members
Felix (Fil) Fraser
Interim Chair
Edmonton, Alberta
Currently an adjunct Professor of Communications Studies at Athabasca University, Fil Fraser was previously President and Chief Executive Officer of Vision TV. He founded the Banff Television Festival, was the Chief Commissioner of the Alberta Human Rights Commission, and managed his own audiovisual production company for 10 years. Known for his commitment to human rights, multiculturalism and diversity, he has published many texts on these topics.
Suzanne Sheaves
Member
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Suzanne Sheaves has a solid track record in the business and investment sector. She is currently First Vice-President and Investment Advisor of CIBC Wood Gundy and conducts business there through the Suzanne Sheaves Group.
Elise Orenstein
Member
Toronto, Ontario
Elise Orenstein is a Toronto lawyer. Elise obtained a B.A. (Honours) from McGill University, a M. Phil. from Oxford University and a LL.B from Osgoode Hall Law School. She was called to the Bar of Ontario in 1983 and has been a senior partner in two major Toronto law firms. Elise has practiced in the area of corporate and commercial law with special emphasis on intellectual property law. She has represented public and private corporations as well as clients in a broad range of industries, particularly convergent media, the knowledge based and the entertainment sectors. Ms. Orenstein has served on the board of several privately held companies. As a volunteer, she has served on the Boards of various arts organizations and as Chair of the Artists’ Health Centre Foundation. In addition to her independent legal practice, she currently sits on the Advisory Boards of the Artists’ Health Centre Foundation (AHCF) and the Dancer Transition Resource Centre.
Tom Perlmutter
Ex-officio member
Government Film Commissioner and NFB Chair
Montreal, Quebec
Throughout his career as a filmmaker, writer and producer, Tom Perlmutter has been a fervent advocate of groundbreaking and socially engaged independent cinema. Before joining the NFB in 2001 as Director General, English Program, Mr. Perlmutter enjoyed a prestigious career in the Canadian film industry as the founding head of documentaries at Barna-Alper Productions, and partner in Primitive Entertainment. Mr. Perlmutter previously partnered with one of Canada’s most noted documentarists, John Walker, on several award-winning documentaries. Prior to this, he was director of creative development for CineNova Productions and executive director of Alliance for Children and Television from 1993 to 1995. He has also worked as a writer and reporter, with a number of articles and publications to his credit.
Senior Management
S. Wayne Clarkson
Executive Director
Elizabeth Friesen
Chief Operating Officer
Carolle Brabant
Chief Administrative Officer
Danny Chalifour
Director – Industry Development Operations
Michel Pradier
Director – French Operations and Quebec Office
Dave Forget
Director – Television Business Unit
Jean-Claude Mahé
Director – Public and Governmental Affairs
Stella Riggi
Director – Human Resources
Stéphane Odesse
Director – Legal Services and Access to Information Coordinator
Corporate Secretary
Maria DeRosa
Director – Corporate Affairs and Communications
Regional Directors
Atlantic Region Office
Gordon Whittaker
Director – Atlantic Region
Quebec Office
Michel Pradier
Director – French Operations and Quebec Office
Ontario and Nunavut Regions Office
Ralph Holt
Director – Ontario and Nunavut Regions
Western Region Office
Earl Hong Tai
Director – Western Region
Telefilm Canada
Developing and promoting the Canadian audiovisual industry
Telefilm Canada is a Crown corporation reporting to Parliament through the Department of Canadian Heritage. Headquartered in Montréal, Telefilm provides services to the Canadian audiovisual industry by means of four regional offices located in Vancouver, Toronto, Montréal and Halifax.
Our mandate
Telefilm Canada is a federal cultural agency dedicated to the development and promotion of the Canadian audiovisual industry.
The Corporation acts as one of the Canadian government’s principal instruments for providing strategic leverage to the private sector, supplying the film, television and new media industries with financial and strategic support. Telefilm’s role is to foster the production of films, television programs and cultural products that reflect Canadian society, with its linguistic duality and cultural diversity, and to encourage their dissemination at home and abroad.
Our vision
By funding high-quality productions and strengthening its industry support to facilitate the transition to the new multiplatform environment, Telefilm Canada is aiming for the long-term viability and development of Canada’s audiovisual industry. Telefilm believes that the main measure of its success lies in the Canadian public’s appetite for the works and products it funds. A second measure concerns the capacity to have a vigorous, dynamic industry able to successfully develop, produce, and market the funded works.
Our values
As a public sector agency and a partner to the industry, Telefilm upholds six core values:
* Celebrate the telling of unique Canadian stories;
* Actively champion a sustainable Canadian audiovisual culture;
* Reward performance and encourage new thinking;
* Promote diversity in all its forms in programs and policies;
* Be open, transparent and accessible to stakeholders, the industry and the public; and,
* Deliver best value to Parliament and to the Canadian public.
Telefilm Canada’s strategic directions
In its new corporate plan titled From cinemas to cell phones: Telefilm Canada responds to the multiplatform challenge, the Corporation offers the Canadian industry and its partners a solid vision of the future that reiterates the vital importance of Canadian content and the need to take full advantage of digital platforms in order to reach wider audiences.
Board Members
Felix (Fil) Fraser
Interim Chair
Edmonton, Alberta
Currently an adjunct Professor of Communications Studies at Athabasca University, Fil Fraser was previously President and Chief Executive Officer of Vision TV. He founded the Banff Television Festival, was the Chief Commissioner of the Alberta Human Rights Commission, and managed his own audiovisual production company for 10 years. Known for his commitment to human rights, multiculturalism and diversity, he has published many texts on these topics.
Suzanne Sheaves
Member
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Suzanne Sheaves has a solid track record in the business and investment sector. She is currently First Vice-President and Investment Advisor of CIBC Wood Gundy and conducts business there through the Suzanne Sheaves Group.
Elise Orenstein
Member
Toronto, Ontario
Elise Orenstein is a Toronto lawyer. Elise obtained a B.A. (Honours) from McGill University, a M. Phil. from Oxford University and a LL.B from Osgoode Hall Law School. She was called to the Bar of Ontario in 1983 and has been a senior partner in two major Toronto law firms. Elise has practiced in the area of corporate and commercial law with special emphasis on intellectual property law. She has represented public and private corporations as well as clients in a broad range of industries, particularly convergent media, the knowledge based and the entertainment sectors. Ms. Orenstein has served on the board of several privately held companies. As a volunteer, she has served on the Boards of various arts organizations and as Chair of the Artists’ Health Centre Foundation. In addition to her independent legal practice, she currently sits on the Advisory Boards of the Artists’ Health Centre Foundation (AHCF) and the Dancer Transition Resource Centre.
Tom Perlmutter
Ex-officio member
Government Film Commissioner and NFB Chair
Montreal, Quebec
Throughout his career as a filmmaker, writer and producer, Tom Perlmutter has been a fervent advocate of groundbreaking and socially engaged independent cinema. Before joining the NFB in 2001 as Director General, English Program, Mr. Perlmutter enjoyed a prestigious career in the Canadian film industry as the founding head of documentaries at Barna-Alper Productions, and partner in Primitive Entertainment. Mr. Perlmutter previously partnered with one of Canada’s most noted documentarists, John Walker, on several award-winning documentaries. Prior to this, he was director of creative development for CineNova Productions and executive director of Alliance for Children and Television from 1993 to 1995. He has also worked as a writer and reporter, with a number of articles and publications to his credit.
Senior Management
S. Wayne Clarkson
Executive Director
Elizabeth Friesen
Chief Operating Officer
Carolle Brabant
Chief Administrative Officer
Danny Chalifour
Director – Industry Development Operations
Michel Pradier
Director – French Operations and Quebec Office
Dave Forget
Director – Television Business Unit
Jean-Claude Mahé
Director – Public and Governmental Affairs
Stella Riggi
Director – Human Resources
Stéphane Odesse
Director – Legal Services and Access to Information Coordinator
Corporate Secretary
Maria DeRosa
Director – Corporate Affairs and Communications
Regional Directors
Atlantic Region Office
Gordon Whittaker
Director – Atlantic Region
Quebec Office
Michel Pradier
Director – French Operations and Quebec Office
Ontario and Nunavut Regions Office
Ralph Holt
Director – Ontario and Nunavut Regions
Western Region Office
Earl Hong Tai
Director – Western Region
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