IEEE International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications
08-13 October 2017 – Montreal, QC, Canada

The 50th Anniversary of Expo 67

Montréal hosted the iconic 1967 International and Universal Exposition – more commonly known as Expo 67 – to celebrate Canada’s centennial year. While the city had long been a choice visitors’ destination, Expo 67 put Montréal on the international map, and influenced the worlds of fashion, science, architecture and entertainment.

 

EXPO 67 SET WORLD RECORDS

Expo 67 was a Category One World’s Fair, the first to be called “Expo” and became the most successful World’s Fair of the 20th century. With 60 participating nations and 90 pavilions representing “Man and His World” themes, Expo 67 set a single-day attendance record for a world’s fair, with 569,500 visitors on its third day, and 50,306,648 over six months, not counting over 5 million admissions by performers, the press, official visitors and employees. Today Expo 67 ranks as the fourth most popular world exposition of all time, after Shanghai, Osaka and Paris.

Also celebrating its centenary, the CIBC’s on-site branch at Expo 67 served up to 10,000 customers each day, seven days a week – or some 1.8 million customers in 183 days!

 

MONTRÉAL WELCOMES THE WORLD IN 1967

Many world leaders visited Expo 67, which also drew the world’s greatest orchestras, ballet and theatre companies – including many, like the full companies of La Scala and the Bolshoi Opera, making their North American debuts. Entertainers included Luciano Pavarotti and Marlene Dietrich, to Petula Clark and The Supremes, who starred on The Ed Sullivan Show twice broadcast live from Expo 67. During the six months of the exposition, some 6,000 star-studded free concerts were presented on the Expo grounds.

MONTRÉAL MUSEUMS CELEBRATE EXPO 67

Montréal museums have programmed blockbuster exhibitions championing the legacy of Expo 67, including Expo 67 – A World of Dreams at the Stewart Museum, Explosion 67 – Youth and Their World at the Centre d’histoire de Montréal, the immersive Révolution: “You say you want a revolution” at Montréal Museum of Fine Arts, and In Search of Expo 67 at the Musée d’art contemporain (known locally as “the MAC”).

The MMFA is also presenting La Balade pour la Paix: An Open-Air Museum, a major outdoor international public art exhibition showcasing 67 pieces that convey a message of peace, reflecting the universal values of humanism, tolerance and openness that inspired Expo 67.

EXPO 67 AT THE MOVIES

For those who wish to learn more about the world expo that defined a generation and whose influence can still be felt in Montréal, Québec and Canada, check out the documentary thriller Expo 67 Mission Impossible about how the greatest universal exposition of the 20th century came to be.

 

 
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