Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Trent Frayne

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Trent Frayne


Spouse
  
June Callwood (m. 1944)

Trent Frayne napoleon95ipowercomImagesRVPFraynejpg

Born
  
September 13, 1918 (
1918-09-13
)

Occupation
  
journalist, sportswriter

Died
  
February 11, 2012, Toronto, Canada

Books
  
The Mad Men of Hockey, Hockey Chronicles

Similar People
  
June Callwood, Red Fisher, Eric Duhatschek

Trent Gardiner Frayne (September 13, 1918 – February 11, 2012) was a Canadian sportswriter whose career stretched over 60 years. Pierre Berton described Frayne as “likely Canada's greatest sportswriter ever."

Contents

Trent Frayne Trent Frayne 93 giant of sportswriting game Toronto Star

Early life

Trent Frayne Legendary sports writer Trent Frayne dies The Globe and Mail

"Billy" Frayne, as he was known as a youth, was the only child born to father Homer, who was a railroader for the Canadian Pacific Railway and mother Ella Trent in Brandon, Manitoba.

Career

Trent Frayne httpsicbcca119036911380864807httpImagei

He began his journalism career with the Brandon Sun at the age of 15 covering minor hockey and moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba three years later to accept a job with the Canadian Press and the Winnipeg Tribune in 1938. He shared lodgings with Winnipeg Free Press columnist Scott Young and befriended Tribune columnist Ralph Allen. He covered his first World Series in 1941 and interviewed Joe DiMaggio. He left Winnipeg in 1942 for Ontario leaving his childhood nickname behind in favour of his given name of Trent.

He followed Young and Allen to Toronto and joined the Globe and Mail as a general reporter earning $45 a week. At the Globe he met June Callwood whom he married in 1944. Frayne resumed his work as a full-time sportswriter when he joined the staff of the Toronto Telegram. He moved to Maclean's Magazine in the 1950 where Callwood was by then working as a freelancer. Fellow Maclean's writer Pierre Berton became a close friend and said of the couple "They were very much in love, a handsome couple who called each other 'Dreamy,'" The couple raised four children in the Etobicoke home they shared until Callwood's death in 2007. Frayne and Callwood also hosted the CBC Television talk show The Fraynes in the 1954-55 television season.

In 1959, Frayne was hired by the Toronto Star as a feature writer and, from 1962 to 1968, worked as a publicist for the Ontario Jockey Club before resuming his journalism career and then moving to the Toronto Sun in the 1970s. From 1983 to 1989 the couple both worked as columnists at the Globe and Mail. Frayne wrote monthly columns for Maclean's from 1989 until his retirement at the age of 78 in 1997.

During his career, Frayne's work has also appeared in Chatelaine, Sports Illustrated and Saturday Evening Post magazines. He has written more than a dozen books and won the National Newspaper Award for sports writing in 1975 and was the first recipient of Brandon University's Quill Award for Outstanding Achievement in 1990. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1984, receiving the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award, and inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1988, and the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame, and also inducted into the Canadian News Hall of Fame and was honoured with a life membership in the Baseball Writers of America. In 2002, Frayne was inducted into the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame.

Personal life and death

Frayne's memoir is titled The Tales of an Athletic Supporter.

He and Callwood had four children, Jill (born 1945), Brant (born 1948), Jesse (born 1951) and Casey who was born in 1961 and was killed in a motorcycle accident in 1982.

He died at the age of 93 of pneumonia and complications related to old age. Frayne is survived by three children and his extended family.

References

Trent Frayne Wikipedia