Festival awards old-timey volunteer with voyageur-era coat - Action News
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Manitoba

Festival awards old-timey volunteer with voyageur-era coat

Thousands have taken in the live music, maple syrup taffy, snow sculptures and more at this year's Festival du Voyageur, but the celebration of Mtis and voyageur culture was particularly noteworthy for one of its committed volunteers this year.

Louis Gagn honoured after years dressing up as voyageur for historical reenactments at Festival du Voyageur

Long-time Festival du Voyageur volunteer Louis Gagn shows off his Capot honorifique, a white and blue coat awarded to a volunteer every year. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Thousandshave taken in the live music, maple syrup taffy, snow sculptures and more at this year's Festival du Voyageur, but the celebrationofMtisand voyageurculture was particularly noteworthy for one of its committed volunteers this year.

Louis Gagn was awarded the "Capot honorifique"(previously known as the "Capotbleu"), a traditional voyageur-style coat made out of a white blanket with blue stripes that's given to people who have volunteered their time to the festival.

"It was a great honour," a pointy-moustached Louis Gagn told CBC Weekend Morning Show host Nadia Kidwai on Saturday.

"It's always nice to be recognized by your peers, and also by the organizers."

Gagn holds out medallions and necklaces he wears as part of his traditional voyageur costume. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Gagn has been dressing up as a voyageur and helping out at the festival for 30 years. Among other duties, he's taken on performer roles in the various historical reenactments scattered throughout Festival.

In recent years he has played a role as an interpreter for school programs that come through the festival to see Gagnfireshots (blanks, of course)during a musket demonstration and learn more about the voyageur era.

"Once you have [the costume] on it's a bit like an alter-ego, a superhero, Clark Kent with his glasses" Gagn said.

"A lot of times the kids are just sitting there on hay bales watching me with their mouths open, a blank stare, and I always joke a lot of times with the teachers asking them if the students are actually this quiet in class. They're captured, it's good fun."

In past years festival organizers presented the capot to someone at the closing ceremonies, but this year they did it during the beginning of the festival.

Gagn wears a large leather belt with several knives, including some made from animal bone, as part of his costume. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Gagn often helps with opening ceremony set-up and was assigned a different kind of task this year. He was aware of the change and thought nothing of it.

Rather than performing crowd control duties, Gagn was asked to stand still on stage "in nice voyageur outfit" and hold a torch during the opening ceremonies.

"[The organizer]says, 'You're going to stand there with a torch. After the capot is presented to the recipient, you will give that person the torch, and they will light the fire and we will continue the ceremonies,'" Gagn recalled.

"So there I am standing in front of everybody like a candle with my torch."

That's when a historical reenactment group Gagn is a member of, called La Compagnie de La Vrendrye, came marching in, "drums blazing."

"The emcee just turned around and said, 'Congratulations Louis, it's you,'" Gagn said.

"I was speechless. And a lot of times when I am in uniform or in costume I can speak to crowds for hours, and this time I just couldn't say a word."

Festival du Voyageur wraps up Sunday.

Gagn's hat contains a medicine wheel, a symbol that signifies a balance of spiritual, physical, emotional and mental health in some Indigenous cultures. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

With files from the Weekend Morning Show