His writing included numerous articles in local and area publications such as
The London Free Press, the
Simcoe Reformer, the
Strathroy Age-Dispatch and the
UWO Gazette, as well as a book on
hangings in London and Ontario. His documentary films have covered such subjects as: •
Old Theatres: The Return, 1991 (while still a student at UWO) •
Marc Emery: Messing Up the System, 1992 • Slippery the Seal and Storybook Gardens in London (
Slippery, 1995) • London's great flood of 1937 (''Lost April: The Flood of '37'', 1997) • the history of London (
Vagabonds and Visionaries: The London Story, 1998) •
CBC-TV's
Guy Lombardo: When We Danced, 1998 • a
Guelph,
Ontario, promotional video (
Guelph: City of Opportunity, 2000) • the British Royal visit of 1939 (
A Great Day for London: The Royal Visit of 1939, 2000) • the history of the
Grand Theatre, (''Let's Go to the Grand!'', 2001) • the history of the local TV station (
Rewind: Fifty Years of Local Television), 2003) • the first 40 years of the
London Knights hockey team (
Green and Gold: 40 Seasons of the London Knights, 2005) •
The Jack Chambers Film Project, 2005 Doty's historical documentary films earned his film company, Doty Docs, a total of six provincial and national awards. He also wrote the commemorative book,
Fifty Years of Music: The Story of EMI Music Canada, 1999, and was active in film restoration, bringing forgotten Canadian films and documentaries back to the public's attention. These have included
Here Will I Nest, 1942,
The Turkey Point Witch Project, 1962, and
Guy Lombardo: A Royal Canadian, 1977. Doty restored the only known print of
Canada's first feature-length colour movie,
Here I Will Nest and produced a series of historical minutes/ videos for The New PL TV-station (now the A-Channel, originally CFPL-TV),
Rogers Television the City of London, Museum London and the Banting House Museum. In 2003, Doty was instrumental in convincing the city to name a park in honour of London-born black actor
Richard B. Harrison (1864–1935), in south-central London, as well as having an interpretive historical plaque erected in Richard B. Harrison Park. Doty was also involved in local
theatre as a playwright and a producer, including a dramatized recreation of
The Donnelly Trial—the 1880 trial of alleged ringleader James Carroll for the mob killing of the notorious
Black Donnellys of Biddulph Township north of London near
Lucan, Ontario, on February 4, 1880—in the same
courtroom in London's historic courthouse (now the
Middlesex County building) where the trial occurred 126 years ago. The play had two possible endings that a jury, made up of 12 audience members, could determine depending on their verdict. During
Doors Open London, 2005, Doty played a key role in writing the scripts for the
Lost Soul Stroll street theatre in downtown London whose theme was London's past, ghosts and hauntings. The second play that Doty co-wrote and produced was about political-
marijuana activist,
Marc Emery, called
Citizen Marc, The Adventures of Marc Emery. In addition, Doty co-founded the Brickenden Awards in 2002 to recognize excellence in theatre in London, which Doty last attended on Monday, January 30, 2006, with
The Donnelly Trial winning a Brickenden for the "Ballyhoo Award" (best advance promotion) and also one for best costumes (made by Barbara Hunter). ==Death==