rehearsal in the Great Hall
Hart House Chess Club Yunshan Li (Board 2 left) and
IM Nicholas Vettese (Board 1, right) representing University of Toronto and the Hart House Chess Club in Ottawa during the 2023 Canadian University Chess Championship Founded in 1895, the Hart House Chess Club is one of The University of Toronto's oldest, most high profile, and most successful clubs. It meets every Friday from 4 pm to 11 pm in Hart House's Reading Room for casual and serious play. Players of all skill levels are welcome. The chess club offers lectures by some of Canada's leading players as well as CFC-rated tournaments. The HHCC Chess Team has won the top title six times at the
Pan American Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship. Since its founding, the club has served host to numerous famous chess players throughout the years, including
Paul Keres,
Samuel Reshevsky,
George Koltanowski, and
World Chess Championship winners
Bobby Fischer,
Max Euwe,
Mikhail Botvinnik,
Boris Spassky and
Evgeny Bareev.
Hart House Debating Club In 1986, the University of Toronto Debating Union—a university-wide debating club dating back to the 1940s—approached the Hart House Debates Committee and came to an agreement that secured support for the Union from Hart House. The organization, renamed Hart House Debating Club, has ever since been the primary speech and debating society at the University of Toronto open to all students from all colleges and campuses. Since its inception, the Hart House Debating Club has played host to leaders in every field, including heads of state, senior Cabinet officials, filmmakers, business leaders, activists, poets, policymakers, and philanthropists. Some of its most notable speakers include
John F. Kennedy,
Christopher Hitchens,
Adrienne Clarkson,
Noam Chomsky,
John Turner,
Brian Mulroney,
John Tory,
Margaret Atwood,
Bob Rae,
Elizabeth May,
Bill Graham,
Andrew Coyne,
Margaret MacMillan, and
Atom Egoyan. The club has hosted dozens of prestigious tournaments, including the
North American Debating Championship and the
World Universities Debating Championship, the latter of which it has won twice: in 1981 and 2006. Hart House also hosts an annual intervarsity university debate tournament. The champions of the 2025 Hart House IV are Karel Brandenbarg and Rhys Nickerson of the
McGill Debating Union.
Hart House Literary and Library Committee This committee oversees many of the literary events that Hart House sponsors throughout the school year. These include the writing groups
le mot juste and the Algonquin Square Table, as well as the
Hart House Review. The Literary and Library Committee regularly hosts a writer-in-residence who leads workshops and reviews students' writings. The committee also runs a library, located on the second floor of Hart House. It features a variety of books for in-house research and leisure reading, and often is the venue for public readings (also coordinated by the committee).
Hart House Music Committee This committee oversees concerts and events of various types of music, including rock, reggae, and folk. The concerts are free for all members of the university community. Throughout the school year, the committee organizes six to ten concerts. These events are a growing part of Hart House. The committee's aim is to bring the entire music community together from all campuses. Hart House also organizes open mics which are open to all. These events are considered a "must see" for all first year students.
Hart House Review The
Hart House Review (
HHR) is a Canadian
literary journal published by student members of Hart House at the University of Toronto and printed by
Coach House Press. The magazine is best known for prose, poetry and photography contributed by emerging writers and artists in Canada.
Rohinton Mistry,
Camilla Gibb,
Lynn Crosbie and similarly notable names in Canadian literature have been published in the
HHR. The review also hosts lecture and reading events that feature established and emerging figures in Canadian literature and publishing.
Lecture series The Hart House Hancock Lecture is an annual public lecture series. Delivered by a lecturer chosen by a committee of students, staff and alumni, it generally takes place in late March in the Great Hall of Hart House. The series was launched in 2001, with the vision of establishing an annual public lecture in Hart House. The lecturer for 2007 was McGill Professor
Darin Barney, who delivered a lecture titled "One Nation Under Google: Citizenship in the Technological Republic" examining the relationship between technology and citizenship. The lecturer for 2008 was Warchild Canada founder and U of T Professor
Samantha Nutt lecturing on "The world is Our Backyard: Individual Responsibility for a Global Society". Dr. Nutt spoke about citizens' role as privileged North Americans and their ability to effect change in war-torn countries. Other past lecturers have included
Michael Geist (2006),
David Bornstein (2005),
Jennifer Welsh, (2004),
Alan Lightman (2002) and
Pico Iyer (2001). Copies of some of the past lectures are available online.
Theatre Hart House Theatre is often referred to as the cradle of Canadian Theatre. Opening in November 1919, the Art Deco theatre on the University of Toronto's
St. George campus quickly became a leader in the Canadian "Little Theatre" movement of the 1920s and 1930s. Hart House Theatre cultivated and featured some of the country's finest actors, directors, playwrights and designers of the Pre-World War II era, including
Raymond Massey,
Dora Mavor Moore,
Lloyd Bochner,
Lawren Harris,
Arthur Lismer,
Wayne and Shuster and
Merrill Denison. After the war, Hart House Theatre, under the direction of Robert Gill, became an extracurricular student theatre and for twenty years turned out a new generation of stage professionals.
William Hutt,
Don Harron,
Kate Reid,
David Gardner,
Arthur Hiller,
Donald Sutherland,
Norman Jewison and
Lorne Michaels all got their start on the Hart House stage. By the mid-1960s the theatre joined the world of academia with the creation of the Graduate Centre for Study of Drama. A new generation of students combined dramatic literature with practical theatre experience, and learned from and contributed to the vibrant Toronto theatre scene of the 1970s. Today Hart House Theatre is the focal point for the performing arts at the University of Toronto. With over a thousand students participating each year in its extra-curricular season of drama, dance, music and film, Hart House Theatre continues to influence each new generation. The performances are often well reviewed by art critics, and almost always sell out.
Hart House Orchestra Since 1976, the HHO has provided an opportunity for members of the University of Toronto community with musical interest and training, to fellowship and perform challenging symphonic works. The orchestra is composed of 80 to 90 musicians. Membership is determined annually by audition, open to university students at all levels of study, alumni, faculty, staff and Hart House senior members. In a typical season, the orchestra performs three concerts at home and one in another city in Ontario or Quebec. Past concert tour destinations have included Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Windsor, London, Guelph and Sudbury. On a few special occasions, the orchestra has toured to Carnegie Hall, New York City; Tübingen, Düsseldorf and Göttingen, Germany; Chicago, Illinois; and Ann Arbor, Michigan. Organizational operations are run by a committee of nominated volunteer orchestra members. On an annual basis the orchestra runs two concerto competitions, one internal (open to its membership) and one external (open to the community). The winning soloists perform with the orchestra, usually in the following season.
Hart House Film Board This popular club helps its members make movies through equipment rental and instruction, as well as group projects (such as the New Filmmaker's Project) and screenings.
Atom Egoyan and
Babak Payami made their first films using Hart House Film Board equipment. Since 2006 The Hart House Film Board has offered an extensive series of film training classes.
Other features The captivating beauty of Hart House has made it a popular location for weddings, professional conferences and other events. Hart House also has a barbershop for students. Hart House also owns and manages a farm in the
Caledon Hills on the ridge of the Niagara Escarpment. The farm has long been a popular retreat. == Notable visitors ==