Louis has been an active participant in Toronto Carnival, formally known as Caribana, for 40+ years, since 1977. Through his ingenuity, dedication and leadership, has been awarded the distinctive title of Band of the Year, 20 times.
Year | Portrayal | Position |
2020 | Streets on Fire | |
2019 | Heartbeat | Band of the Year (20th time) |
2018 | Wonders of Spring | Band of the Year |
2017 | Celebration Time | Band of the Year |
2016 | Outta Africa | 2nd Place |
2015 | Chronicles of Machel Montano | 2nd Place |
2014 | River of Mirrors | 2nd Place |
2013 | Heaven & Earth | Band of the Year (17th time) |
2012 | Fantasy in Jewels | 2nd Place |
2011 | Secrets of the Outer Limits | 2nd Place |
2010 | Portraits | Band of the Year |
2009 | A Tribute to Harold Saldenah (The Golden Years) | 2nd Place |
2008 | The Deep | 2nd Place |
2007 | RainForest | 2nd Place |
2006 | Mas Jamboree | 3rd Place |
2005 | Rewind | 3rd Place |
2004 | Havoc | 2nd Place |
2003 | Rituals | Band of the Year |
2002 | The Lost Horizon of Atlantis | Band of the Year |
2001 | River of Life | Band of the Year |
2000 | Theatre of the Streets | Band of the Year |
1999 | Millennium 2000 | Band of the Year |
1998 | Ontario, Yours to Discover | Band of the Year |
1997 | Did not enter | N/A |
1996 | Mas on Stage | Band of the Year |
1995 | Images | 5th place |
1994 | Rhythm in the Sky | Band of the Year |
1993 | Light after Dark | 2nd place |
1992 | The Architect | Band of the Year |
1991 | Outa Dis’World | Band of the Year |
1990 | Beyond the Darkness | Band of the Year |
1989 | Fire on Ice | Band of the Year |
1988 | A High Mas-K | 2nd place |
1987 | Aliens | 2nd place |
1986 | Did not enter | N/A |
1985 | Did not enter | N/A |
1984 | Symptoms of Carnival (with Noel Audain) | 2nd place |
1983 | Reminiscence of War | 5th place |
1982 | Night Out | Band of the Year |
1981 | Did not enter | N/A |
1980 | Island on the Sun | Band of the Year |
1979 | Blowing in the Wind | 2nd place |
1978 | Caribbean Fantasy | 2nd place |
1977 | Shangri-La | Band of the Year |
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About Louis Saldenah
In 1977, he produced his first mas band ‘Shangri-la’ which went on to win the coveted Band Of The Year Honours.
His exceptional organizational, management, financial and people skills, has propelled him to create the most spectacular parade presentations that Toronto has ever seen.
Louis’s creative life, growth and development of this art form have significantly contributed to the creation of this innovative art attraction which has grown to become Toronto’s “theatre in the streets” resulting in Toronto becoming host to one of the largest Carnivals in the world.
Louis artistic vision and creativity have caused excitement, inspiration and joy to tens of thousands of Canadians, foreign spectators and masqueraders.
The Historian
by Dylan Kerrigan & Nicholas Laughlin
from the March/April 2005 Issue (No. 65) of Caribbean Beat
Born in the east Port of Spain district of Belmont in 1925, Harold Saldenah – universally known as “Sally” – began his Carnival career in the years immediately after the Second World War, as an assistant to now almost forgotten bandleaders like Harry Basilon and Harold Tang Yuk, and, most importantly, Mansie Lai. (In turn, among Saldenah’s early masqueraders were future bandleaders Stephen Lee Heung, Bobby Ammon, and Edmond Hart.)
These were the days when Trinidad’s different social groups still had separate Carnival experiences – the “white” bands drove through Port of Spain in their elevated lorries, while “parading the streets on foot in costume…was perceived as a ‘black’ thing”, as one historian has put it.
But in the early 50s change accelerated. Lighter-skinned masqueraders, drawn by the increasingly attractive costumes of bandleaders like Saldenah and his contemporaries, came down from their lorries, reconnecting their mas with the streets.
Sally’s historical presentations, intensely researched and scrupulously fabricated, worked as a catalyst for this change. As designers looked beyond traditional characters and biblical stories for their subject matter, new masqueraders from across the social spectrum swelled the sizes of the leading bands from the dozens to the hundreds.
Mansie Lai, Saldenah’s early mentor, had been greatly influenced in his themes by the Hollywood films that were so popular in Trinidad’s cinemas in the 1930s and 40s. In 1952, when Saldenah designed his own first band, he took inspiration from the 1951 film extravaganza Quo Vadis, set in New Testament times. Saldenah used still pictures distributed by the movie studios to guide his costume designs; he even wrote to Hollywood for more photos. Unable to afford metal, and with plastic not yet in common use, he made his first legionnaires’ helmets from papier mâché over clay moulds.
Harold Saldenah: Band of the Year Titles
1955 Imperial Rome 44 BC to 96 AD
1956 Norse Gods and Vikings
1958 Lost City of Atlantis
1959 Crees of Canada
1964 Mexico 1519 to 1521
1968 El Dorado, City of Gold
Over the next decade Saldenah produced a series of historical epics, remarkable for the magnificence and splendour of their costumes. Most celebrated of all, his 1955 presentation Imperial Rome 44 BC to 96 AD astounded masqueraders and spectators with its elaborate cast of characters – centurions, gladiators, vestal virgins, and the 12 Caesars, including Nero in a 20-yard cape of purple velvet. Saldenah’s insistence on accuracy forced his Roman soldiers into short skirts.
Previously, bare flesh had been considered inappropriate. But Sally dispensed with tights and political correctness. His legionnaires learned to reflect the realism of the era they portrayed. He used tooled leather and real copper breastplates created by Ken Morris, contributing to a new tradition of metalwork in Carnival design. No one was surprised when Imperial Rome won Saldenah the first of his six band of the year titles.
During the 60s, as more women joined the masquerade and bands grew even larger (his Mexico 1519 to 1521 crossed a thousand in 1964), Saldenah split up the mass of costumed revellers into different sections, each depicting one aspect of the overall portrayal. He was thus a pioneer of “section mas”, which soon became the convention. With their different colours and themes, each complete with flag bearer and title, the sections came together in rapid succession to tell a larger story.
In the mid-60s, “fantasy” portrayals began a trend away from authentic historical themes, bringing new possibilities to designers and bandleaders. Saldenah’s imagination rose to the challenge, and with his 1968 presentation, El Dorado, City of Gold, he combined history and fantasy brilliantly. The shiny foil he used on the costumes created a glistening spectacle in the setting sun. Other bandleaders quickly followed his lead.
In 1976, to celebrate his 25th year as a bandleader, Saldenah presented a personal retrospective called A Sailor Is a Sailor, recreating each of his previous bands in the form of a traditional fancy sailor. The following year he moved to Canada, where he brought his expertise to the Trinidad-style Caribana Carnival. But in 1983, for the 200th anniversary of Trinidad Carnival (the first French settlers had arrived in 1783), he came back home to present Masquerade to Carnival, a 40-section tribute to the history of the festival, with costumes celebrating dozens of traditional characters. The historian of ancient civilisations had become the historian of his own art-form.
Sally died from cancer in June 1985. He said he never felt afflicted by the disease, preferring fresh coconut water from Savannah vendors to the drugs recommended by his doctors. Two days before his death, as he was carried on a stretcher from his home to the hospital, he turned to those around him and said, with a masquerader’s smile, “Look how I’m going out as an African king!”