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“Canada’s Country Gentleman” Tommy Hunter, the celebrated musician whose professional career spanned from the 1950s into the early 2010s, has died.
The singer and guitarist died Thursday of natural causes, entertainment promoter and manager Brian Edwards confirmed to CBC News.
Hunter was 89.
Born on March 20, 1937, in London, Ont., Hunter got an early start as an entertainer. He began taking guitar lessons at around nine years old, which soon led to him booking gigs, playing in churches and eventually landing on the radio.
He joined CBC’s Country Hoedown in 1956 as a rhythm guitarist before making his biggest mark: hosting The Tommy Hunter Show, which debuted as a radio show before transitioning to television. That series ran for 27 years, going off the airwaves in 1992.
The singer known as ‘Canada’s country gentleman’ looks back on good times and bad as he begins his final cross-Canada tour, CBC’s Deana Sumanac reports
A mainstay in the Canadian broadcast and music landscape, its near-three decade run was among the most successful in North America — and even extended to U.S. viewers via a Nashville Network syndication.
Throughout its history, it attracted the star-powered names of Gordon Lightfoot — who had earlier made his mark as a dancer on Country Hoedown — along with Loretta Lynn and Johnny Cash.
Hunter’s early-career finds also helped build what would later become household names: including Garth Brooks, a 14-year-old Shania Twain (then known as Ellie Twain) and even CBC’s The World This Hour longtime anchor Tom Harrington as a child.
Sad to hear Tommy Hunter has died. Our vocal group appeared on his show 3x in 70-71. 40 years later, I represented CBC at his final live show where this photo was taken. He really was the Country Gentleman & should be on Canada’s Walk of Fame. May his memory be a blessing. 🇨🇦🎤 pic.twitter.com/CmEidr0gUM
Both before and after The Tommy Hunter Show concluded, Hunter toured across the country; most notably with his backup band, The Travellin’ Men — a name borrowed from his show’s theme song, Travellin’ Man.
But when CBC cancelled his TV show, he was devastated. In an interview with CBC News decades later, he recalled how television executives told him over dinner that they would be ending the show with a series of specials.
“I didn’t hear ‘specials,’ all I heard was [that] they’re going to cancel the show,” he said. “I felt like I had failed, the whole thing. What did I do wrong?”
But it wasn’t the end for Hunter. He continued to perform until his 75th birthday in 2012, ending his professional career with a long farewell tour. After stops across the country, he played the final concert in his hometown.
Aside from a broken string in his opening medley, it was a smooth — if emotional — send-off, including appearances from longtime friend Lightfoot, former Canadian teen idol Bobby Curtola and a nod to the local teacher who helped foster his interest in country music.
“If I wander off, as I often do … I start losing it, I start getting emotional because all these memories come back,” he said in that same CBC interview, shortly ahead of his final tour date.
“There’s going to be emotional moments. [But] at least I’m still breathing, and at least I can say thank you, and goodbye.”
Hunter won three Juno awards over his career, as well as a Gemini award for best variety series for The Tommy Hunter Show. He was inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 1984 and made a member of the Order of Canada in 1986.
He is survived by three children, four grandchildren and one great grandchild.

