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Lori Bruner
Lori Bruner (January 24, 1932 - December 18, 2009, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) was one of the preeminent women during the 1950s and 1960s to break through the glass ceiling within the male-dominated Canadian record industry. Bruner was also a pioneer in support of the Canadian music industry Cancon momentum. In her later years, Bruner acquired the Book Cellar (Yorkville) which was considered by many to be the best independent book store in Canada. ==Early life and family== Lorraine ”Lori” Lenore Bruner was born on January 24, 1932, in Toronto, Ontario, the second daughter of Marie Clarinda (Clara) White née Allary and Clifford James White. Bruner spent her childhood growing up in Toronto, Ontario with her siblings, Percy, Cynthia, and Patricia. In 1943, at the age of 11, Bruner was sent to live in foster care until she was 16 and then lived with Arthur and Katie Roseborough in Scarborough, Ontario. Bruner eventually moved to Dartmouth, Nova Scotia with the Roseborough's. While living in Nova Scotia, Bruner earned a job at a local retail record store, where she met Rodeo Records creator George Taylor. George encouraged Bruner to consider a career in Canada’s fast growing record industry. On July 15, 1955, Bruner was married to Canadian Naval Airman, Peter Charles Bruner at the chapel on the Shearwater Naval Base in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. They separated in 1958, finally divorcing on September 29, 1961. They had no children together.
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