In memory of

Kenneth Edward Taylor

February 12, 1938 -  October 10, 2022

Ken is lovingly remembered by his family and friends where he will live on forever in their wonderful memories.
For 62 years Ken was the loving husband of Joan (Towers). He was the father of Linda MacLean (John), Brian (Deanne), Carolyn Oliver (Shawn) and Christine.
He was the loving brother of Joan (the late Jim Hannah), his brother the late Jim (Margaret), his brother-in-law the late Doug Towers (Judi), and sister-in-law Pat Ireland (Jim). Kenny was the proud grandfather of Taylor Gilbert (Brian), Andrew (Jordan) and Courtney MacLean; Jennifer, Matthew and Michael Oliver; and Jett and Sidney Taylor. His great grandchildren were Avery and Lucas. He was admired by many nieces and nephews.
Ken’s true soulmates were Jim Hannah, Doug Towers, Chuck Spencer, Kent Taylor, Mike McQuaid and Gene Sutton.
Ken grew up in East Toronto where he attended Danforth Tech as an exceptional student and athlete. He excelled in hockey, football, fastball, and sailing. He was highly competitive, a powerful and beautiful skater who played hockey for a short time for the junior Marlies but knew education and grad school was for him. Ken attained his engineering degree from the University of Toronto, and his MBA from the Wharton School of Business. A math whiz who looked at everything with a critical eye, Ken was also a voracious reader of hundreds of books on politics and history all his life.
On a warm Friday evening in August 1960, Ken married the love of his life. Soon afterward, his career with Hercules Powder took he and his bride to Wilmington, Delaware where they started their life of love together. After Wilmington, Delaware, Ken came to Toronto to work in Finance for Ford Motor Company, and then Consulting with Urwick Currie. While at Urwick Currie, he moved his family to the Bahamas to work on Land Development projects there. After 3 years he returned to Toronto and joined Cadillac Development Corporation as Vice President Finance followed by Vice President Land Development.
A true risk-taker and entrepreneur, his motivation and vision was to create a business. He and Joan founded Spinnaker Resorts 40 years ago and developed resorts in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina; Beaver Creek, Colorado; Branson, Missouri; Ormond Beach, Florida and acquired a resort in Williamsburg, Virginia. He created strong relationships with many of his over 500 employees.
Family and friends meant the world to him. The cottage was his happy place as he was a lifetime lover of the water, all watersports and tennis. His home in Echo Bay, Muskoka with his extended “Bay Family” was his favourite place! Ken was fascinated by history, political systems, economics, business and finance. All this was enhanced by Ken’s love to travel all over Canada, the United States, and the Caribbean. He and Joan enjoyed skiing in Europe, sailing through the Caribbean and exploring parts of South America, Asia, Australia, New Zealand and many countries in Europe.
He valued tennis and ski friends from Ontario Racquet Club in Mississauga and Alpine Ski Club in Collingwood. Many winter days were spent on the slopes, then zooming home to play tennis and party at night!
Ken was confident and had strong opinions. He believed in making the most of life and we know that he wasn’t much for small talk but would much rather have a lively debate over the economy, politics or current events. Music and his “nothing box” helped to complete him.
He had a zest for life and he took every opportunity to share his passions in hopes of passing them on to his kids and grandkids. His desire to improve others’ lives was also evident in his commitment to philanthropy.

We’d like to think Ken is still smiling his great smile as we hold him deep in our hearts.

We would like to thank all the wonderful doctors and nurses Ken encountered over the years and in particular Dr. Suzanne Trudel at Princess Margaret Hospital.
Cremation has taken place. Please come and join us to celebrate his life on October 22nd at 4 p.m. at Mt. Pleasant Funeral Centre at 375 Mount Pleasant Rd.

In lieu of flowers, donations would be appreciated to Joan and Ken’s Fund at The Princess Margaret Hospital or The Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Use the drop down menu on the Give in Memory page to find the Joan and Ken Taylor Multiple Myeloma Research Fund Donate - Donations (supportthepmcf.ca)
Or The Toronto Symphony Orchestra please refer to this page on our website, and please include "in memory of Ken Taylor.”

Life Stories 

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The Taylor family (Multiple Myeloma Research)

Entered October 15, 2022 from The Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation

Ken and Joan Taylor

In January 2009, Ken and Joan Taylor were on one of their regular work trips to beautiful Hilton Head, South Carolina where they founded Spinnaker Resorts in the early 80s. Unfortunately, their trip took a turn for the worse. Ken was admitted to the hospital with a serious case of pneumonia. To their surprise, Ken received an unexpected and startling diagnosis during his hospital stay: multiple myeloma.

With no known cure, multiple myeloma, also known as myeloma, is a blood cancer associated with the uncontrolled growth and abnormal behavior of plasma cells – the white blood cells made in the bone marrow that help the body fight infection. Myeloma develops when abnormal plasma cells – cancerous cells known as myeloma cells – accumulate, making it difficult for healthy blood cells to properly develop and function.

With Princess Margaret Cancer Centre home to one of the largest and most comprehensive myeloma programs in North America, Joan shares, “We never had questions about where we should go for treatment. At the time, Dr. Michael Baker advised Ken see Dr. Suzanne Trudel, a clinician-scientist at The Princess Margaret, claiming she was one of the best students that he’s ever had.”

Ken swiftly began treatment, including taking part in a clinical trial and stem cell transplant, under the watchful eye of Dr. Trudel at The Princess Margaret’s Myeloma Clinic, which hosts one of the largest stem cell transplant programs in Canada.

Thanks to her attentive and compassionate care, Ken’s cancer has been in remission for over eight years.

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Grateful for the exceptional care Ken received, the Taylor family generously gifted $1.5 million to The Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation to further Dr. Trudel’s robust research portfolio focused on discovering novel therapies based on the underlying drivers of the disease. This brings the family’s total giving to the myeloma program close to $3 million.

“Despite phenomenal advancements in treatment, we have not achieved a cure for all patients. Inevitably, patients’ myeloma will become resistant to all available therapies. One of the most recent innovative approaches to target myeloma is CAR T-cell therapy, which has the demonstrated ability to use the body's own immune response to selectively kill cancer cells and overcome all conventional drug-related resistance mechanisms,” says Dr. Trudel.

Dr. Trudel emphasizes the responses to CAR-T treatment they are seeing in patients who have failed all therapy treatments are way beyond the team’s wildest dreams, “In the vast majority of patients, CAR-T therapy annihilates basically every B-cell maturation antigen expressing cancer cell within days in the patients that do respond to standard treatment approaches. This is why there is so much excitement around the therapy.”

Grateful for the Taylor family’s gift, Dr. Trudel expresses, “Philanthropy allows us to advance bold and innovative projects that are in the earliest stages, whereas government typically finances safe and predictable projects.”

With the support of their donation, Dr. Trudel is contributing to the first, in-human clinical trial using T-cell antigen coupler (TAC) therapy for myeloma developed at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, making The Princess Margaret one of three sites involved. The university’s pre-clinical evaluations indicate reengineering TAC T-cells to target and destroy cancerous cells could be more effective and safer than CAR T-cell therapy, particularly for older patients.

She is also leading a clinical trial with Dr. Keating, clinician-scientist at The Princess Margaret, that involves reengineering natural killer (NK) cells – white blood cells that control the spread of tumours and viral-infected cells – to target and destroy myeloma cells, offering another potentially more effective and safer alternative to CAR T-cell therapy.

Last but not least, she is launching a pre-clinical study to develop a new type of CAR T-cell therapy. Dr. Rodger Tiedemann, senior scientist at the Myeloma Clinic, who developed the antibody to the antigen of interest, and Dr. Naoto Hirano, a leader in T-cell receptor technology and clinician-scientist at The Princess Margaret, are collaborating with Dr. Trudel to develop the CAR T-cell manufacturing process.

“The Taylor family’s gift offers us the opportunity to test big and bold ideas. We can chase unconventional avenues of scientific inquiry, help attain proof of concept, and build research tools and therapeutics to help people facing myeloma live better and longer lives,” says Dr. Trudel.

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“I looked at my diagnosis as something that was going to take my life in a definite period of time. The fact I’ve lived with the disease means The Princess Margaret’s researchers, like Dr. Trudel, are making exceptional progress in better understanding myeloma and advancing treatments. There’s a night and day difference between the treatments available today versus fifty or sixty years ago," says Ken.

When asked to share their advice for others facing myeloma, Joan expresses, “Do everything you can to live a happy life with supportive people around you. Have a positive attitude and be hopeful.”


Published March 23, 2022

Photos 

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