Côté left an indelible mark on popular culture in the province, appearing in a variety of roles in productions including TV’s La Petite Vie and Omertà, and the films Cruising Bar and C.R.A.Z.Y., which earned him Genie and Jutra awards
The decorated star of C.R.A.Z.Y. has left the stage after years of breaking box-office and attendance records. He had retired from acting last year because of bone marrow disease.
Quebec actor Michel Cote, who captivated audiences with his roles in the theatre piece Broue and films such as Cruising Bar and C.R.A.Z.Y., has died at 72.
Through a critical examination of the limits of SWP guru Tony Cliff's analysis, Marot demolishes the popular myth that Trotsky and his Left Opposition within the Bolshevik Party in Russia were, during the 1920s, a heroic attempt to defend working class interests against a Stalinist 'socialist construction' and repression that they disagreed with. An effective factual antidote to leftist and ICC-type left-communist apologetics for Trotsky and Trotskyism's anti-working class character in Soviet Russia.