80-year-old Port Alberni man fills home with more than 270 eclectic nutcrackers
“This is how it all began,” Kenn Whiteman smiles, holding a statue of a regal-looking rodent.
“Turned out to be the Mouse King in ‘The Nutcracker.’”
Kenn happened upon the character 45 years ago, while shopping for something else, and bought it.
The purchase inspired him to the read "The Nutcracker" story and listen to Tchaikovsky’s music.
“I thought, ‘Wow! This is pretty fascinating,” Kenn recalls.
That led to Kenn to start collecting nutcrackers.
“The appeal is the hunt,” he says.
That means Kenn and his wife Linda Whiteman would never walk past a garage sale without stopping.
“He’s got a good eye for these things,” Linda says.
“There’s nothing neater than when you can see a nutcracker at the back of the garage,” Kenn says. “And then the anticipation of getting it.”
There’s also the pleasure of knowing that when you bring it home, there will be no other one like it.
“The elation is finding a nutcracker that you’ve never seen before,” Kenn says.
Kenn’s collection is currently on display in three rooms around their home.
“As you can see,” Linda smiles. “It’s quite overwhelming.”
More than 270 colourful characters greet you in the front entrance and surround you in the living room, before lining the dining room floor, and covering the table.
“I do appreciate the beauty of them,” Linda says.
When you look beyond the quantity of nutcrackers, you notice the diversity of them, ranging from hockey players to Wizard of Oz characters, surfers to RCMP officers.
“The variety is amazing,” Linda says, before moving the mouth of nutcracker that's six feet tall.
When asked why he’s spent more than half his life collecting them, Kenn is initially self-deprecating.
“I was thinking about [going to] therapy,” Kenn laughs. “Nutcracker therapy!”
But if you ask the 80-year-old about how he spent the time between collecting, he’ll tell you about working as a registered psychiatric nurse, clown school instructor, city councillor, and prolific volunteer. And you start to see that both Kenn and the Nutcracker character share a common goal of helping others.
“It’s service above self,” Kenn says. “It’s just being involved in the community.”
Which is why the couple is hoping to sell the Nutcracker collection to someone who can display it publicly.
“Where others could see them,” Linda says. “And enjoy them.”
And like that first nutcracker did for for Kenn, all those years again, spark an enduring sense of wonder.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Advocates come together to help sailors stuck for months on tugboats in Quebec port
Groups that advocate for seafarers are expressing concern for 11 sailors who are spending a harsh Quebec winter aboard three tugboats that have been detained for months in the port of Trois-Rivières.

First tank sent by Canada for Ukrainian forces arrives in Poland
The first of the Leopard 2 tanks Canada is donating to Ukrainian forces has arrived in Poland.
Canadians Drake, Michael Buble, Tobias Jesso Jr. among early Grammy winners
Singer-songwriter Tobias Jesso Jr. became a first-time Grammy Award winner at the pre-broadcast ceremony where fellow Canadians Michael Buble and Drake also picked up trophies.
Charles Kimbrough, best known for role in 'Murphy Brown,' dies at 86
Charles Kimbrough, a Tony- and Emmy-nominated actor who played a straight-laced news anchor opposite Candice Bergen on “Murphy Brown,” died Jan. 11 in Culver City, California. He was 86.
Canada sends military aircraft into Haiti's skies as gang violence escalates
Canada has sent one of its military planes to Haiti to help the country cope with escalating violence. A joint statement today from National Defence Minister Anita Anand and Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly says Canada has deployed a CP-140 Aurora aircraft to help 'disrupt the activities of gangs' in Haiti.
31,000 cards: Montreal woman passing along father's extensive collection of Expos baseball cards
A Montreal woman is passing along her father's extensive collection of over 31,000 Expos baseball cards. April Whitzman's father, Steve Whitzman, collected the cards from 1969 to 2016. A huge Expos fan, he's got every player covered.
New study highlights increasing prevalence of muscle dysmorphia among Canadian boys, young men
Canadian researchers are drawing attention to the increasing prevalence of 'a pathological pursuit of muscularity' among Canadian boys and young men, with a new study that found one in four were at risk of developing what's known as muscle dysmorphia.
Four Americans, two Canadians fined $50K for illegal moose hunting in northern Ont.
An investigation that lasted almost two years has resulted in moose hunting violation convictions for six people and a lodge in Red Lake in northwestern Ontario.
Tiny wines find home in B.C.'s market, as Canadians consider reducing consumption
Wine lovers have growing options on the shelf to enjoy their favourite beverage as producers in B.C. offer smaller container sizes.