In–Person (Tuesdays) and Virtual (Thursdays) Lectures Series
Fall Series 2026
Power Players – Couples That Changed the World
Presented by Dr. Laura Carlson
Tuesdays, October 13 to November 17, 2026 (Six lectures)
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
To be offered as in-person lectures ONLY.
Neither online lectures nor recordings will be available for this in-person series.
Location: Burnhamthorpe Community Centre, Applewood Hills Room
1500 Gulleden Drive, Mississauga (Vicinity of Burnhamthorpe Road East and Dixie Road)
Times
9:30 a.m. Doors open
10:00 a.m. Lecture
11:00 a.m. Refreshment break
11:20 a.m. Q & A
12:00 p.m. Conclusion
Venue In-person lecture presentations only. Online and recorded sessions will not be available.
Cost $50 per person for six-part series
Registration begins on Tuesday, September 1, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. and tickets will be on sale throughout this series until Tuesday, November 17, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. However, it will be possible to register only for the entire six-week series and not for individual lectures or a partial lecture series.
From imperial spouses to artistic duos, discover the partnerships that forged empires, penned prize-winning prose, started revolutions or lit up the silver screen. Explore the political intrigue of Cleopatra and Mark Antony, the scientific genius of Marie and Pierre Curie, the artistic powerhouses of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, and the civil rights legacy of Coretta Scott King and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Although these relationships were not always lifelong or without their share of strife, we’ll explore what each half brought to these power partnerships: collaboration, competition, support and inspiration.
Click on the link to download a printable PDF of the Lecture Agenda: LifeLong Learning Mississauga Lecture October 2026 Power Players
13 October 2026: From Monarchs to Prime Ministers – Political Partnerships
We start our series with a dive into the famous couples who forged empires, united continents or created centuries-long dynasties. We’ll span the centuries, exploring the powerful and tragic partnership of Cleopatra and Mark Antony, the romantic royal marriage of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, and the presidential powerhouse of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt.
20 October 2026: Fighting the Good Fight Together – Revolutionary Partnerships
This week, we explore couples who stood together during revolution and political upheaval. We’ll investigate the Cultural Revolution through the lens of China’s ultimate power couple, Mao Zedong and Jiang Qing. We’ll also explore couples who supported each other in fights against injustice, from Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King’s struggle for civil rights in the United States to Nelson and Winnie Mandela’s battle against South Africa’s apartheid.
27 October 2026: Innovation and Industry – Scientific Partnerships
This week, we explore famous duos who matched intellectual wits in the fields of physics, chemistry, anthropology and more. Discover the powerful partnership of Voltaire and Émilie du Châtelet, who together advanced Newtonian physics. Or the Nobel Prize-winning family of Marie and Pierre Curie, whose discovery of radium had wide-ranging influences on science, technology and even warfare. We’ll unpack how these duos relied on each other for both their professional careers and personal lives, and how – or when – those areas came into conflict.
3 November 2026: Living the Creative Life – Artistic Partnerships
We’ll discover what life is like living with not just one artist in the house, but two. With partners acting alternatively as inspirational muse or artistic rival, artistic duos have given the world some of its most enduring and beloved works. We’ll explore some of the art world’s most famous duos, such as the tumultuous marriages of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera or Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner. We’ll also delve into some less-famous duos, including the contentious relationship between celebrated sculptor Auguste Rodin and his student, lover and eventual rival Camille Claudel.
10 November 2026: Music and Lyrics – Couples of Song and Verse
From the lifelong collaboration of composers Clara and Robert Schumann to the transformative marriage of musicians June Carter and Johnny Cash, this week we explore the inner workings of musical pairings. We’ll investigate the collaborative if contentious process of writing (and performing) music together. Discover couples who spent their lives immersed in music, from Romantic études and operatic arias to rockabilly country.
17 November 2026: Stars of the Silver Screen – Cinematic Couples
We will close this series by looking at some of the most public and famous cinematic couples over the last century. We’ll go beyond the tabloids to explore how these partnerships helped to create the Hollywood of today, from the early years of movie-making with Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford to the film activism of Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee and, of course, that most iconic of Hollywood power couples, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.
Laura Carlson is a historian, writer and media producer. Holding a DPhil in history from Oxford University, she has taught history, classics, philosophy and food studies in England and in Canada, most recently at Queen’s University and Centennial College. She is also the host and executive producer of the award-winning culinary history podcast The Feast. Over the years, Laura has worked with numerous international organizations, from Bloomberg News to Heritage Toronto. As a writer and presenter, she has been featured on the CBC, Forbes, the Toronto Star, CBS Sunday Morning and Atlas Obscura. She is currently working on a book project on the food history of Toronto.
AI and Big Data
Presented by Dr. Steve Engels
Thursdays, October 15 to November 19, 2026 (Six lectures)
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
To be offered as virtual lectures via Zoom Webinar. Recordings of each lecture will be made available to all paid participants for one week following each live lecture.
Cost $50 per household for this six-lecture series
Times
9:50 – 10:00 a.m. Participants can join the webinar
10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Lecture
11:00 a.m. Refreshment break
11:10 a.m. Q & A
12:00 noon Lecture ends
Registration begins on Tuesday, September 1, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. and tickets will be on sale until Friday, October 9, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. After October 9, it will not be possible to register for individual lectures or a partial lecture series.
This course provides a guide to the world of AI and big data, starting from the fundamental AI concepts in everyday life to the latest advancements and future directions. Explore big data concepts like “free” services, user modelling, privacy and security. Learn about cutting-edge AI developments in machine learning and generative AI in an accessible environment for both avid techies and complete novices alike.
Why Take This Course?
The fields of AI and big data are advancing rapidly, with far-reaching implications. This course will introduce knowledge to help navigate this evolving technological landscape. Attendees will learn about the impact of AI on daily life and society as a whole to help inform future conversations about the benefits and challenges posed by AI.
Click on the link to download a printable PDF of the Lecture Agenda: LifeLong Learning Mississauga Lecture October 2026 AI and Big Data
15 October 2026: History of AI and big data
Discover the fascinating history and various disciplines of AI. Learn the basics of Big Data and how it connects to modern AI. Understand the basic domain of AI and the high-level benefits and risks.
22 October 2026: Robotics
Explore how real-world AI systems perceive the world through voice recognition, language processing and computer vision, including self-driving cars and robotic humanoids.
29 October 2026: Learning
Understand modern approaches to data-driven AI, which learns its understanding and interactions with the world. Learn about techniques such as reinforcement learning, supervised and unsupervised learning, and neural network architecture.
5 November 2026: Large Language Models
Uncover the technology behind AI tools like ChatGPT and Gemini, their applications and their limitations.
12 November 2026: Artificial Creativity
Delve into the world of generative art, music, video and design. Learn the current abilities and limitations of these generative technologies.
19 November 2026: Big Data
Grasp the significance of big data, how it’s collected and how patterns are discovered within it. Explore crowdsourcing and the Internet of Things (IoT). Discover practical applications of big data in AI, such as protein structure prediction and user modelling, and discuss issues of data bias, discrimination, safety and privacy.
Dr. Steve Engels (BASc, MMath, PhD) has been a professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Toronto since 2002. Steve is an award-winning instructor for courses in computer organization, artificial intelligence and video game design, and has supervised nearly 200 graduate students and thesis projects in these areas. Steve’s main research is in AI and machine learning, particularly generative AI and music generation. Steve’s research also combines AI with fields such as education, animation, mining and video games.
