PNE perogy king 'Hunky' Bill Konyk dead at 88
Credit to Author: Scott Brown| Date: Wed, 14 Aug 2019 15:40:52 +0000
Bill Konyk, better known to Vancouverites as Hunky Bill, has died at the age of 88, according to a spokesperson for the Pacific National Exhibition, where Konyk served up his Ukrainian-style perogies for 52 years.
The son of Ukrainian immigrants, Konyk was born and raised in Winnipeg but left for Chicago as a young man to pursue a career as radio sports reporter. He met his wife Kay in Chicago and they had three sons — Billy, Clayton and Mark.
The radio game eventually took the family back to Manitoba and then to Vancouver where he settled and became a local culinary legend when he started selling his perogies, kielbasa sausage and cabbage rolls — Winnipeg Uke Soul Food, as he used to call it — at The Fair in 1967.
“Next thing I know, I’m making some serious coin,” he told the Vancouver Sun in 2011.
PNE spokeswoman Laura Ballance said in a statement that Konyk died peacefully Tuesday night, surrounded by family.
“Hunky Bill was a beloved member of the extended PNE family for 52 years, beginning, as the legend has it, when the then Vancouver based radio executive bet a friend $10 that he could get a booth at the PNE to sell his homemade Ukrainian style perogies,” said Ballance.
“The story goes that Bill showed up at the PNE administration office and spent an hour and a half convincing the then head of the PNE booth sales department to give him a chance. Konyk got his booth, won his $10 and began a 52-year journey during which time Hunky Bill has become one of the most iconic pitchmen and restaurateurs in Canadian history.”
Ballance said Konyk’s family will continue to sell Hunky Bill’s food at the PNE, which begins Saturday.
With files from Matt Robinson, Shelley Fralic