A_20th_Century_Chocolate_Cake

<i>A 20th Century Chocolate Cake</i>

A 20th Century Chocolate Cake

1983 Canadian film


A 20th Century Chocolate Cake is a Canadian comedy docufiction film, directed by Lois Siegel and released in 1983.[1] The film stars Greg Van Riel and Charles Fisch Jr. as Greg and Charles, two young men in Montreal who are trying to find creative fulfillment in their professional lives. Greg pursues work as a freelance writer of human interest journalism, while the openly gay Charles takes a job as a dancer in a gay bar.[2]

Quick Facts A 20th Century Chocolate Cake, Directed by ...

The film was an expansion of an earlier short film, Recipe to Cook a Clown, which Siegel, Van Riel, and Fisch had made together in the 1970s.[3] Due to budgetary limitations, the film took over three years to make, went through a dozen different cinematographers, and was shot predominantly on stray ends of donated film from other film projects.[3]

André Vincelli received Genie Award nominations for Best Original Score and Best Original Song at the 5th Genie Awards in 1984.[4]


References

  1. "A slice of life served with fiction". The Globe and Mail, July 16, 1983.
  2. "Lois Siegel's A 20th Century Chocolate Cake". Cinema Canada, July/August 1983.
  3. "The baking of a chocolate cake". Cinema Canada, June 1983.
  4. "11 nominations for Chapdelaine in Genie race". The Globe and Mail, February 10, 1984.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article A_20th_Century_Chocolate_Cake, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.