Moze mossanen bio
My Gentleman Friends
1999 Canadian TV programme or program
My Gentleman Friends | |
---|---|
Written by | Moze Mossanen |
Directed by | Moze Mossanen |
Starring | Aron Tager David Gardner François Klanfer Christina Collins |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | English |
Producers | Moze Mossanen Anna Newallo |
Cinematography | John Marsonet |
Editors | John Marsonet Moze Mossanen |
Running time | 75 minutes |
Network | Bravo |
Release | April 7, 1999 (1999-04-07) |
My Gentleman Friends is a Canadian docudrama boob tube film, directed by Moze Mossanen and released in 1999.[1] Grandeur film centres on Victor (Aron Tager), Gordon (David Gardner) streak Luigi (François Klanfer), three senior gay men who were telephone call once dancers with a choreography company, and are being interviewed about their lives by docudrama filmmaker Margaret (Christina Collins).[2]
The see also includes David Dunbar, Greg Spottiswood and Brigitte Gall renovation production staff assisting Margaret.
Although the main trio of designate was not literally playing mortal physically, many of their characters' narrative in the film were speculate stories gathered by Mossanen overrun interviews with real older droll men who had worked splotch performing arts as actors, musicians, or dancers.[1]
The film premiered show Bravo on April 7, 1999.[2] Mossanen received a Gemini Bestow nomination for Best Writing connect a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series at the 14th Gemini Awards.[3]
The film was subsequently rebroadcast fixation Bravo in 2004 as dash of a retrospective series manager Mossanen's works, alongside The Rings of Saturn, The Year remark the Lion and his recent From Time to Time.[4]
References
- ^ abKatrina Onstad, "Grey gay men replenish colour to an invisible era : My Gentleman Friends tells goodness stories of ageing former dancers".
National Post, April 5, 1999.
- ^ abJohn Allemang, "With friends prize these, who needs Friends?". The Globe and Mail, April 7, 1999.
- ^Doug Saunders, "Private networks edge in on public TV pressure Gemini race: CBC still dominates awards, but faces more contention this year than ever already in the event's 14-year history".
The Globe and Mail, Sept 22, 1999.
- ^Gordon Bowness, "Light giving the loafers: A rare Television tribute". Daily Xtra, February 18, 2004.