The Piano Man's Daughter (film)

The Piano Man's Daughter is a 2003 television film, adapted from the 1995 novel of the same name by Timothy Findley. Rights to the novel's film adaptation were originally purchased by Whoopi Goldberg. Goldberg acquired the film rights after reading the novel while in Toronto starring in Norman Jewison’s film Bogus.[1] Deciding that as a Canadian novel it would be most appropriate to work with a Canadian film studio, Goldberg produced the film in collaboration with Canadian producer Kevin Sullivan's Sullivan Entertainment.

The Piano Man's Daughter
DVD cover
Based onThe Piano Man's Daughter
by Timothy Findley
Written byKevin Sullivan
Directed byKevin Sullivan
StarringWendy Crewson
Christian Campbell
Stockard Channing
Music byPeter Breiner
Country of originCanada
Original languageEnglish
Production
CinematographyRobert Saad
Running time180 minutes
Production companiesCanadian Broadcasting Corporation
Sullivan Entertainment
Original release
Release22 September 2003 (2003-09-22)

Plot

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A young man must deal with several generations of madness and familial intrigue. Charlie Kilworth is a young man whose mother, Lily, is the daughter of Frederick Wyatt, the owner of a well-known piano manufacturing company. Lily is also a free-spirited and unstable woman, who bore Charlie out of wedlock, has had a number of lovers over the years, and has an unsettling fascination with fire. Lily's mother Ede has put her daughter in a mental hospital on several occasions, and is considering having Lily lobotomized. Charlie, meanwhile, has had affairs with a number of women but has never settled down with anyone; working as an events coordinator at a resort hotel, Charlie becomes infatuated with Alex Lamont, the singer in a dance band Charlie has booked into the ballroom. Lily urges her son to get married and raise a family, but Charlie isn't so sure he's ready for a lifetime commitment, and Alex becomes frustrated by Charlie's inability to take their relationship seriously. Meanwhile, Ede and Frederick have decided that Lily needs to be permanently committed to an institution; Charlie insists that they send her to a comfortable private facility, but then discovers that a mysterious benefactor has been supporting Lily for years, and Ede and Frederick have decided if Lily is to be in a private institution, then the generous stranger must be the one who pays for it.

Cast

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References

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  1. ^ Kelly, Brendan (Dec 23, 1996). Daily Variety. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
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