The Best Damn Fiddler from Calabogie to Kaladar | |
Producer: | John Kemeny Barrie Howells |
Director: | Peter Pearson |
Starring: | Chris Wiggins Kate Reid Margot Kidder Paisley Maxwell William Thourlby Sandy Webster Jon Granik |
Editing: | Michael McKennirey |
Distributor: | National Film Board of Canada |
Runtime: | 49 minutes |
Country: | Canada |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $82,635 |
The Best Damn Fiddler from Calabogie to Kaladar is a 1968 National Film Board of Canada drama directed by Peter Pearson, produced by John Kemeny and written by Joan Finnigan. The 49-minute drama stars Chris Wiggins and Kate Reid, along with Margot Kidder in her first feature role.[1]
Produced for the NFB's Challenge for Change program, the film had initially been "pushed aside and ignored by CBC TV," according to Canadian film scholar Gerald Pratley, who called it "A brilliant example of what our filmmakers could do if they had the opportunities and the material to replace the run-of-the-mill American films that dominate our theatres and television – the kind of inexpensive creativity private broadcasters continue to say they cannot afford."[2] [3]
One of the best English-Canadian docudramas from the 1960s, The Best Damn Fiddler is a realistic account of an itinerant bush worker (Chris Wiggins) living in the rural area of the Ottawa Valley who cannot make enough money to feed his large family but nevertheless rejects government handouts. The oldest daughter (Margot Kidder) eventually leaves home to find work and a better future.