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The opening scene has [[James Morrison (jazz musician)|James Morrison]] playing "[[I Can't Get Started]]" à la [[Bunny Berigan]].
The opening scene has [[James Morrison (jazz musician)|James Morrison]] playing "[[I Can't Get Started]]" à la [[Bunny Berigan]].
The musical score was written by the late [[Larry Muhoberac]], who won an AFI award that year for Best Musical Score. It was produced in Sydney, Australia, with co-production, instrumental performances and engineering by [[Parrish Muhoberac]].
The musical score was written by the late [[Larry Muhoberac]], who won an AFI award that year for Best Musical Score. It was produced in Sydney, Australia, with co-production, instrumental performances and engineering by [[Parrish Muhoberac]].

==Novelisation==
A novelisation was written by Whitburn and published by [[Pan Macmillan]] in 1995.<ref>{{cite web |title=Billy's holiday / Denis Whitburn |url=https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/670231 |website=National Library of Australia |access-date=30 July 2024}}</ref>


==Cast==
==Cast==

Revision as of 10:58, 30 July 2024

Billy's Holiday
Directed byRichard Wherrett
Written byDenis Whitburn
Produced byTristram Miall
StarringMax Cullen
Production
company
Beyond Films
Distributed byAnchor Bay Entertainment, Miramax
Release date
  • October 19, 1995 (1995-10-19)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
BudgetA$4 million[1]
Box officeA$68,472 (Australia)[2]

Billy's Holiday is a 1995 Australian musical film. Based on actor Max Cullen's real-life ability to vocally impersonate Billie Holiday, the film revolves around a man named Billy Apples, played by Cullen, whose life and music career are stagnating until he is visited by Holiday's spirit and finds himself gifted with her voice.

Production

Screenwriter Denis Whitburn had written a play called The Siege of Frank Sinatra in which Max Cullen had starred in its original 1980 production. During the production Cullen and Whitburn would head out to bars and Cullen would sing in a Billie Holiday voice. In the early 1990s Whitburn decided to write a film about this ability and wrote the script in three weeks.[1]

Music

The opening scene has James Morrison playing "I Can't Get Started" à la Bunny Berigan. The musical score was written by the late Larry Muhoberac, who won an AFI award that year for Best Musical Score. It was produced in Sydney, Australia, with co-production, instrumental performances and engineering by Parrish Muhoberac.

Novelisation

A novelisation was written by Whitburn and published by Pan Macmillan in 1995.[3]

Cast

References

  1. ^ a b Mary Colbert, "Finding Billy's Holiday", Cinema Papers, June 1995 p4-8, 56
  2. ^ "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria Archived 9 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 11 November 2012
  3. ^ "Billy's holiday / Denis Whitburn". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 30 July 2024.