Peoria Babylon
| Peoria Babylon | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Directed by | Steven Diller | 
| Written by | Steven Diller | 
| Produced by | Michael Caplan | 
| Starring | David Drake Ann Cusack The Lady Bunny Matthew Pestorius Paul Adelstein Marilyn Pittman Deane Clark  | 
| Cinematography | Erick Bergstrom | 
| Edited by | Erick Bergstrom | 
| Music by | Bradley Parker Sparrow Joanie Pallatto | 
| Distributed by | Culture Q Connection | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 90 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
Peoria Babylon is a 1997 American comedy directed by Steven Diller. It premiered at the Chicago Lesbian and Gay International Film Festival in November 1997.[1] The cast features David Drake and Ann Cusack.[2]
Plot
Candy and her gay friend Jon are owners of a financially troubled art gallery in Peoria, Illinois. After exhausting their savings, they concoct a devious scheme in order to save the gallery in this screwball comedy.
They team up with a hunky con artist, the mob and a lesbian porn queen, but at the end little is left standing but their friendship.
Cast
- David Drake as Jon Ashe
 - Ann Cusack as Candy Dineen
 - Matthew Pestorius as Matthew Perretti
 - Paul Adelstein as Brad Kessler
 - The Lady Bunny as Octavia DiMare
 - Marilyn Pittman as Doris Kessler
 - Dan Turek as Bill
 - Deane Clark as Raul Kessler
 - Michael Hagedorn as Ted Jamison
 - William McGough as Detective Dillon
 - Andrew Carrillo as Cop
 - Anna Markin as Tina Rotblatt
 - David Gould as Stanley
 - Tom Ciappa as Private Dick
 - William Graham Cole as Swensen
 - Helen Caro as Adele
 - Kel Mitchell as Beave
 - Jeff Kenny as Willie
 - Sam Perry as Minister
 - Hank Donat as Poet
 - Nikki Lewis as Sandy
 - Lou Wynhoff as Museum Guard
 - Ted Lyde as Wayne
 - Wendy Lucker as Reporter
 - Tom Holycross as Cop #2
 - Dan Callahan as Drag Queen
 - M.J. Loheed as German Tourist
 - Aja as Drag Queen #2
 - Tom Phisella as Hick Man
 - Rita Symons as Hick Woman
 - Phyllis Diller as Painting Owner
 - Lora Adams as Angry Art Patron
 
Reception
The Chicago Tribune called it "…wonderfully funny…charming all the way around." (November 7, 1997) and the Chicago Sun-Times said that it was "Wacky and witty." (November 14, 1997).
In Media Audiences and Identity: Self-Construction in the Fan Experience, Steve Bailey states that "Peoria Babylon, aims its satire at the world of high art and the peculiarities of the international art market".[3]
References
- ^ "Peoria Babylon, A Film about Sex, Art and Peoria, Illinois". Montrose Pictures. Retrieved 2023-05-17.
 - ^ "NO DIFFICULTIES FOR TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES". Chicago Tribune. 1996-09-22. Retrieved 2023-05-17.
 - ^ Bailey, Steve (8 September 2005). Media Audiences and Identity: Self-Construction in the Fan Experience. Macmillan. p. 89. ISBN 9781403945426.
 
