Crossing Delancey
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Joan Micklin Silver
Amy Irving
Peter Riegert
Jeroen Krabbe
Kevin Rogers
Peter Gelfman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Romantic drama about a single New York City woman and her quest to find the right man--but can an upscale intellectual employee find love with a pickle man?
Director
Joan Micklin Silver
Cast
Amy Irving
Peter Riegert
Jeroen Krabbe
Kevin Rogers
Peter Gelfman
Jacob Harran
Scott Sommer
Suzzy Roche
Hendrik Hertzberg
David Hyde Pierce
Freda Foh Shen
Amy Wright
Kathleen Wilhoite
Ronnie Gilbert
Young Ho Kim
Maria Antoinette Rogers
Claudia Silver
Denis Bellocq
Mina Bern
Miriam Phillips
Lore Segal
Stanley Leff
Deborah Offner
Reizl Bozyk
Vickilyn Reynolds
John Patrick Shanley
Christine Campbell
Rosemary Harris
Myra Taylor
Sylvia Miles
Mimi Bensinger
Faye Grant
Pat Oleszko
Bob Levine
Reg E. Cathey
Moishe Rosenfeld
Loring Eutemey
Arthur Rubin
Quincy Long
Tudor Sherrard
John Bedford Lloyd
Lee M Linderman
Ina Harnden
Arthur Tracey
Betty Rollin
Madge Cooper
Delores Sutton
Brad O'hare
Hugh Nissenson
Stan Rubin
Susan Blommaert
Michael Marisi Ornstein
Paula Laurence
George Martin
Debra Johanna Cole
Jayne Haynes
Richard Frisch
Stan Page
Susan Sandler
Susan Braudy
Keith Reddin
Sam Corsi
Anthony Diaz Perez
Vicki Goldberg
Crew
Joshua Abeles
Robert M Andres
Stan Bochner
Daniel Boxer
Brian Chavanne
Paul Chihara
Paul Chihara
Peter Christian
Gretchen Christopher
Judy Claman
Kathryn Colbert
Gregory D'agostino
Louis D'esposito
Victor Denicola
Pat Derousie
Anthony Desposito
Rick Dior
Run Dmc
Run Dmc
Tony Dunne
Barbara Ellis
Suzy Elmiger
William Farber
P J Feerick
Jack Fitzstephens
David Craig Forrest
David J Frederick
David Scott Gagnon
Keith Gardner
Francois Girbaud
Marithe Girbaud
Benny Goodman And His Orchestra
Marshall Grupp
Quincy Gunderson
Oscar Hammerstein Ii
Ann Hasselbeck
Brent Haywood
Patricia Doherty Hess
Jery Hewitt
Ken Howard
Isham Jones
Gus Kahn
Jenny Kane
Gail Kearns
Mary C Kelly
Quentin R King
Thomas Kudlek
Fran Kumin
Paula Laurence
Dan Leigh
Lee Lighting Ltd
Harry Madsen
William C. Mcconnell Jr.
Martha Mericka
Danny Michael
Roseann Milano
Susie Money
Phil Neilson
Michael Nozik
Michael Nozik
Nellie Nugiel
Mick O'rourke
Pat Oleszko
Pat Oleszko
Pat Oleszko
Peggy Parker
Thomas Reilly
Lisa Rhodes
Sandy Richman
David Roche
Margaret A Roche
Suzzy Roche
Terre Roche
Richard Rodgers
Marc Rogers
Leslie Rollins
Mike Russo
Rita Ryack
Robert L Sabah
Susan Sandler
Susan Sandler
Frank Serrano
Rick Shaine
Raphael Silver
Meg Simon
C J Simpson
Ginger Sledge
Ellie Smith
John Sosenko
Michael Stockton
Chris Stoia
Timothy Sullivan
Chris Tergesen
Paul Trejo
Leo Trombetta
Gary Troxel
Leslie Urdang
Theo Van De Sande
Theo Van De Sande
Susan Wagner
Margot E Weiser
Tom Wright
Tom Yatsko
Nike Zachmanoglou
Videos
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Film Details
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Articles
Crossing Delancey
Crossing Delancey was the fourth feature film directed by Joan Micklin Silver, and her second film about the New York Jewish-American experience. Silver had moved to New York from Cleveland, but after writing and directing several award-winning short films she was unable to make the leap to features. Instead, her husband raised money and produced his wife's feature directing debut, Hester Street (1975), about Jewish immigrants living in the lower east side in the last years of the nineteenth century. The indie film was well-received, and Joan Micklin Silver's career was launched.
Like all of Silver's films, Crossing Delancey is perfectly cast with a vibrant mix of moderately well-known actors and unfamiliar ones, who all inhabit their roles. The daughter of a theater director and an actress, Amy Irving made her film debut in 1976's Carrie and was nominated for an Academy Award® as best supporting actress for Yentl (1983). Her performance in Crossing Delancey earned Irving a Golden Globe nomination as best actress. Peter Riegert's easy charm and everyman looks make him ideal as Izzy's unlikely Prince Charming.
The grandmother in Crossing Delancey could have been the offspring of the main characters in Silver's Hester Street. She is played by Reizl Bozyk, a Polish-born veteran of the Yiddish stage, making a delightful film debut at the age of seventy-three. Bozyk had been performing since the age of five in Europe, and she and her husband were touring in Argentina when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939. The family made their way to New York, where they worked for decades in Yiddish theater. Bozyk did not play her first stage role in English until after she appeared in Crossing Delancey. She never made another film, but continued to work on stage until shortly before her death in 1993.
Sylvia Miles had received two supporting actress Oscar nominations for playing aging, hard-edged, sexually-voracious women in Midnight Cowboy (1969) and Farewell My Lovely (1975). In Crossing Delancey, as a motormouth Jewish matchmaker in cahoots with Bubbie, Miles took off her girdle and delivered a performance that's pure fun. Look for David Hyde Pierce (billed as "David Pierce"), who later played Niles Crane on the television series Frazier, as Izzy's co-worker, and Suzzy Roche of the musical group the Roches as Izzy's friend Marilyn, whom she fixes up with Sam on a blind date. The Roches also contributed several songs to the soundtrack.
While a few critics found Crossing Delancey a formulaic rom-com, others liked the film's sense of place and the charm of the characters. Sheila Benson of the Los Angeles Times called it "at once hip and romantic; wittily sophisticated and unabashedly affectionate; a love poem to all of New York." In the New York Times, Janet Maslin wrote that the film managed to "combine a down-to-earth, contemporary outlook with the dreaminess of a fairy tale."
Director: Joan Micklin Silver
Producer: Raphael Silver, Michael Nozik
Screenplay: Susan Sandler, based on her play
Cinematography: Theo Van de Sande
Editor: Rick Shaine
Costume Design: Rita Ryack
Art Direction: Dan Leigh, Leslie E. Rollins
Music: Paul Chihara, additional songs by the Roches
Principal Cast: Amy Irving (Isabelle Grossman), Peter Riegert (Sam Posner), Jeroen Krabbe (Anton Maes), Reizl Bozyk (Bubbie), Sylvia Miles (Hannah Mandelbaum), George Martin (Lionel), John Bedford Lloyd (Nick), Amy Wright (Ricky), Fay Grant (Candyce), Suzzy Roche (Marilyn), Deborah Offner (Karen)
97 minutes
by Margarita Landazuri
Crossing Delancey
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer August 24, 1988
Released in United States August 31, 1988
Released in United States on Video April 12, 1989
Released in United States 1988
Released in United States September 16, 1988
Released in United States November 12, 1988
Released in United States April 1998
Shown at Montreal World Film Festival August 24-September 4, 1988.
Shown at Boston Film Festival September 16, 1988.
Shown at London Film Festival November 12, 1988.
Shown at USA Film Festival in Dallas April 16-23, 1998.
Began shooting October 12, 1987.
Todd-AO
Released in United States August 31, 1988 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States on Video April 12, 1989
Released in United States 1988 (Shown at Montreal World Film Festival August 24-September 4, 1988.)
Released in United States September 16, 1988 (Shown at Boston Film Festival September 16, 1988.)
Released in United States November 12, 1988 (Shown at London Film Festival November 12, 1988.)
Released in United States April 1998 (Shown at USA Film Festival in Dallas April 16-23, 1998.)
Released in United States Summer August 24, 1988