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  1. Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? is a 1983 American comedy film directed by Henry Jaglom. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival. The film takes place in and was filmed in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It was released to mixed reviews.

  2. Can she bake a cherry pie, Billy Boy, Billy Boy? Can she bake a cherry pie, Charming Billy? She can bake a cherry pie, quick as a cat can wink her eye But she's a young thing...

  3. Feb 23, 1984 · Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?: Directed by Henry Jaglom. With Michael Emil, Karen Black, Michael Margotta, Martin Harvey Friedberg. Zee is walking up and down Manhattan streets, talking to herself and to the husband who has just left her. At a sidewalk café she runs into Eli.

    • (402)
    • Comedy, Romance
    • Henry Jaglom
    • 1984-02-23
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Billy_BoyBilly Boy - Wikipedia

    A line from the song was used as the title for Henry Jaglom's 1983 film Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?, which concerns a middle-aged New York City musician who, after being dumped by her husband, develops a relationship with a middle-aged divorced social worker.

  5. A comedy about two rambling, goofy people who fall into each other's lives and flail about in New York. Karen Black plays a woman who conducts a manic monologue on a Broadway sidewalk, while Michael Emil plays a man who takes his pulse before, during and after sex.

  6. Synopsis. In New York City, a woman named Zee (Karen Black) tries in vain to stop her husband, Willy (Paul Williams), from leaving her. In a business office, Eli (Michael Emil), a divorced middle-aged man, advises his friend and co-worker, Mort (Martin Harvey Friedberg), to have a more positive attitude if he wants to attract women.

  7. Oct 10, 2020 · "In the rural America of the past, a woman's reputation was sometimes made by her cherry pie, her chocolate layer cake, or her biscuits. As America modernized and as women left the home, entered the paid labor force, and battled their way to success in the professions, mastery of cooking remained an accepted sign that a woman took her gendered ...