Satire American Fiction wins TIFF's People's Choice prize - Action News
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Entertainment

Satire American Fiction wins TIFF's People's Choice prize

Cord Jefferson's American Fictionhas won the People's Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Cord Jefferson's directorial debut mocks racial clichs, stereotypes

Two people walk in a farmer's field.
Actors Erika Alexander, left, and Jeffrey Wright are shown in a scene from American Fiction, which won the People's Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sunday. (Claire Folger/MGM-Orion Releasing/The Associated Press)

Cord Jefferson's American Fictionhas won the People's Choice Awardat the Toronto International Film Festival.

The satire about race and personal agency was announced as the winner during a TIFF awards breakfast on Sunday morning, concluding 11 days of in-person film screenings and celebrations.

The film stars Jeffrey Wright as an African-American novelist grappling with an industry that is limiting his work to trauma and poverty narratives.

It's anadaptation of Percival Everett's bookErasure poking fun at the publishing industry'scommodification of marginalized voices.

A frustrated writer struggling to attract publishers for his latest work pens a pseudonymous novel embodying every Black clichand stereotype he can imagine. When it becomes a hit, he must reckon with a monster of his own making.

Known for his Emmy Award-winning television work, Jefferson's directorial debut has been described by TIFF as "a wildly entertaining sendup of our hunger for authenticity," and a timely reflection on the fictions we tell ourselves about race, progress and community.

The People's Choice Award, determined through online voting, is frequently considered a harbinger of success at the Academy Awards. Last year's winner was Steven Spielberg's coming-of-age ode to cinema, The Fabelmans.

Meanwhile, the People's Choice documentary award went to Mr. Dressup: The Magic of Make-Believe,about beloved children's performer Ernie Coombs, directed by Robert McCallum.

With files from CBC Books