Restaurant kitchens are a pressurized stew of brutal hours, high stress and sleep deprivation. Acting out goes with the territory and anyone lower in the hierarchy is fair game. But the familiar macho posturing of celebrity chefs has reached a tipping point.
Now with an influx of women at the helm of restaurants, and a younger generation unwilling to submit to the brutal conditions once considered the norm, the rules of “kitchen culture” as we know it are being rewritten.
The Heat takes viewers behind-the-scenes to meet pioneers who broke through the glass ceiling, including Anne Sophie Pic of Maison Pic in Valence, France – the only three-Michelin starred female chef in France and one of only a handful in the world, she has been dubbed “the “Queen of French Cuisine”; Angela Hartnett of Murano in London – a beloved UK star and two-Michelin starred chef who survived Gordon Ramsay’s kitchens to become his first female protége; Iron Chef and Top Chef Master Anita Lo, – she led the first all female team to beat an Iron Chef in the U.S. and closes her beloved Greenwich Village restaurant Annisa, after 17 years.
We’ll also meet the hungry talents of a new generation, including award-winning chef and media darling Amanda Cohen of the trendy vegetarian restaurant, Dirt Candy in New York’s Lower East Side; rising star Victoria Blamey, who received critical accolades for her culinary skills at the famed Greenwich Village Chumley’s in New York; Toronto favourite Suzanne Barr of Saturday Dinette, The Gladstone and Kid Chocolate, who is diversifying kitchens one restaurant at a time; renegade Toronto chef Charlotte Langley, who has done away with traditional brick and mortar to host elaborate dinners off the grid, as well as Toronto writer/former line cook Ivy Knight on why she left the industry.
From grass roots to haute cuisine, The Heat is a compelling and illuminating journey into the culinary world.
Maya Gallus is an award winning filmmaker based in Toronto. Her most recent documentary, The Heat: A Kitchen (R)evolution launched the Berlinale Culinary Cinema Programme (2019) as well as the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Film Festival (2018). In 2017, she was honoured with a 'Focus On' mid-career retrospective, featuring six of her films, at the Hot Docs Film Festival. Her work has screened internationally, including the Toronto International Film Festival, Montreal World Film Festival, Berlinale, San Sebastian Film Festival, Sheffield Doc Fest, Seoul International Women’s Film Festival, Singapore International Film Festival, This Human World and Lady Fest (UK), among others. Her films have also screened theatrically in Canada, the U.S. and Japan. She formed Red Queen Productions, in 2003, with her partner, Justine Pimlott, to produce provocative, art house documentaries about women, popular culture, queer issues and the arts. Their work has been featured in The Guardian (UK), and the magazines: Ms., Curve, Bust, Salon, Now Magazine, POV, Xtra and The Walrus. Notable films include the award winning docu-fictions, The Mystery of Mazo de la Roche and Elizabeth Smart: On The Side of the Angels, as well as the feature length documentaries The Heat: A Kitchen Revolution, Dish-Women, Waitressing & the Art of Service, Girl Inside, and Erotica: A Journey Into Female Sexuality.