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Film/Theatre> DirectorsClement
Virgo
Born in Jamaica, Clement
moved to Canada when he was 11. He developed his considerable skills at
the Canadian Film Centre for Advanced Film Studies, which was founded
by Norman Jewison. He is
active in the Toronto film community as a past board member of L.I.F.T.
and the Black Film and Video Network. "Love Come Down" won
3 Genie Awards including Best Supporting Actor. From Rude he moved
carefully and successfully into episodic television. He picked-up a Gemini
Award nomination for Best Direction in a Dramatic Series for his episode
of the CBC series, Side Effects. Virgo's The Planet of Junior Brown,
although produced as a made-for-television movie, had its theatrical premier
at the Toronto International Film Festival and went on to win Best Feature
Film at the Urban World Film Festival, America's foremost black film event,
and Best Screenplay at the Monte Carlo International Television Festival.
Back in Canada, The Planet of Junior Brown won Clement Virgo and his co-writer,
Cameron Bailey, a Gemini nomination. Other Works by Virgo:
Cameron
Bailey ttp://www.showcase.ca/movies/hosts_bio_cam.asp Cameron Bailey is a Toronto based writer, broadcaster and film programmer. Since 1998, Cameron has co-hosted The Showcase Revue…The Planet of Junior Brown, co-written by Cameron and Clement Virgo, was named Best Picture at the 1998 Urbanworld Film Festival in New York, and was nominated for a Gemini Award. Currently, Cameron's second screenplay, old school, is in development. Cameron also hosts IFC Filmmaker, a series of one hour episodes spotlighting the unpredictable process of filmmaking from happy accidents to unforeseen causalities, on the Independent Film Channel. Other works by Cameron Bailey:
Dionne Brand http://www.wmm.com/Catalog/_makers/fm25.htm http://voices.cla.umn.edu/authors/DionneBrand.html Dionne Brand was born in Guayguayare, Trinidad. After graduating from Naparima Girls' High School in 1970, she moved to Canada, where she has lived ever since. She attended the University of Toronto, earning a B.A. in English and Philosophy. She earned an M.A. in the Philosophy of Education from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. She taught English Literature and Creative Writing at Guelph, York and Toronto universities. She taught poetry writing at West Coast Women and Words Summer School in Vancouver and at the Humber School of Writing in Toronto. She was a Writer in Residence both at the University of Toronto and at the Halifax City Regional Library. Brand has strong political views, expressing them in her books, films, and social activism. She has been a member of the Communist Party of Canada and remains committed to Marxist ideas, particularly to the principles of equal distribution of the world's wealth. Michelle
Mohabeer Michelle
Mohabeer is a Guyana born, Toronto based multi-award winning independent
Film Director, Screenwriter, Film Instructor at Ryerson University and
Curator. She holds an MFA in Film Production from YORK University (Toronto)
and an honours BA in Film Theory & Criticism from Carleton University.
Her films Exposure, Parkdale Portraits, Coconut/Cane
& Cutlass, Two/Doh, and Child-Play have received
acclaim at festivals across North America, Latin America, Europe, Japan,
Australia, South Africa, India and the Caribbean. She was recently awarded
a Canada Council grant to complete the feature film script Chameleons.
Michelle was also profiled in two recent publications FILM FATALES:
Independent Women Directors, edited by Judith Redding & Victoria
Brownworth and her work was featured in THE BENT LENS: A World Guide
to Gay/Lesbian Film (Australia Catalogue Company). Other Works by Michelle Mohabeer:
Nadine
Valcin Nadine Valcin is the director of Black, Bold and Beautiful: Black Women’s Hair. She came to the world of film and television after obtaining a bachelor of Architecture from McGill University. She has since worked in a variety of capacities in the industry, from assistant editor to on-air promotions producer with research, writing and other credits along the way. She has experience in both film and television with organizations such as the National Film Board, CBC and TVOntario’s French language network, TFO. Her first short film Independent Modulations has been broadcast on CBC’s Canadian Reflections and screened at numerous festivals. She is currently developing a short historical drama entitled Angelique. (03/00) ©
York University 2002 |