Feature Presentation:
"What they must see...
Women filmmakers of Africa and the African Diaspora are challenging old cinematic prescriptions and are using their art to erect new visions of their people and the world. Beginning with Tressie Saunders' A Woman's Error (1922), Black women directors have had a long, slow path to the director's chair. Yet their evocative work manages to satisfy and challenge all at once.
Today, more and more Africana women are getting into the field of filmmaking and there are now even a few, such as Cheryl Dunye, that have emerged on the Hollywood scene. While it yet remains only a handful of women of color that have broken through the racial barriers in Hollywood, many from Africa and here in the United States have been able to carve out successful careers in filmmaking.
...sustains us all."
The BFC/A salutes the women and the continuing tradition:
Tsitsi Dangarembga (Zimbabwe)
Tsitsi Dangarembga was born in
the town of Mutoko, Zimbabwe in 1959. She received her education in England at
Cambridge University, studying medicine. After college she went back to Zimbabwe
where she became a member of the theater group, "Zambuko." Dangarembga made her
debut as a writer in the play, "She no Longer Weeps" when she was 28 years old.
She is also the author of Nervous Conditions, which
was the first novel to be published by a black Zimbabwean woman in English.
Filmography:
Everyone's Child (1996)
For more on Tsitsi Dangarembga:
Biography:
Postcolonial Studies at Emory University.
Pegasos biography

Julie Dash is originally from New
York City and has been making films since 1973. She became well known through
her feature film, Daughters of the Dust (1991), which
won the Best Cinematography Award at the 1991 Sundance Film Festival. Within the
past year Julie Dash has completed a Grammy-nominated video and a segment for
HBO. She is a former member of the American Film institute, and is the first
African American woman to have a full-length general theatrical release.
Filmography:
Working Models of Success (1973)
Diary of an African Nun (1977)
Four Women (1977)
Illusions (1982)
Daughters of the Dust (1991)
Praise House (1991)
Breaths (1994) [Sweet Honey in the Rock music video]
Give Me One Reason (1996) [Tracy Chapman music video]
Sax Cantor Riff from SUBWAYStories:
Tales from the Underground (1997)
Funny Valentines (1999)
Incognito (1999)
Love Song (2000)
The Rosa Parks Story (2002)
For more on Julie Dash:
Geechee Girls Multimedia
African American Literature Book
Club

Born in 1966, Cheryl Dunye is a
native of Liberia. She received her BA from Temple University, and her MFA from
Rutgers University's Mason Gross school of the Arts. Dunye created the first
African American lesbian feature film, The Watermelon
Woman (1996). Currently she teaches in the department of film and media
arts at Temple University.
Filmography:
Wild Thing: A Poem by Sapphire (1989)
Janine (1990)
She Don't Fade (1991)
Vanilla Sex (1992)
Untitled Portrait (1993)
The Potluck and the Passion (1993)
Greetings from Africa (1994)
The Watermelon Woman (1996)
Stranger Inside (2001)
My Baby's Daddy (2004)
For more on Cheryl Dunye:
CherylDunye.com
BlackCulturalStudies.org

Born in 1943 in Fad Jal,
Senegal, Safi Faye was the first sub-Saharan African woman to direct a feature
film, Kaddu Beykat. She was educated in Senegal, where
she received her teacher's certificate at Rufisque normal school. Faye's
ethnographic films brought her international acclaim and earned her several
awards at the Berlin International Film Festivals in 1976 and 1979 for Kaddu Beykat and Fad'jal,
respectively. Safi Faye currently lives in Paris.
Filmography:
La Passante (1972)
Kaddu Beykat (aka Letter from My
Village, 1975)
Fad'jal (aka Come and Work, 1979)
Goob Na Nu (aka The Harvest Is
In, 1979)
Many Say Yay (aka I, Your
Mother, 1980)
Les ames au soleil (aka Souls Under
the Sun, 1981)
Selbe et tant d'autres (aka One and
So Many Others, 1982)
Ambassades nourriciers (aka Cultural Embassies, 1984)
Mossane (1996)
For more on Safi Faye:
Biographical
information in the Comtemporary Africa Database
Biography on
bookrags.com

Salem Mekuria was born in
Addis Abeba, Ethiopia and later moved to the United States for her college
education in Minnesota. She is an independent documentary filmmaker focusing on
her native Ethiopia and African and African American women. Currently, Mekuria
lives in Boston and is an associate professor at Wellesley College.
Filmography:
Our Place in the Sun (1988)
As I Remember It: A Portrait of Dorothy West (1991)
Sidet: Forced Exile (1991)
Ye Wonz Maibel (1995)
For more on Salem Mekuria:
Wellesley College
Biographical and film
information by Women Make Movies

Soraya Mire was born in 1961 in
Somalia. Her film, Fire Eyes (1994), based on female
genital mutilation takes her own personal experience along with others to voice
the truth about this practice. She also created this film in hopes of educating
others about the practice, and protecting young children.
Filmography:
Fire Eyes (1994)
For more on Soraya Mire:
Biographical
information in the Contemporary African Database
Review of Fire Eyes

A native of Burkina Faso,
Fanta Régina Nacro is a graduate of INAFEC (African Institute for
Cinematographic Studies) with a degree in audiovisual science and techniques.
She became the first Burkinabe woman to direct a dramatic film, Un certain matin, in 1991. Nacro currently resides in
Paris where she is furthering her studies in the art of filmmaking.
Filmography:
Un certain matin (1991)
Puk Nini (1996)
Le Truc de Konaté (1998)
Bintou (2001) [released in USA as A
Close-Up on Bintou on Mama Africa (2002)]
Iron Will (2001) [from Scenarios
from the Sahel]
Relou (2000) [released as segment of Pas d'histoires! (2001)]
A Ring on her Finger (2001) [from Scenarios from the Sahel]
The Voice of Reason (2001) [from Scenarios from the Sahel]
For more on Fanta Régina Nacro:
Interview - "A condom
tree in Burkina Faso"
Biographical
information in the Contemporary African Database

South African writer,
author, playwright, and poet Zulfah Otto-Sallies has only recently begun her
career in filmmaking with her popular film Raya
(2001). Among her literary accomplishments are her first short story "A Better
Life for Moms," which was published in 1995, and her 1997 book, Diekie Vannie Bo-Kaap.
Filmography:
Do you want to build a house? (1999)
Framed (1999)
From Zambian Soil (1999)
Skills Revolution for the Nation (1999)
Whispers from the Cape Flats (1999)
Raya (2001) [released in USA as a segment of Mama Africa (2002)]
For more on Zulfah Otto-Sallies::
Biographical
information in the Contemporary African Database

Born on the French Caribbean
island Martinique in 1958, Euzhan Palcy brought with her a perspective unique to
Hollywood. Her films have been acclaimed for their focus on often overlooked
social and cultural issues. In 1989, she became the first black woman to direct
a mainstream Hollywood film, A Dry White Season.
Filmography:
The Messenger (1975)
The Devil's Workshop (1982)
Sugar Cane Alley (1983)
A Dry White Season (1989)
"Hassane" from How Are the Kids? (1990)
Siméon (1992)
Aimé Césaire: A Voice for History (1994)
Ruby Bridges (1998)
The Killing Yard (2001)
For more on Euzhan Palcy:
Official Website of Euzhan Palcy
Profile on Martinique.org

Michelle Parkerson is from
Washington, D.C. and is currently an assistant professor at Temple University in
the department of film and media arts. Parkerson's pioneering work as a writer,
filmmaker, performance artist, and scholar has been widely acclaimed. Her films
have appeared on PBS, BET, and the Learning Channel and have been shown at
festivals around the world.
Filmography:
Sojourn (1973)
But Then She's Betty Carter (1980)
Storme: Lady of the Jewel Box (1991)
A Litany for Survival: The Life and Work of Audre
Lorde (1995)
14th Street Freestyle: "68-2-98" (1998) [producer]
For more on Michelle Parkerson:
Biography on FemmeNoir
Video of
speech at University of Maryland

Monique Mbeka Phoba was born in
Congo and currently lives in France. Monique has a degree in economic and
international studies from Hec Saint Louis in Belgium and has worked as a
journalist for radio and newspapers. The areas she specializes in include
cultural, social, and historical issues concerning Africa.
Filmography:
Revue en Vrac (1991)
Rentrer? (1993)
Deux petits tours et puis s'en vont... (1997)
Un rêve d'indépendance (1998)
Anna from Benin (2000)
A Bewitched Life! (2004)
For more on Monique Mbeka Phoba:
Biographical
information in the Contemporary African Database
Biographical and film
information by Women Make Movies
More Feature Presentations:
- William Greaves (January/February 2003)
- Oscar Micheaux (March/April 2003)
- Camille Billops (Summer/Fall 2003)
- African American Oscar Winners (February 2004)
- Race Movies (Fall 2005 - Spring 2006)