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Ruhi Hamid | |
---|---|
Born | Mwanza, Tanzania]] |
Alma mater | Middlesex Polytechnic; Royal College of Art |
Occupation | Filmmaker |
Notable work | The Rock Star and the Mullahs (2003) Women, Weddings, War and Me (2010) |
Partner | Misha Maltsev |
Awards | Rory Peck Award |
Ruhi Hamid is a British filmmaker, born in Tanzania of Asian origin, who has made award-winning documentaries for the BBC, Channel 4, Al Jazeera International, and other UK, US and European broadcasters. Her films have covered international stories — in Africa, Asia, Europe, South America, the USA, and the Middle East — dealing with social and political issues about women religion, poverty, health, and human rights. [1] A graduate of London's Royal College of Art, she is also a graphic designer. [2]
Ruhi Hamid was born in Mwanza, Tanzania, to Indian Muslim parents, [3] and moved to England at the age of 12. [2] After earning a BA in Information Graphics from Middlesex Polytechnic in 1980, she attended London's Royal College of Art, and on graduating worked as a graphic designer: in the Netherlands with the influential Studio Dumbar, [2] in Zimbabwe as part of a collective of young black designers and photographers, the Maviyane Project, and in London at the BBC for several years. [4] [5]
She began her filmmaking career with the BBC's Community Programme Unit on the BAFTA award-winning series Video Diaries and Video Nation , [6] before leaving in May 2000 to work as a freelance producer/director. [7] For her debut as a freelance, she gained unprecedented access to the Pakistani criminal courts to make the three-part Channel 4 series Lahore Law (2002), which was nominated for a Grierson Award. [7] Specialising as a solo director/camerawoman, often at significant personal risk, [8] she went on to make other well regarded films for the BBC, Channel 4, Arte and Al Jazeera International, including Women and Islam (2004), The Rockstar and the Mullahs (2003), [4] and Women, Weddings, War and Me (featuring Nelufar Hedayat, 2010). [9] [10] Hamid has also collaborated with prominent broadcasters including Jonathan Dimbleby and BBC Three's Reggie Yates. [11]
Her films have been described as "informative journeys into the world of people and their cultures", [5] her projects having included documentaries about the Hmong people trapped in the jungle of Laos [12] (she filmed the first ever footage of their plight and went on to campaign on their behalf at the United Nations, the US State Department and at the EU Commission in Brussels), [8] [13] farmers in China, New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, [3] gang crime and violence in Cape Flats, South Africa, [6] and At the Epicentre, a film on the aftermath of the Asian tsunami in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, that won the Rory Peck Award in 2005. [4] [14] She has also campaigned through video for greater awareness of people with HIV/AIDS in rural India. [3]
According to ESPN,
"Hamid's empathy and gift for understanding the ordinary person has enabled her to gain access to peoples, cultures and institutions around the world, including the Amazonian Indians, Shamans in the Siberian forests, refugees in Uganda, women in Afghanistan and the British Foreign & Commonwealth office in Pakistan. Hamid is able to work with children and old people alike and turn her skills to more populist programmes working with rock stars, untried and professional presenters and celebrities like Michael Palin on a film about transport, explorer Benedict Allen, newscaster Samira Ahmed, the food writer and broadcaster Stefan Gates and more recently a film in a three-part series on Africa with Jonathan Dimbleby.
Hamid's interest lies primarily in telling intimate human stories of people caught up in complex political or social conditions in our world today. She has a talent for gaining the trust and collaboration of those sensitive and suspicious of the media.... Her documentaries are always character driven with strong narratives." [7]
Together with her partner Misha Maltsev, also a film and music professional, she runs Partisan Films. [15] [4]
Year | Title | Duration |
---|---|---|
2015 | Reggie Yates: Race Riots USA | (60 mins) [16] |
2015 | Mexico's Baby Business, Unreported World | (60 mins) [17] |
2015 | Reggie Yates' Extreme Russia: Teen Model Factory | (60 mins) [18] |
2014 | Pharmageddon | (60 mins) |
2013 | Reggie Yates's Extreme South Africa: Knife Crime ER | (55 mins) [19] |
2013 | Return to Somalia: Aliya's Story | (30 mins) |
2013 | L'Arbitre | (08 mins) |
2012 | An African Journey with Jonathan Dimbleby | (60 mins) [20] |
2011 | Breaking into Britain, Panorama | (60 mins) [21] |
2010 | Women, Weddings, War and Me | (60 mins) |
2010 | Child Slavery | |
2007 | Inside a Shariah Court | (59 mins) |
2006 | The Hurricane That Shook America | |
2006 | The Governor, Back to School & Looking Good | |
2005 | At the Epicentre - Post Tsunami Aceh' ' | (50 mins) |
2005 | Living Positive | |
2005 | It's My Country Too: Muslim Americans | (58 mins) [22] |
2004 | Frontlines Laos | (30 mins) [23] |
2004 | Women and Islam: Islam Unveiled | (88 mins) [24] |
2003 | The Rock Star and the Mullahs | (56 mins) [25] [26] |
2000 | Lahore Law: A Suitable Husband, Episode 3 | (50 mins) |
2000 | Lahore Law: Illicit Affair, Episode 2 | (50 mins) |
2000 | Lahore Law: Murder at the Shrine, Episode 1 | (50 mins) |
1999 | The Bones of Colonel Fawcett | |
The Hmong people are an indigenous group in East and Southeast Asia. In China, the Hmong people are classified as a sub-group of the Miao people. The modern Hmong reside mainly in Southwest China and countries in Southeast Asia such as Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, and Myanmar. There is also a large diasporic community in the United States of more than 300,000. The Hmong diaspora has smaller communities in Australia and South America.
Mira Nair is an Indian-American filmmaker based in New York City. Her production company, Mirabai Films, specializes in films for international audiences on Indian society, whether in the economic, social or cultural spheres. Among her best known films are Mississippi Masala, The Namesake, the Golden Lion–winning Monsoon Wedding, and Salaam Bombay!, which received nominations for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language.
Rory Elizabeth Katherine Kennedy is an American documentary filmmaker. Kennedy has made documentary films that center on social issues such as addiction, her opposition to nuclear power, the treatment of prisoners-of-war, and the politics of the Mexican border fence. She is the youngest child of U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Ethel Skakel.
Deeyah Khan is a Norwegian documentary film director and human rights activist of Punjabi/Pashtun descent. Deeyah is a two-time Emmy Award winner, two time Peabody Award winner, a BAFTA winner and has received the Royal Television Society award for Best Factual Director. She has made seven documentaries to date, all have been shown on ITV in the UK as part of its Exposure series.
Reginald Yates is a British television presenter, actor, writer and director with a career spanning three decades on screen as an actor, television presenter and radio DJ. Yates played Leo Jones in Doctor Who and has worked at the BBC in radio and television–presenting various shows for BBC Radio 1 for a decade as well as hosting the BBC One singing show The Voice UK, hosting the first two series with Holly Willoughby.
Sean Langan is a British journalist and documentary film-maker. Langan works in dangerous and volatile situations; including environments noted for war, conflict and civil unrest. In 2008 he was kidnapped along with his translator while filming in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region. They were freed three months later after Langan's family had negotiated their release.
Jennifer Ann Barraclough OBE is a British film and television producer. Much of her work is in television documentaries. She has also been involved in a number of trusts and charities. They include the Grierson Trust and LEPRA and the Razumovsky Ensemble of which she is a Trustee.
McLibel is a British documentary film directed by Franny Armstrong and Ken Loach for Spanner Films about the McLibel case. The film was first completed in 1997 as a 52-minute television version after the conclusion of the original McLibel trial. It was then extended with new footage to 85-minute feature length in 2005, after the McLibel defendants took their case to the European Court of Human Rights.
Henry Vaughan Lockhart Smith is an English restaurateur, sustainable farmer, and freelance video journalist. He ran the freelance agency Frontline News TV and founded the Frontline Club in London. The Guardian has described him as "a former army officer, journalist adventurer and rightwing libertarian."
The Rory Peck Award is an award given to freelance camera operators who have risked their lives to report on newsworthy events. It was set up in 1995 and is named after the Northern Irish freelance cameraman Rory Peck, who was killed while reporting on the siege of the Moscow White House in 1993. The award is organised by The Rory Peck Trust. Both were set up in 1995 by Peck's widow Juliet Peck and his friend John Gunston, in order to provide support and help to freelancers. The Rory Peck Trust is now an internationally recognized organization that supports freelancers' rights and enables them to work safely.
Tara Sutton is a Canadian journalist and filmmaker whose work in conflict zones has received many awards. She was one of the first international television correspondents to both produce and shoot their own reports and is a pioneer in the field of "video journalism".
The Rock Star and the Mullahs is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ruhi Hamid and Angus MacQueen and by producer Pamela Friedman. The film follows the journey of the South Asian rock music band Junoon and addresses music in Islam. The film won the "Outstanding story on South Asia - Broadcast" award at the South Asian Journalists Association Awards.
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It's My Country Too: Muslim Americans is a 2005 documentary film directed by Clifford Bestall and produced by Ruhi Hamid. The film follows the journey of the South Asian rock music band Junoon during their tours to America and the lives of Salman Ahmad and Muslims in the United States, and the Muslims for Bush pressure group.
Nelufar Hedayat is a British journalist and presenter who hosts the podcast Course Correction and is the correspondent for Doha Debates. She has worked in television across the BBC, as well as on Channel 4, Netflix, Fusion and The Guardian newspaper, covering breaking news, live events and in-depth investigations in some of the world's most dangerous places. Her work often focuses on cultural upheaval experienced by women, children, and families during a conflict, especially in her native Afghanistan.
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Jane Hamilton-Merritt is a retired college professor, photojournalist, author, and animal rights and animal husbandry advocate. She resides in Redding, Connecticut. In 1999, she was inducted into the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame. Some of her work has focused on breeding and raising Llamas and Alpaca.
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