Ingrid Sinclair

Ingrid Sinclair is a British-Zimbabwean director, screenwriter and producer best known for being an important filmmaker of the African Renaissance. She is internationally recognized for her 1996 film, Flame, a drama about the Zimbabwe War of Liberation and her documentaries about Zimbabwe. Flame was chosen for the Director's Fortnight section at the Cannes Film Festival and the Nestor Almendros Award at the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in New York City.

Ingrid Sinclair
Born1948 (1948) (age 73)
Citizenship
Occupation
  • Director
  • screenwriter
  • producer
Known forFlame
Spouse(s)Simon Bright

Biography

Ingrid Sinclar was born in Rhodesia in 1948. She was raised in Great Britain where she studied Medicine and Literature.[2] Sinclair moved to Zimbabwe in 1985 after marrying filmmaker and producer Simon Bright. Sinclair and Bright were actively involved with the Zimbabwe Liberation Movement and later became citizens of Zimbabwe.[3] Sinclair wrote and directed a variety of short films and documentaries in the late eighties and early nineties, exploring themes of equality, culture, history, and the landscape of Zimbabwe.[4] She is widely considered to be a filmmaker of the African Renaissance[5]

The political situation in Zimbabwe changed dramatically in 2001 with the land reform program. During this time period, "not only the white farmers were purged, but also other notable white people still working in Zimbabwe. It was also during this time that the idealogical effort of the regime was intensified, fueling racial hostility". [6]

In 2003, Sinclair and Bright left Zimbabwe and moved to Bristol where they established Afrika Eye Film Festival and continue to work in film production.[7]

Selected filmography

Flame (1996)

Flame is Sinclair's first full-length feature film. It tells the story of two women who join the Zimbabwean Liberation Army to fight for Zimbabwe self-rule.[8] It is the first film to chronicle Zimbabwe's liberation struggle. "It is perhaps the most controversial film ever made in Africa --certainly the only one to be seized by the police during editing on the grounds it was subversive and pornographic. Sinclair's tribute to women fighters in the Zimbabwean liberation struggle aroused the ire of war veterans and the military because it revealed officers sometimes used female recruits as "comfort women." Flame's real crime may have been that it exposed not just past abuses but continuing divisions within Zimbabwean society."[9]

The film was later returned to producers after a global campaign of support. The film eventually passed Zimbabwe censors and became the most successful film of the year in Zimbabwe. Flame was selected for the Director's Fortnight section at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival. The film won numerous awards worldwide including Grand Prize at the Annonay International Film Festival in France, the jury award for best film at the 1998 International Women's Film Festival in Turenne, and the Nestor Alemendros award at the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in New York[10][11]

Tides of Gold (1998)

The film Tides of Gold (1998) is a documentary which illustrates the history of the 1000-year-old trading network which dominated southern and eastern Africa, linking the region to distant places including China and Indonesia.[4]

Riches (2002)

Riches is a short film which tells the story of a black teacher and her son from apartheid South Africa who move to an isolated village in Zimbabwe and the challenges they encounter.[4]

Africa is a Woman's Name' (2009)

Africa is a Woman's Name is a trilogy of three dramas about of the lives of three women in three African countries directed by three African women. "Amai Rose, a Zimbabwean housewife and businesswoman, Phuti Ragophala, a dedicated school principal in one of South Africa’s poorest communities, and Njoki Ndung’u, a human rights attorney and member of Kenya’s parliament, tell their individual stories, reflecting upon their own achievements and failures as well as needed initiatives for women and children in their respective societies". The film was co-directed with Wanjiru Kinyanjui from Zimbabwe and Bridget Pickering from South Africa.[12]

Year Film Role Notes
2011 Robert Mugabee... What Happened? Screenwriter Nominate Best Documentary, South African Film and Television Awards
2009 Africa is a Woman's Name Director and screenwriter Segment Amie Rosie
2002 Mama Africa Director Segment Riches
2001 Riches Director Milan Venice Prize: African Film Festival Milan
1998 Tides of Gold Director Winner Best Documentary Film Southern African Film Festival
1996 Flame Director and screenwriter Winner Human Rights Watch International Film Festival (1997)
Golden Camera Nominee Cannes Film Festival 1996
1991 Bird from Another World (short) Director Documentary, Winner African Film Festival
1989 Limpopo Line Co-Director with Simon Bright Documentary

References

  1. "Ingrid Sinclair". International Film Festival Rotterdam. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  2. "Ingrid Sinclair". Women Make Movies. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  3. Ouzgane, Lahoucine (2011). Men in Africa Film & Fiction. James Currwy. p. 192. ISBN 9781847015211.
  4. "Flame Ingrid Sinclair". African Film Festival. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  5. Kelly, Gabrielle; Robson, Cheryl (2014). Celluloid Ceiling Women Film Directors Breaking Through. Supernoval Books. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-956632-90-6.
  6. Piotrowska, Agnieszka (2016). Black and White: Cinema, politics and the arts in Zimbabwe. Routledge. p. 150. ISBN 978-1138817869.
  7. "Ingrid Sinclair". Africa Eye Film Festival. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  8. "Ingrid Sinclair Zimbabwe Director and Filmmaker". Zimbabwe Today. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  9. "Flame". California Newsreel. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  10. "Flame Awards". IMDB. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  11. "Flame Notes for Viewing the film". California newsreel. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  12. "Africa is a Woman's Name". Women Make Movies. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
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