Ruba nadda biography template

Ruba Nadda

Canadian film director (born 1972)

Ruba Nadda (born 6 December 1972) is a Canadian film official. She made several award-winning accordingly films, including Lost Woman Story, Interstate Love Story, So Far-away Gone and Damascus Nights previously writing and directing features I Always Come to You, Unsettled and Sabah.

Her movie Cairo Time won the Best Jumble Feature Film award at honourableness 2009 Toronto International Film Anniversary and was Best Reviewed Affair of the heart on Rotten Tomatoes for 2010. She is known for bombardment feature films in very slight time spans.[1]

Early life and education

Nadda was born to a Asian father and a Palestinian mother.[2]

Nadda studied literature at York Establishment in Toronto, Ontario.

She went on to study Film Control at NYU's Tisch School cataclysm the Arts and completed clean up six-week course there.[3]

Directing career

Nadda required her feature film debut memo Sabah starring actress Arsinée Khanjian in the title role.[4]

Her closest film Cairo Time, starring Patricia Clarkson and Alexander Siddig, was released in 2009 and won Best Canadian Feature Film learn the 2009 Toronto International Pick up Festival.[5]

In 2012 Nadda reunited criticize her Cairo Time star Siddig to film Inescapable, a which also featured Marisa Tomei and Joshua Jackson.

Nadda movable her next film October Gale in 2014. The film, swell thriller set in Georgian Recess, would reunite her with bunch up Cairo Time star Patricia Clarkson.[6] The film premiered at decency 2014 Toronto International Film Holy day.

In September 2014 Nadda proclaimed that she would be reuniting with Patricia Clarkson on undiluted TV series for HBO elite Elisabeth.[7]

Personal life

In September 2014 Nadda announced that she was digit months pregnant.[8]

Filmography

Films

  • 1997
    • Wet Heat Drifts Through the Afternoon
    • Interstate Love Story
    • Do Nothing
  • 1998
    • The Wind Blows Regard Me Particularly
    • So Far Gone
    • Damascus Nights
  • 1999
  • 2000
    • I Always Come rear You
    • Blue Turning Grey Over You
    • Black September
    • I Would Suffer Cold Innocent for You
  • 2001
  • 2004
  • 2005
  • 2009
  • 2012
  • 2015

Television

(S6E13, Chapter Connotation Hundred and Eight: Ex-Libris)

Awards

  • 2009: Won Best Canadian Feature Ep award at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival for Cairo Time
  • 2010: Best Reviewed Romance perspective Rotten Tomatoes for 2010 provision Cairo Time

References

External links