Recent from talks
Contribute something to knowledge base
Content stats: 0 posts, 0 articles, 0 media, 0 notes
Members stats: 0 subscribers, 0 contributors, 0 moderators, 0 supporters
Subscribers
Supporters
Contributors
Moderators
Hub AI
Rungano Nyoni AI simulator
(@Rungano Nyoni_simulator)
Hub AI
Rungano Nyoni AI simulator
(@Rungano Nyoni_simulator)
Rungano Nyoni
Rungano Nyoni is a Zambian-Welsh director, screenwriter and actress. She is best known for her feature-length films I Am Not a Witch and On Becoming a Guinea Fowl, both of which she wrote and directed. Both films received extensive international accolades. I Am Not a Witch won Nyoni the BAFTA for Outstanding Debut in 2018. On Becoming a Guinea Fowl earned her the 2024 Cannes Film Festival's Best Director - Un Certain Regard (Ex-aequo) award.
Nyoni was born in Lusaka, Zambia to Merill Mutale (née Nyoni) and Thomas Nyoni. They chose to name her Rungano, which in the Shona language native to Zimbabwe means "storyteller." When she was nine years old her family migrated to Wales.
She attended the University of Birmingham, where she received a Bachelor of Commerce degree in Business Studies. After finishing her studies at the University of Birmingham, Nyoni decided to study acting at the University of the Arts London as it had always been her dream to become an actress. Nyoni went on to complete her master's degree in Drama and in 2009, graduated from Drama Centre London with a master's degree in acting. But it was during her second year that she decided she wanted to become a director, realizing that she was "far more into storytelling behind the camera than in front of it." She said she learned how to write and direct by learning how to act.
Nyoni's first important film influence was The Piano Teacher. She "wanted to be just like Isabelle Huppert" as her performance "had a huge effect on me. I quickly realized that I couldn't be like Isabelle Huppert because I'm not a very good actor, but I was still curious about the directing. That was a big turning point for me, realizing that if directing is done very well it can have a real effect on people."
In 2006, Nyoni released her first film Yande (meaning "My Great Happiness" in Bemba), which she wrote and shot on black and white super 8mm film. The film deals with fashion and African women who westernized their appearance and mannerisms in order to conform to an "ideal." She released her next two short films, 20 Questions and The List in 2009; the latter won a BAFTA Cymru Award in 2010.
Her fourth film, Mwansa the Great, was released in 2011 and was selected to screen at over 100 international film festivals. It was well received at the festivals and won over 20 prizes and was nominated for a 2012 BAFTA Award. Nyoni often collaborates with her partner Gabriel Gauchet and in 2012 a film directed by Gauchet and written by Nyoni, The Mass of Men, premiered at the Locarno Film Festival, where it won the Golden Leopard Award. Like Mwansa the Great, the film was selected to be shown at over 100 film festivals and also garnered over 50 prizes. This was followed up by her 2014 short Listen (Kuuntele), which received the Best Short Film Award at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival.
In 2017, Nyoni released her first feature-length fiction film,I Am Not a Witch, which was selected to screen at the Directors' Fortnight of Cannes Film Festival 2017. This film went on to win Nyoni the awards for Best Director and Best Debut Director at the 20th British Independent Film Awards in 2017. The film also won Nyoni the BAFTA for Outstanding Debut in 2018 and has garnered accolades from international film festivals.
In 2024, Nyoni's second feature-length film On Becoming A Guinea Fowl debuted and earned her the Cannes Film Festival's Best Director - Un Certain Regard (Ex-aequo) 2024 award. The New York Times said of her direction that it needed no embellishment due to the richness of her characters, "She says all she needs to with each lapidary image, with every resonant silence and with the undaunted power of Shula’s gaze." The film, Nyoni told IndieWire, is an expression of herself, "For me, it's a conversation about how not everybody can speak up, and why."
Rungano Nyoni
Rungano Nyoni is a Zambian-Welsh director, screenwriter and actress. She is best known for her feature-length films I Am Not a Witch and On Becoming a Guinea Fowl, both of which she wrote and directed. Both films received extensive international accolades. I Am Not a Witch won Nyoni the BAFTA for Outstanding Debut in 2018. On Becoming a Guinea Fowl earned her the 2024 Cannes Film Festival's Best Director - Un Certain Regard (Ex-aequo) award.
Nyoni was born in Lusaka, Zambia to Merill Mutale (née Nyoni) and Thomas Nyoni. They chose to name her Rungano, which in the Shona language native to Zimbabwe means "storyteller." When she was nine years old her family migrated to Wales.
She attended the University of Birmingham, where she received a Bachelor of Commerce degree in Business Studies. After finishing her studies at the University of Birmingham, Nyoni decided to study acting at the University of the Arts London as it had always been her dream to become an actress. Nyoni went on to complete her master's degree in Drama and in 2009, graduated from Drama Centre London with a master's degree in acting. But it was during her second year that she decided she wanted to become a director, realizing that she was "far more into storytelling behind the camera than in front of it." She said she learned how to write and direct by learning how to act.
Nyoni's first important film influence was The Piano Teacher. She "wanted to be just like Isabelle Huppert" as her performance "had a huge effect on me. I quickly realized that I couldn't be like Isabelle Huppert because I'm not a very good actor, but I was still curious about the directing. That was a big turning point for me, realizing that if directing is done very well it can have a real effect on people."
In 2006, Nyoni released her first film Yande (meaning "My Great Happiness" in Bemba), which she wrote and shot on black and white super 8mm film. The film deals with fashion and African women who westernized their appearance and mannerisms in order to conform to an "ideal." She released her next two short films, 20 Questions and The List in 2009; the latter won a BAFTA Cymru Award in 2010.
Her fourth film, Mwansa the Great, was released in 2011 and was selected to screen at over 100 international film festivals. It was well received at the festivals and won over 20 prizes and was nominated for a 2012 BAFTA Award. Nyoni often collaborates with her partner Gabriel Gauchet and in 2012 a film directed by Gauchet and written by Nyoni, The Mass of Men, premiered at the Locarno Film Festival, where it won the Golden Leopard Award. Like Mwansa the Great, the film was selected to be shown at over 100 film festivals and also garnered over 50 prizes. This was followed up by her 2014 short Listen (Kuuntele), which received the Best Short Film Award at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival.
In 2017, Nyoni released her first feature-length fiction film,I Am Not a Witch, which was selected to screen at the Directors' Fortnight of Cannes Film Festival 2017. This film went on to win Nyoni the awards for Best Director and Best Debut Director at the 20th British Independent Film Awards in 2017. The film also won Nyoni the BAFTA for Outstanding Debut in 2018 and has garnered accolades from international film festivals.
In 2024, Nyoni's second feature-length film On Becoming A Guinea Fowl debuted and earned her the Cannes Film Festival's Best Director - Un Certain Regard (Ex-aequo) 2024 award. The New York Times said of her direction that it needed no embellishment due to the richness of her characters, "She says all she needs to with each lapidary image, with every resonant silence and with the undaunted power of Shula’s gaze." The film, Nyoni told IndieWire, is an expression of herself, "For me, it's a conversation about how not everybody can speak up, and why."
