Friday, March 29, 2024

OWN’S ‘Queen Sugar’ Reveals S3’s Remaining All-Female Directorial Line-Up

Aurora Guerrero, left, directs actress Dawn-Lyen Gardner in an episode of "Queen Sugar." (Alfonso Bresciani / Warner Bros. Entertainment)
Aurora Guerrero, left, directs actress Dawn-Lyen Gardner in an episode of “Queen Sugar.” (Alfonso Bresciani / Warner Bros. Entertainment)

*“Queen Sugar,” the OWN drama series  from Ava DuVernay, announced the remaining directors to complete the season three all-female directorial line-up.

The ladies include first time television directors Nijla Mu’min, Christina Choe, Ayoka Chenzira and Rachel Raimist, along with the return of “Queen Sugar” showrunner Kat Candler.

These directors join the previously announced line-up including “Queen Sugar” producing director DeMane Davis, Patricia Cardoso, Shaz Bennett, Maria Govan and Lauren Wolkstein.

Continuing the creative initiative established in the show’s first season by DuVernay to hire all female directorial teams, the series has employed 26 female directors to date.

“Queen Sugar” airs Wednesday nights at 10 p.m. ET/PT on OWN.

More about “Queen Sugar” Season 3 Directors Below:

· Nijla Mu’min – Nijla Mu’min is a writer and filmmaker named one of 25 New Faces of Independent Film by Filmmaker Magazine in 2017. Her short films have screened at festivals and venues across the country. In 2014, she was selected for the Sundance Institute Screenwriters Intensive, and she was the winner of the Grand Jury Prize for Best Screenplay at the 2014 Urbanworld Film Festival, for her script “Noor.” Mu’min’s debut feature film, “Jinn,” premiered in narrative competition at the 2018 South by Southwest Film Festival, where she won the Special Jury Recognition Award for screenwriting. Her short film “Dream” was acquired by Issa Rae Productions for online streaming in 2017 and has amassed over 70,000 views to date. She is a 2013 dual-degree graduate of CalArts MFA Film Directing and Writing Programs. “Queen Sugar” marks her directorial debut for television.

· Christina Choe: Christina Choe’s debut feature “Nancy” recently premiered at Sundance in the 2018 US Dramatic Competition, where it won the Waldo Salt Best Screenplay Award and releases in theatres June 8. Choe’s docu-series “Welcome to the DPRK”, a personal portrait of North Korea, was also recently acquired and released by First Look Media. Her short films, “I am John Wayne,” won the Grand Jury Prize at the Slamdance Film Festival, with “The Queen” and “Flow” screening at Telluride, SXSW, Aspen, among many others. Additional honors include a year-long Directing Fellowship with HBO and a Roger and Chaz Ebert Foundation Fellowship awarded at the Independent Spirit Awards. “Queen Sugar” marks her directorial debut for television.

· Ayoka Chenzira: Ayoka Chenzira is an award-winning artist and recognized pioneer in Black independent cinema. She is a teaching artist at Spelman College and a graduate of New York University (B.F.A. Film), Columbia University/Teachers College (M.A. Education) and is the first African American to earn a Ph.D. in digital media from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her distinctive body of work spans fiction, documentary, animation, performance, experimental narratives, and interactive cinema. Her film work includes “Alma’s Rainbow,” one of the first 35mm independent films by an African American woman, along with “Hair Piece: a film for nappyheaded people,” “Zajota and the Boogie Spirit,” “My Own TV” and HERadventure.” “Queen Sugar” marks her directorial debut for television.

· Rachel Raimist: Rachel Raimist is best known as the award-winning director of “Nobody Knows My Name,” the first film about women in hip-hop. Her work centers on stories of women, music and youth culture, and her work has screened at numerous international film festivals including SXSW, Women in the Director’s Chair and Slamdance. Raimist holds a B.A. and a M.F.A. in directing from the UCLA Film School, and a M.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota where The Rachel Raimist Feminist Media Center was named in her honor in 2009. Currently she is a tenured professor of media production at the University of Alabama. “Queen Sugar” marks her directorial debut for television.

· Kat Candler: Kat Candler returns to season three of “Queen Sugar” as showrunner. Her award-winning film “Hellion” played in competition at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, and she was a 2015 Sundance Institute Women’s Initiative Fellow. She is also a two-time grant recipient of the San Francisco Film Society/Kenneth Rainin Foundation. Her television work includes “Being Mary Jane” “13 Reasons Why” and “12 Monkeys.”

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