about
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bio karen cho résume
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Bio - Karen Cho :
Native to Montreal, Karen Cho is a filmmaker
interested in documentary and other narrative forms.
In 2001, she graduated from Concordia University's Film Production Program
where she received the Mel Hoppenheim Award. Her graduate
film EVE won the award for Best
Cinematography and premiered at the NYC Flicker Film Festival
in 2002.
In 2003, as the winner of the National Film Board's Reel Diversity
Competition, Karen directed In the Shadow of Gold
Mountain, a documentary exploring the legacy of the Chinese
Head Tax and Exclusion Act. It premiered at the Montreal World Film Festival
in 2004 and was broadcast on CBC's Rough Cuts in 2005. The film won a
Golden Sheaf Award for Best Multicultural Documentary
at the 2005 Yorkton Film Festival and garnered the Canadian Association
of Broadcasters’ Golden Ribbon Award for Diversity in News
and Information Programming in 2006.
In 2004-2005, Karen worked as a series director for Past Lives
(Global) a documentary series about Canadians in search of their ancestral
roots. Karen directed 4 episodes of the series on topics ranging from
Chinese Immigration to Inuit history, Japanese-Canadian WWII Internment
and Scottish Home Children.
In 2006, Karen directed the National Film Board’s first ever video
podcast. Entitled Chinese Head Tax – the Government
Officially Apologizes, the 10-minute documentary captured
the unveiling of and reaction to the redress package that ended the Chinese
Canadian 22-year-struggle for redress.
Seeking Refuge is Karen’s second documentary.
The feature-length film tells the story of five asylum seekers who’ve
sought refuge in Canada. Produced by InformAction, the film premiered
at the Rendez-vous de cinema quebecois in 2009 and also screened at Vancouver’s
DOXA Documentary Film Festival, Amnesty International’s Reel Awareness
festivals in Toronto and Vancouver and at Document 7 in Glasgow Scotland
amongst others. Seeking Refuge is currently
being used by the Canadian Council for Refugees and other organizations
and universities as an education and advocacy tool. The film was broadcast
on CBC’s The Lens garnering Karen a 2009 Gemini Nomination
for Best Direction in a documentary Program. It will also broadcast
on Radio-Canada and RDI in 2010.
Karen is also working as a series director for Extraordinary
Canadians (Omni) a documentary series based on the Penguin
Extraordinary Canadians collection of books. Produced by PMA Productions,
the series explores the lives of eminent Canadians from the perspective
of leading contemporary writers. Karen has directed episodes on Nellie
McClung, Lester B. Pearson and Norman Bethune.
Karen is currently in development, with the NFB, on a feature-length documentary
and multiplatform project about the Women’s Movement in Canada.
She is also producing, directing and editing an experimental docu-fiction
about family secrets. Production of this film has been supported by the
Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec (CALQ)
Karen's films often recount un-told histories and explore themes of immigration,
activism, and social justice. Her approach to filmmaking is shaped by
personal experience, pop-culture and her background in a richly multi-ethnic
family.
Karen is interested in using film as a tool for social debate.
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