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Canadian film producer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Annette Clarke is a Canadian producer of documentary and animated films, who served as executive producer of the National Film Board of Canada's Quebec and Atlantic studio from 2003 to 2021.[1]
Clarke first joined the NFB's Newfoundland office in 1987, moving to Montreal two years later to work with the Studio D unit for women filmmakers.[2] She left the NFB in 1997 to launch her own studio, Ruby Line Productions,[3] before returning to the NFB in 2003.
Award | Category | Year | Work | Result | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gemini Awards | Best History Documentary Program | 2002 | White Thunder | Nominated | [4] |
Donald Brittain Award | 2007 | Cottonland | Nominated | [5] | |
Best Children's or Youth Non-Fiction Program or Series | 2008 | Heads Up! | Nominated | [6] | |
Genie Awards | Best Animated Short | 2010 | Vive la rose | Nominated | [7] |
Canadian Screen Awards | 2014 | Impromptu | Nominated | [8] | |
2021 | 4 North A | Nominated | [9] | ||
Best Feature Length Documentary | The Forbidden Reel | Nominated | [9] | ||
2023 | Dear Audrey | Nominated | [10] | ||
Best Short Documentary | 2013 | The Boxing Girls of Kabul | Won | [11] | |
2014 | Mary & Myself | Nominated | [12] | ||
2020 | Gun Killers | Nominated | [13] | ||
2022 | Nalujuk Night | Won | [14] | ||
2023 | Bill Reid Remembers | Nominated | [15] | ||
Perfecting the Art of Longing | Nominated | [15] | |||
Donald Brittain Award | 2016 | Danny | Nominated | [16] | |
2021 | Assholes: A Theory | Nominated | [9] | ||
Prix Iris | Best Documentary Film | 2021 | Wintopia | Nominated | [17] |
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