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British-Nigerian film director, producer, model, and lecturer
- Ngozi Onwurah (born 1966) is a British-Nigerian film director, producer, model, and lecturer. She is best known as a filmmaker for her autobiographical film The Body Beautiful (1991) and her first feature film, Welcome II the Terrordome (1994).
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Ngozi Onwurah (born 1966) is a British-Nigerian film director, producer, model, and lecturer. She is best known as a filmmaker for her autobiographical film The Body Beautiful (1991) and her first feature film, Welcome II the Terrordome (1994).
Ngozi Onwurah. Director: Neighborhood Alert. Graduated as a director from the UK's National Film and Television School in Beaconsfield. Her first short film, `Coffee Coloured Children', achieved international film festival success and won first prize in the BBC Showreel competition.
- Director, Writer
- Ngozi Onwurah
Jun 10, 2020 · Our first SPOTLIGHT focuses on Ngozi Onwurah, a wildly imaginative, uncompromising filmmaker, and the first black female director to release a feature in the UK.
Oct 7, 2023 · Ngozi Onwurah, Maureen Blackwood, and Martina Attille have left an indelible mark on Black British cinema. Through their thought-provoking films and passionate storytelling, they have challenged stereotypes, celebrated cultural heritage, and provided a platform for marginalised voices.
Black British filmmaker Ngozi Onwurah takes on the issues of time and space in her work which embraces heterogeneity and multiple sites of subjectivity. Onwurah consistently navigates and challenges the limits of narrative and ethnographic cinema by insisting that the body is the central landscape of an anti-imperialist cinematic discourse.
Ngozi Onwurah is a British-Nigerian film director. She is best known for her first feature film, Welcome II the Terrordome, which was the first film directed by a Black woman to receive theatrical distribution in the UK.
Jun 8, 2022 · When Ngozi Onwurah’s Shoot the Messenger first screened in 2006, it dealt with one of the Black community’s greatest taboos: the Black racist. Or more precisely, the psychological turmoil of a Black person who has fully internalised the white supremacist view of the race to which they belong.