
Age: 44
female
Chloé Zhao (born Zhao Ting, in Chinese: 赵婷; 31 March 1982) is a Chinese-born filmmaker. She is known primarily for her work on independent films. For her film Nomadland (2020), Zhao is the second of three women to win the Academy Award for Best Director. Songs My Brothers Taught Me (2015), her debut feature film, premiered at Sundance Film Festival to critical acclaim and earned a nomination for the Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature. The Rider (2017) was critically acclaimed and received nominations for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Film and Best Director. Zhao garnered international recognition with the American film Nomadland (2020), which she wrote, produced, edited and directed, and which won numerous accolades, including the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and the People's Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival. Earning four Academy Award nominations for the film, Zhao won Best Picture and Best Director, becoming the first woman of color to win the latter. She also won awards for directing at the Directors Guild of America Awards, Golden Globe Awards, and British Academy Film Awards, becoming the second female winner of each of them. Zhao co-wrote and directed the Marvel Cinematic Universe superhero film Eternals (2021). Her latest film, Hamnet, premiered at the 52nd Telluride Film Festival to critical acclaim. Description above from the Wikipedia article Chloé Zhao, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Chloé Zhao

Director
for Director in Eclipsed Dawn: The Ai Xia Story
Suggested by kamsismith

In the heart of Shanghai’s roaring 1930s, a city alive with jazz, rebellion, and silent cinema, Eclipsed Dawn tells the hauntingly poignant story of Ai Xia, the trailblazing actress and screenwriter whose meteoric rise and tragic fall mirror the turbulence of her time. Ai Xia, born into modest means, broke barriers in the male-dominated film industry as a bold voice in left-wing cinema. With her haunting performances and incisive scripts, she became the voice of a generation grappling with war, colonialism, and the fight for social justice. But behind the camera’s glow and the adulation of fans lay a woman caught in the vice grip of artistic ambition, societal expectations, and personal despair. The film chronicles her tumultuous journey, from her passionate entry into filmmaking and her rise as a silent film star to her fraught relationship with fame and her eventual tragic death. It delves into her struggle to balance her revolutionary ideals with the pressures of an entertainment industry rife with exploitation.

