It’s Friday, end of another work week and start of the weekend. This week’s open thread has highlighted talented African-American/Black female movie directors.
Sanaa Hamri is a Moroccan American music video and film director. She is one of the few prominent female film and music video directors.
Hamri was born in Tangier, Morocco to the late Moroccan painter and author Mohammed Hamri. In 1992, at the age of 17, she won a scholarship to Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York, where she studied theatre. She studied her junior year of college in Paris, graduated in 1996 and then moved to Manhattan. With dreams of becoming an actress, Hamri struggled through auditions and unemployment before she decided to try directing. Hamri taught herself to use an Avid editing machine in 2000 and has never taken a filmmaking course. Realizing she had a talent for putting images together in order to tell a story, Hamri began making videos and approaching the music industry.
Her big break came when video mogul Malik Sayeed saw one of her early productions and loved it. He showed it to Mariah Carey, who was just as impressed as Malik and hired Hamri to direct her video. He also gave Hamri her first editing job for a reggae – hip hop fusion group called Born Jamericans. Hamri made her directing debut two years later after meeting music video director Hype Williams.
Her videos include but are not limited to Jadakiss’s “U Make Me Wanna”, Prince’s “Musicology”, Kelly Rowland’s “Stole” and Mariah Carey’s “Crybaby”, Bringing On The Heartbreak, “Don’t Stop (Funkin’ 4 Jamaica)”, and Mariah Carey’s unreleased video for “Last Night a DJ Saved My Life.” She has also directed videos for Nicki Minaj, Lenny Kravitz,Joss Stone, Sting, Common, Raven-Symoné, Eric Benet, Amel Larrieux, Jay-Z, A*Teens, and Christina Aguilera. She also directed the music video for Greyson Chance’s “Waiting Outside The Lines”.
The directed-video ‘Super Bass’ for Nicki Minaj has more than 250 million views on YouTube.com, making the most popular video directed by Sanaa Hamri.
Production began in March 2005 on Focus Features’ Something New, a romantic comedy starring Sanaa Lathan (Brown Sugar, Alien vs. Predator) and Simon Baker (The Ring Two,L.A. Confidential) and directed by Hamri. The film was released on January 29, 2006. Stephanie Allain produced the film through her company, Homegrown Pictures. Something New was Hamri’s first film, as she made the transition from music videos to features. Something New was the first major studio release in Hollywood that was produced by, directed by, written by, and starring African American women. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 was the second film Hamri directed and was released on August 6, 2008. Her latest directorial project was Just Wright with Queen Latifah and Common, which was released on May 14, 2010.
Along with directing feature film and music videos, Hamri also directs television. Hamri has directed multiple episodes of ABC’s Desperate Housewives, Greys Anatomy, and Men in Trees. Mariah Carey’s live concert documentary, The Adventures of Mimi, and Prince’s The Art of Musicology and Price Live at the Aladdin Las Vegas were directed by Hamri. Her recent commercial credits include spots for Coors Light and AT&T.