- Ben Diogaye Beye
Ben Diogaye Bèye is a
Senegal ese filmwriter, filmmaker, film producer and journalist. He was the co-director of nearly a dozen Senegalese films, including "Touki Bouki" with Djibril Diop Mambety, "Baks" with Momar Thiam, "Sarah et Marjama" with Axel Lohman, and the co-screenwriter of the latter two.cite news|url=http://www.africultures.com/index.asp?menu=affiche_artiste&no=5795|title=Bèye Ben Diogaye | Sénégal |date=2007-10-20|work=Africultures|language=French|accessdate=2008-09-16]Educated in
Paris , he was an apprentice of several noted Senegalese filmmakers, includingOusmane Sembène ,Ababacar Samb , andDjibril Diop-Mambety .cite news|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/specials/1349_whoswho/page3.shtml|title=Who's Who at Fespaco: Ben Diogaye Bèye|date=2005|work=BBC World Service |publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation |accessdate=2008-09-15] He has been a radio broadcaster-producer forRadio Senegal and also as a professional journalist, directing the Senegalese news agency's "Sports and Culture" department.cite web|url=http://spot.pcc.edu/~mdembrow/Un%20Amour.htm|title=A CHILD’S LOVE STORY/UN AMOUR D’ENFANT|last=Dembrow|first=Michael|work=Portland Community College |accessdate=2008-09-16]His first (short) film was "
Les Princes Noirs de Saint Germain-des-Près ", released in 1972, which is also his best known. It is a satire on a young and unemployed African trying to live differently in the French capital. His second film, "Samba Tali ", was released in early 1975. He produced and directed it based on his own screenplay. It received the Best Short Film Prize at theFestival International du Film de l'Ensemble Francophone inGenèva in 1975 and at theCarthage Festival in 1976.Bey produced and directed his first feature film, "
Sey, Seyti ", in 1980, which was critical of polygamy in Senegal. It was the runner up for the Best Screenplay Prize at at a contest organized for the Francophone countries by the Agency for Technical and Cultural Cooperation. It received an honorable mention at theLocarno Film Festival and the Prix de la CommunePan-African Film Festival s in 1980 and 1981 respectively.In 1987, he directed a documentary film on the Senegalese Red Cross. Other films he created include "Un Homme Des Femmes" (1983) and "Moytuleen" (1996). His most recent and second full-length film is "Un Amour d’Enfant", released in 2004, which looks at childhood love. It won the UNICEF Award for the Promotion of Children’s Rights at the Pan-African Film Festival in 2005 and a Special Mention from the World Catholic Association for Communication.
He wrote the original script of Thiaroye '44, a project later renamed "
Camp de Thiaroye ". Beye is a member of the Association of Senegalese Filmmakers.References
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