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・ Mireia García
・ Mireia Gutiérrez
・ Mireia Lalaguna Royo
・ Mireia Miró Varela
・ Mireia Riera Casanovas
・ Mireille
・ Mireille (disambiguation)
・ Mireille (opera)
・ Mireille and the Others
・ Mireille Astore
・ Mireille Balin
・ Mireille Ballestrazzi
・ Mireille Bauer
・ Mireille Best
・ Mireille Bousquet-Mélou
Mireille Dansereau
・ Mireille Darc
・ Mireille Dargent
・ Mireille Delunsch
・ Mireille Derebona
・ Mireille Eagan
・ Mireille Enos
・ Mireille Gigandet-Donders
・ Mireille Gingras
・ Mireille Granelli
・ Mireille Guiliano
・ Mireille Hartuch
・ Mireille Hassenboehler
・ Mireille Havet
・ Mireille Johnston


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Mireille Dansereau : ウィキペディア英語版
Mireille Dansereau

Mireille Dansereau (born December 19, 1943 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian director and screenwriter who is known for "emulating the style and approach of her aesthetic role model, John Cassavetes".
==Biography==
Mireille Dansereau was a dancer for 15 years before turning to filmmaking. After finishing her studies at the University of Montreal, she made her first film, a short entitled ''Moi, un jour...'' for Expo 67. The film was well received and enabled her to move to London, England to attend the Royal College of Art. She obtained her Master's Degree in Film and Television and made another short film, ''Compromise'', which won first prize at the 1969 Great Britain Student Film Festival. Dansereau worked a variety of jobs - researcher, script assistant, sound recorder - before returning to Quebec. There, she co-founded L’Association Coopérative des Productions Audio-visuelles (ACPAV) and became the first woman in Quebec to direct a fiction feature film in the private sector; the film, ''La vie rêvée'' (1971) was produced by the ACPAV and became a landmark that received a wide theatrical release and national critical acclaim.
She joined the NFB following her success and directed 2 feature documentaries for the ''En tant que femmes'' Series, ''J'me marie, j'me marie pas'' (1973) and ''Famille et variations'' (1977). She returned to the private sector to directed her next fiction feature, ''L'Arrache-Coeur'' (1979), a bleak, and penetrating examination of a marriage in crisis which earned Dansereau a Genie Award for Best Screenplay nomination, and ''Le Sourd dans la ville'' (1987), a dark, disturbing and experimental adaptation of Marie-Claire Blais's novel centered on a rooming house.

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