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Nanette Burstein (born May 23, 1970) is an American film and television director. Burstein has produced, directed, and co-directed many documentaries which have won her much recognition, including an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary and the Sundance Special Jury Prize for Documentary. ==Life and career== Burstein studied film at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts. In 1997 she collaborated on her first film with Brett Morgen, producing and directing ''On the Ropes'', a low-budget documentary that follows the fates of three young boxers and their trainer. The film, shot mainly on BetaSP,〔(IndieWire Interview August, 1999 )〕 was nominated for an Oscar for Best Documentary (feature length), won Special Jury Prize for Documentary at Sundance, won the Directors Guild of America’s award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary. The film also won the International Documentary Association’s Feature Documentary award, a Silver Spire at the San Francisco International Film Festival, the Urbanworld Film Festival Best Documentary, and the Land Grant Award at the Taos Talking Picture Festival. The film was also nominated for an Independent Spirit Award (“Truer than Fiction” award). In 1998 with Nancy Tong she co-wrote the script for Tong's matter-of-fact documentary ''In the Name of the Emperor'' of the massacre of over 300,000 Chinese civilians by the Japanese in the so-called Rape of Nanjing in 1937. In 2002 she and Morgen teamed up again for the Robert Evans biography ''The Kid Stays in the Picture''. The film was very positively reviewed〔(Rotten Tomatoes reviews of The Kid Stays in the Picture )〕 and won the International Press Academy and Boston Society of Film Critics award for Best Documentary. It was also nominated for Best Documentary by the Chicago, Online, Phoenix and Broadcast Film Critics. In 2004, she produced a documentary television show ''Film School'' for IFC with Jordan Roberts, following four film students at their alma mater, Tisch. In 2007 Burstein was executive producer and writer on the VH1 Rock Doc ''NY77: The Coolest Year In Hell'' which showcases the rise of hip hop, punk, disco, and graffiti in New York City in 1977. She also executive produced the doc American Shopper. Her latest documentary American Teen was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. For the project, she lived in the small town of Warsaw, Indiana for 10 months, filming daily. She ended up with 1000 hours of footage, which took a year to edit.〔(Reeler Interview, January 2008 )〕 She lives in New York and co-owns a Manhattan bar The Half-King, with Scott Anderson and Sebastian Junger.〔(Half-King site )〕 Nanette is married and the mother of one daughter. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Nanette Burstein」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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