
Director
Euzhan Palcy
Born 1958 · Martinique, French West Indies
Born January 13, 1958, in Martinique, French West Indies, Euzhan Palcy is a leader for black people, especially black women, in cinema. She is a screenwriter, producer and director. After studying the likes of Billy Wilder and Orson Welles and receiving a few degrees, including one from Louis Lumière College, she directed her first feature, Sugar Cane Alley (1983), in Paris for less than a million dollars. The film is about an impoverished black family making sacrifices for a young boy on a plantation in Martinique during the 1930s. It won numerous awards internationally, among them the César Award and the Venice Film Festival Silver Lion. Palcy's second feature, A Dry White Season (1989), explored the politics of South African apartheid, beckoning actor Marlon Brando to end his nine-year retirement to portray lawyer Ian McKenzie in it. With A Dry White Season, Palcy became the first black woman director produced by a major Hollywood studio. The film was banned in South Africa for a period of time. Brando's direction by Palcy earned him his final Academy Award nomination, for Best Supporting Actor. This made Palcy the first director who is black to direct an actor to such an honor. Palcy has continued to produce and make films all the way into the 2010s.
Directed

A Dry White Season
Director · 1989

Sugar Cane Alley
Director · 1983

Aimé Césaire: A Voice for History
Director · 1995

Ruby Bridges
Director · 1998
The Messenger
Director · 1975

How Are The Kids?
Director · 1992

The Devil's Workshop
Director · 1981

The Killing Yard
Director · 2001

Siméon
Director · 1992

The Brides of Bourbon Island
Director · 2007

Journey of the Dissidents
Director · 2006


