Studio 9 Films




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AWARDS
Royal Television Society Awards 2005
Winner - Innovation
The Baghdad Blogger: Salam Pax
BBC Newsnight - Producer: Fiona Lloyd-Davies
The judges said: 'This winning entry took us to places and people in Iraq which could not be reached by other coverage... it was also highly inventive in turning what might have appeared to be only a print idea into a fascinating and stylish piece of television.'
*
Amnesty International Media Awards 2004
Winner - Gaby Rado Memorial Award
The Guardian's James Astill - BBC Newsnight
Producer: Fiona Lloyd-Davies
*
European Online Journalism Award 2001
Winner - Best Investigative reporting
using video and audio.
The Refugee Trail Guardian
Special Report - Guardian Online
Producer: Fiona Lloyd-Davies
Reporter: Maggie O'Kane
*
Royal Television Society Awards 2000
Winner - Current Affairs: International
Licence to Kill - Correspondent - BBC News
Producer: Fiona Lloyd-Davies
Reporter: Olenka Frenkiel

WHAT PEOPLE SAY
About the Baghdad Blogger
"This winning entry took us to the places and people
of Iraq which could not be reached by other coverage."
*
About The Asylum Seeker
Sunday Telegraph "..this poignant but unjudgmental film.." The Observer "..a thoughtful, well-observed documentary.."
*
About the Bunia: Newsnight feature with James Astill
Will Hutton "..a chilling film ..one of this year's
more extraordinary TV interviews" with a 10
year old child soldier.
*
About the Face of Debt
Jeremy Paxman "This film should be sent to
every head of State of G8". Tim Gardham
"powerful, stunning and infuriating"

LINKS
Rwanda exhibition: 10 years after the genocide
Guardian story
Christian Aid
*
Guardian Special report: The Refugee Trail
*
Article for Forgotten Women 2001
Forgotten Women 2001
Forgotten Women Exhibition 2005
Edinburgh catalogue
- see page 6.
*
Licence to Kill
Since this film was broadcast, Honour Killing
has been legislated against and
is now illegal in Pakistan.
*
Looking for Karadzic

The Peace Builder
.
THE
PEACE
BUILDER


I’m flying high, 38,000 feet. No, not just from euphoria, but literally. After months of research, endless delays at Heathrow – after the obligatory suspected terrorist was hauled off the plane – I’m on a Boeing 777 half way across the Atlantic. I’m on my way to New York to see the toast of Broadway, British Shakespearean actor Mark Rylance, perform a play I wrote about an extraordinary peace builder in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Right now, Mark is riding the wave of success. The play he’s starring in, Jerusalem, has . . .

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