- Source: Niki Karimi
Niki Karimi (Persian: نیکی کریمی; born 10 November 1971) is an Iranian actress and filmmaker. Regarded as "the most prominent figure among the young generations coming after post-Islamic Revolution Iranian Cinema", she has received various accolades, including a Crystal Simorgh, three Hafez Awards, an Iran Cinema Celebration Award, and three Iran's Film Critics and Writers Association Awards.
Born in Tehran, Karimi began her career in the late 1980s. She received critical acclaim for her performance in Sara (1992), for which she won the best actress award at the San Sebastian Film Festival.
Early life
Niki Karimi was born on November 10, 1971, in Tehran, Iran. Her parents are both from Tafresh. She has been active in theater since elementary school, and has said that her early interest in film and literature inspired her to become an actress.
Career
In 1990, she was cast as a young bride in Behrooz Afkhami's hit film The Bride.
Karimi began her career in the late 1980s. She received critical acclaim for her performance in Sara (1992), for which she won the best actress award at the San Sebastian Film Festival.
Karimi has won many awards nationally and internationally for "Sara" such as San Sebastian film festival award for best actress. She has also recently been on the jury for more than 20 renowned film festivals, including Karlovy Vary Film Festival, the Edinburgh International Film Festival, the Locarno International Film Festival and Thessaloniki International Film Festival and Berlin Film Festival and also the 60th Cannes Film Festival. She was the assistant of Abbas Kiarostami from 1992 to 2007.
Expanding on her career as an actor, she wrote and directed the documentary To Have or Not to Have (2001).
In 2001, she won her first award as a director in Iran's Rain film festival for her work To Have or Not to Have, which was produced by renowned Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami.
Nominated at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival for her feature film directorial debut One Night (2005), she said that acting no longer satisfied her and she would like to direct more movies.
In addition to films, Karimi has also done translating work. In 1999 she released her first translation, Marlon Brando's biography Songs My Mother Taught Me, which she translated from English to Persian. She also translated two books by Hanif Kureishi, a Pakistani-English writer.
Her third film as director, Final whistle (2011), won three awards at the Vesoul International Film Festival of Asian Cinema in Vesoul, France.
She has been nominated for the best actress award in Fajr Film Festival in 2011 for I Am His Wife (2011), directed by Mostafa Shayesteh.
She has been awarded recently by the jury of the Iranian Fajr Film ّFestival for her last film as best director, actress and producer. She also got a jury award for acting in two films, Wednesday, May 9 and Death of Fish.
= As a translator
== As a film critic
=Filmography
= Film
== Web
== Television
=Awards and nominations
See also
Iranian women
Iranian cinema
List of famous Persian women
Persian women's movement
Fajr International Film Festival
References
External links
Media related to Niki Karimi at Wikimedia Commons
Official Website
Niki Karimi at IMDb
Profile on Cannes Film Festival website
Niki Karimi interview with Radio Zamaneh
Her filmography (in Persian)
New York Times profile
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- One Night (film 2005)
- Si Cecep
- Daftar tokoh Iran
- Esteghlal F.C.
- Kutunggu Kau di Pasar Minggu the Series
- INS Kayutanam
- Daftar tokoh Minangkabau
- Nama orang Minangkabau
- 1999
- Daftar tokoh Kota Padangpanjang
- Niki Karimi
- Karimi
- Connie Nielsen
- Niki (given name)
- The Hidden Half
- Deborra-Lee Furness
- Aghazadeh (TV series)
- Atabai
- Audrey Hepburn
- Cinema of Iran