LONE SCHERFIG

Film Industry Role: Director

Nationality: Danish

Major Works: An Education (2009) and Italian For Beginners (2000)

Major Awards and Nominations: Nominated for Two BAFTA Awards with An Education

Writer/director Lone Scherfig graduated from The National Film School of Denmark in 1984. Her first feature film, The Birthday Trip (1990), was selected for Panorama in Berlin, the New Directors section at MOMA in New York and won the Grand Jury Prix in Rouen. Her next film, On Our Own (1998), received the Grand Prix in Montreal and the Cinekid Prize in Amsterdam. Scherfig then wrote and directed Italian For Beginners (2000; following the danish movement Dogma 95) which was a huge audience hit and won her the Silver Bear and the international film critics' award FIPRESCI at the 2001 Berlinale, plus numerous other awards around the world.

Scherfig's first English-language feature, Wilbur Wants To Kill Himself (2002), toured the festival circuit and brought home awards from e.g. France, the US and Japan. Her next production, An Education (2009), won the Audience Award at Sundance and was nominated for three Oscars and eight BAFTAs. Scherfig has since directed three British films, i.e. One Day (2011), The Riot Club (2014) and Their Finest (2016) which premiered at TIFF in 2016 and screened in Sundance and London as the Mayor's gala. In 2019, Lone Scherfig's The Kindness of Strangers opened and was in competition at Berlin International Film Festival.

In between features Scherfig has directed a range of TV-series, including Taxa (1997), Quiet Waters (1999), Better Times (2004) and most recently, The Astronaut Wives Club (2015) conceptualized by Scherfig.