Ramona S. Diaz | |
---|---|
Nationality | Filipino-American |
Education | Emerson College (B.A.) |
Alma mater | Stanford University (M.A.) |
Occupation | Filmmaker |
Notable work | Imelda |
Style | Documentary |
Ramona S. Diaz is a Filipino-American documentary filmmaker[1] best known for creating "character-driven documentaries".[2][3][4][5] Her notable works include the 2012 film Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey, featuring the band Journey and its new lead vocalist Arnel Pineda, which won the Audience Award for the 2013–2014 season of PBS's Independent Lens;[6] and the 2003 film Imelda, about the life of Imelda Marcos, former First Lady of the Philippines.[7][8][9]
Three of Diaz's films have screened at the Sundance Film Festival: Imelda, a biographical documentary about Imelda's beginnings as a beauty contest winner to the wife of rising politician and eventual President of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos. Motherland, a documentary set at an overcrowded and under-resourced maternity hospital in Manila;[10] and most recently A Thousand Cuts a profile of Nobel laureate Maria Ressa, a journalist working in the Philippines, released in 2020.[11] Motherland received a Special Jury Award at Sundance in 2017 and premiered the same year at the Berlin International Film Festival.[12] Diaz served as a Documentary Competition Juror at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival.
Diaz's most recent feature documentary, And So It Begins, was selected to premiere at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival and was chosen by the Film Academy of the Philippines as the Philippines' entry to the 97th Academy Awards.[13]
In 2019 Diaz received a United States Artists (USA) Fellowship.[14]