Tasha Hubbard

Tasha Hubbard
Born
Carrie Alaine Pinay

1973
NationalityCanadian (Peepeekisis First Nation in Treaty Four Territory)
Occupation(s)Director, Writer, Filmmaker, Associate Professor - Native Studies
EmployerUniversity of Alberta
Awards2017 Gemini Award;
2005 Golden Sheaf Award - Aboriginal;
2016 Golden Sheaf Award - Short Subject (Non-Fiction);
2020 Golden Sheaf Award - Multicultural (Over 30 Minutes)

Tasha Hubbard is a Canadian First Nations/Cree filmmaker and educator based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Hubbard's credits include three National Film Board of Canada documentaries exploring Indigenous rights in Canada: Two Worlds Colliding, a 2004 Canada Award-winning short film about the Saskatoon freezing deaths,[1] Birth of a Family, a 2017 feature-length documentary about four siblings separated during Canada's Sixties Scoop, and nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand Up, a 2019 Hot Docs and DOXA Documentary award-winning documentary which examines the death of Colten Boushie, a young Cree man, and the subsequent trial and acquittal of the man who shot him.[2]

  1. ^ "Two Worlds Colliding wins Canada Award | Windspeaker - AMMSA". Saskatchewan Sage. Vol. 10, no. 1. Aboriginal Multi-Media Society. 2005. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  2. ^ "‘We Will Stand Up,’ ‘Hope Frozen’ Take Top Prizes at Hot Docs". Variety, May 4, 2019.