Neasa Ní Chianáin
Neasa Ní Chianáin is an Irish documentary filmmaker, best known for her 2007 film Fairytale of Kathmandu.
Biography
Ní Chianáin studied at the National College of Art and Design in Dublin. She worked as freelance art director on several Irish feature film and television projects, such as All Soul’s Day, Angela’s Ashes and A Love Divided, and also on the BBC TV series Rebel Heart.Her first documentary was No Man’s Land, about the asylum process in Ireland. Her more recent productions have included Frank Ned & Busy Lizzie, Fairytale of Kathmandu, The Stranger and School Life. In Loco Parentis/School Life premiered at IDFA 2016, and was thereafter invited to Sundance Film Festival 2017, and other international film festivals, at several of which it has won awards. Fairytale of Kathmandu also premiered at IDFA 2007, and was invited to over 30 other international film festivals.
Since 2006, Neasa has been co-director of the Guth Gafa International Documentary Film Festival, Gortahork, County Donegal.
She is a mother of two, and lives with her partner David Rane.
Selected filmography
- No Man's Land
- Frank Ned & Busy Lizzie
- Fairytale of Kathmandu
- The Stranger
- School Life
''Fairytale of Kathmandu''
''The Stranger''
The Stranger explores the story of Neal MacGregor. He was an Englishman who in the 1960s had studied cabinetry, jewelry and silver design in London, and had worked for the interior designer Anthony Redmile, and had married. Then, without explanation, he relocated on his own to Inishbofin, a tiny island off the extreme north-west coast of County Donegal. On Inishbofin, he lived in an abandoned stone hen house, too small to stand up in, without water, gas or electricity. While there, he made things with his hands: such as a grandfather clock, a windmill, and his own fishing nets and hooks. He wrote diaries. He and a local woman, Mary, formed a relationship. They grew their own vegetables, and stayed on the island during the winter, a season during which other locals returned to the mainland. There were rumours that he was a spy, or perhaps something worse. He died suddenly in 1990, from a heart attack, at the age of 43 or 44.''In Loco Parentis/School Life''
In Loco Parentis is a feature documentary that had its world premiere in Competition at IDFA, the largest documentary film festival in the world, and then had its North American premiere in the World Cinema Documentary competition at Sundance in January 2017. The film, shot observationally explores a year in the life of Headfort School, the last remaining boarding school for primary age children in Ireland. This charming, humorous and award-winning documentary focuses on John and Amanda Leyden, who throughout their long careers at Headfort school have become legends in their own right. This warm and affectionate portrait places childhood center stage and celebrates the joy and power of teaching. The film was acquired after Sundance by Magnolia Pictures. It has screened at many international festivals and won awards at San Francisco International Film Festival and Visions du Réel.Awards
Year | Work | Event | Nomination | Result | References |
2004 | Frank Ned & Busy Lizzie | Celtic Film and Television Festival | Bronze Torc Award | Won | |
2008 | Fairytale of Kathmandu | Barcelona International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival | Jury Award | Won | |
2008 | Fairytale of Kathmandu | Documenta Madrid | Best Documentary | Second place | |
2008 | Fairytale of Kathmandu | Best Director | Won | ||
2009 | Fairytale of Kathmandu | Irish Film and Television Awards | Irish Language Award | Special award | |
2014 | The Stranger | Locarno International Film Festival | Critics Week Award | Nominated | |
2016 | School Life | Irish Film and Television Awards | Best Feature Documentary Award | Nominated | |
2016 | School Life | Sundance Film Festival | World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury Prize | Nominated | |
2016 | School Life | San Francisco International Film Festival | Golden Gate Award Special Jury Prize | Won | |
2016 | School Life | Visions du Réel | Prix du Public Best Film Grand Angle | Won |