Helena Solberg
0.3Directing

Helena Solberg

Jun 17, 1938 - Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Helena Solberg (born June 17, 1938, in Rio de Janeiro) is a Brazilian-born documentarist who, since 1971, has made her career in the United States. She is recognized as the only woman to participate in "Cinema Novo" movement in Brazil.

In 1983, Solberg received an Emmy Award for From the Ashes: Nicaragua Today, documentary on a new society that born of political turmoil in Central America and the role that the U.S. plays in determining its future.

Helena Solberg was born in Rio de Janeiro, daughter of a Norwegian father and Brazilian mother, lived for a long time in New York City, and established herself as a producer and director of documentaries in Brazil and the United States. She began her career from contact with big names of the new movies, as Carlos Diegues and Arnaldo Jabor, a time when she lived with them during the studies at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro. Solberg began in adolescence working as a reporter at the Metropolitano newspaper and by mastering English and French interviewed important names like the writer Clarice Lispector and also the philosopher Simone de Beauvoir and Jean Paul Sartre.

Her debut as a filmmaker occurred in 1966 with the short film A Entrevista. In 1969 directed Meio-dia, a fiction about the revolt of students in the classroom, with the context the period of military dictatorship in Brazil, Caetano Veloso's music, É proibido proibir (It is forbidden to forbid).

In the 70s, she took up residence in the United States for about 30 years, where she directed several productions, among them: From the Ashes: Nicaragua Today (1982), which won a News & Documentary Emmy Award. From the 80s, began to produce a series of documentaries for international TV channels such as HBO, PBS, Channel 4, Radio and Television of Portugal, National Geographic Channel, among others.

In 1995, she produced, wrote and directed her first feature film, Carmen Miranda: Bananas is My Business, a mixture of documentary and fictional recreation from the singer Carmen Miranda's life. With Bananas is my business she won the Best Films award of the audience, the critic and the jury at the Festival de Brasilia. The film also was awarded with the Golden Hugo for Best documentary at the Chicago International Film Festival and was selected among the 10 best in its category by the critic Andrew Sarris.

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie1982From the Ashes: Nicaragua TodayNarrator
Movie1986As Kineastas
Movie2024Um Filme para BeatriceSelf
Movie2023Nelson Carneiro: Knight of DemocracySelf
Movie1995Carmen Miranda: Bananas Is My BusinessNarrator
Movie2020O Cinema das MulheresSelf

Crew

Media
Movie2003Diary of a Provincial GirlDirectorDirecting
Movie2013Our Stories, OurselvesDirectorDirecting
Movie1974The Emerging WomanProducerProduction
Movie1969NoonProducerProduction
Movie1969NoonEditorEditing
Movie1975The Double DayWriterWriting
Movie1977Simplemente JennyWriterWriting
Movie1969NoonWriterWriting
Movie1995Carmen Miranda: Bananas Is My BusinessDirectorDirecting
Movie1995Carmen Miranda: Bananas Is My BusinessProducerProduction
Movie2009Palavra (En)CantadaDirectorDirecting
Movie2024Um Filme para BeatriceDirectorDirecting
Movie2024Um Filme para BeatriceWriterWriting
Movie2017Meu Corpo, Minha VidaWriterWriting
Movie1966The InterviewDirectorDirecting
Movie1982From the Ashes: Nicaragua TodayCo-ProducerProduction
Movie2003Diary of a Provincial GirlWriterWriting
Movie1969NoonDirectorDirecting
Movie1985Portrait of a TerroristDirectorDirecting
Movie1974The Emerging WomanDirectorDirecting
Movie2017Meu Corpo, Minha VidaDirectorDirecting
Movie1982From the Ashes: Nicaragua TodayDirectorDirecting
Movie1975The Double DayDirectorDirecting
Movie1977Simplemente JennyDirectorDirecting
Movie1985Home of the BraveDirectorDirecting
Movie1983Chile: By Reason or By ForceDirectorDirecting
Movie1983The Brazilian ConnectionDirectorDirecting
Movie1990The Forbidden LandDirectorDirecting
Movie1997Brazil in Living ColourDirectorDirecting
Movie2013Our Stories, OurselvesProducerProduction