Michael Mooleedhar | |
Birth Date: | 1985 8, df=yes |
Occupation: | Film director, film producer |
Years Active: | 2008–present |
Michael Mooleedhar (born 3 August 1985) is a Trinidadian director and producer, whose work includes documentaries, music videos and film. His first feature film, Green Days By The River, opened the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival in 2017.[1] Winning People's Choice Award best Feature Film Narrative and Best Trinidad and Tobago Feature Film 2017.http://ttfilmfestival.com/news/ttff-news-and-features/and-the-ttff17-winners-are
Mooleedhar’s directorial debut, Queens Of Curepe (2008), is a revealing documentary focusing on transsexual sex workers from Trinidad and Tobago and other territories in the Caribbean, who work in the streets of Curepe, a town found along Trinidad and Tobago’s East-West Corridor.[2]
Michael Kenneth Mooleedhar was born on 3 August 1985 in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, the son of Carol Mooleedhar (née Brewster), a librarian and Timothy Mooleedhar, a city planner. He grew up in the Trincity neighbourhood before moving to Glencoe, and graduated from Saint Mary's College (CIC) in 2006.
Mooleedhar attended the University of West Indies, Saint Augustine campus, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree (BA) in Film in 2009, and a Master of Arts degree (MA) in Creative Design Entrepreneurship in 2012.[3]
Mooleedhar's first film, Queens Of Curepe (2008), was a critically acclaimed documentary that shone light on the world of sex workers in Trinidad and Tobago. The film was also met with concerns from Trinidad and Tobago’s Family Planning Association due to its content; however, Mooleedhar was able to work with the organization and allowed them to use the film for advocacy purposes. The FPA subsequently hired him to do additional projects for them.
In 2009 he met his mentor and future collaborator Professor Patricia Mohammed and they worked together on Mohammed’s next project, Coolie Pink and Green (2009), for which Mooleedhar served as co-producer and editor. The film won the People’s Choice Award at the 2009 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival.
In 2010, Mooleedhar and Mohammed came together again to work on Seventeen Colors and a Sitar, featuring Rex Dixon and Mungal Patasar, with Mooleedhar co-directing.[4]
Mooleedhar’s narrative short film The Cool Boys (2012) is an exploration of young man’s take of the reality around him and his attempt at expressing how he experiences life at this time.
Mooleedhar returned to documentary film with City On The Hill (2015), this time exploring the region of Laventille in Trinidad and Tobago’s East Port of Spain. The documentary was praised for its understatement of the violence for which this neighbourhood is generally known.[5]
Mooleedhar's feature film directorial debut came in 2017 with Green Days By The River, an adaptation of the classic Trinidadian novel of the same name by celebrated author Michael Anthony that opened the 2017 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival.[6]