Monona Wali received an M.F.A. from the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television in 1983 where she earned the Lynn Weston Memorial Prize. Her thesis film Grey Area was featured in many film festivals around the world, and was distributed by the Black Filmmaker Foundation. She co-directed and edited Maria’s Story (1990) a documentary about a guerilla leader in the Salvadoran Civil War. The film received national airing on P.O.V. in 1991, and the Blue Ribbon Edward R. Murrow award at the American Film Festival, among many other awards.
Wali was born in Benares, India and currently makes her home in Los Angeles. She is a published short story writer, and is an adjunct faculty member at Santa Monica College, where she teaches creative writing. She volunteers with InsideOut Writers, an organization that offers creative writing classes for incarcerated youth.
Film | Role(s) | Year | |
---|---|---|---|
Grey Area An African-American woman reporter for a local television station who must seemingly compromise her political principles to keep her job, just as a former Black Panther Party member gets out of prison, only to realize that the old comrades in the struggle have moved on with their lives. |
Director Producer Writer Editor |
1982 | |
Maria's Story Nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the 1991 Sundance Film Festival, Maria's Story follows Maria Serrano, a wife, mother, and guerrila leader on the frontlines of the battle for El Salvador three years before the end of a brutal civil war. |
Director Writer Editor |
1990 |
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