Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Lyne Charlebois

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Canadian

Notable work
  
Borderline

Years active
  
1980s-present

Movies
  
Borderline

Lyne Charlebois wwwarrqqccaWebphotoCharleboisLynejpg

Occupation
  
film, television and music video director, photographer

Awards
  
Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television Award for Best Screenplay, Juno Award for Video of the Year

Nominations
  
Genie Award for Best Achievement in Direction

Similar
  
Marie‑Sissi Labrèche, Angèle Coutu, Isabelle Blais, Pierre‑Luc Brillant, Marie‑Chantal Perron

Lyne Charlebois is a Canadian film and television director, most noted as the director and cowriter of the 2008 film Borderline.

Charlebois began her career as a photographer, who had one of her first jobs in the film industry shooting promotional stills for Jean-Claude Lauzon's 1987 film Night Zoo. She then became a music video director for artists including Daniel Bélanger and Laurence Jalbert. She won a Prix Félix for Best Video in 1991 for Marjo's "Je sais, je sais", and was a three-time Juno Award nominee for Best Music Video for Spirit of the West's "Political" at the Juno Awards of 1992, Mae Moore's "Bohemia" at the Juno Awards of 1993 and for Gogh Van Go's "Tunnel of Trees" at the Juno Awards of 1995. She won the award in 1995.

She subsequently worked in television, directing episodes of Bliss, Tabou, Nos étés and Sophie, and made the short films Quel jour était-ce? in 2001 and Nous sommes tous les jours in 2006.

She collaborated with Marie-Sissi Labrèche on the screenplay for Borderline, and directed the film. At the 29th Genie Awards in 2009, Charlebois and Labrèche were cowinners of the Genie Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and Charlebois was a shortlisted nominee for the Genie Award for Best Director; at the 2009 Prix Jutra, she won the award for Best Director.

References

Lyne Charlebois Wikipedia