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Rebecca Frayn

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Years active
  
1979–present

Books
  
One Life, Deceptions

Spouse
  
Andy Harries (m. 1992)

Role
  
Documentary maker

Name
  
Rebecca Frayn


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Occupation
  
filmmaker screen writer novelist

Children
  
Emmy Lou Harries, Jack Harries, Finn Harries

Parents
  
Michael Frayn, Gillian Palmer

Movies
  
The Lady, Whose Baby?, Annie Leibovitz

Similar People
  
Andy Harries, Michael Frayn, Jack Harries, Luc Besson, Aung San Suu Kyi

Rebecca frayn 5x15 the life of aung san suu kyi


Rebecca Frayn is an English documentary film maker, screenwriter and novelist.

Contents

Rebecca frayn on the rep carpet at tiff 2011


Career

Rebecca Frayn is a film maker, screen writer and novelist, inspired by contemporary issues. She has directed a wide variety of quirky documentary essays for the BBC, Channel 4 and ITV on subjects that range from Tory Wives to the Friern Barnet Mental Asylum and identical twins.

She played the role of June in the 1979 TV movie One Fine Day, directed by Stephen Frears and starring Robert Stephens and Dominic Guard. She also appeared uncredited as the photograph image of Liam Neeson's character's dead wife Joanna in the film Love Actually (2003), directed by Richard Curtis.

She made her drama debut as a director with Whose Baby? for ITV, a TV drama that tackled father's rights, starring Sophie Okonedo and Andrew Lincoln. Also, a screenplay she wrote for the BBC, Killing Me Softly explored the true story of Sara Thornton, whose conviction for murder helped bring about a reform of the law on domestic violence. She has also written and/or directed a number of films about prominent women, including Leni Riefenstahl, Annie Leibovitz and Nora Ephron. Her screenplay about Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady, directed by Luc Besson and starring Michelle Yeoh and David Thewlis was awarded the Amnesty International Human Rights Film Award in 2011.

Her first novel, One Life, dealt with the complex emotional and ethical landscape of IVF. Her second novel, Deceptions, is a psychological thriller, inspired by a true story and explores the impact on a family when a child goes missing.

After making a short viral film in 2008 opposing the proposed expansion of London Heathrow Airport, Frayn co-founded We CAN, a group who lobbied the government to take action on climate change in the run up to the 2010 Copenhagen Conference. In 2012 she directed the Green Party's political broadcast.

Frayn is currently writing a screenplay for the BFI, Miss Behaviour that charts the Miss World demonstrations in 1970 and the birth of feminism.

Personal life

Frayn graduated from the University of Bristol in 1984. She married film producer Andy Harries in July 1992 and they have three children: twin sons, Jack Harries and Finn Harries, and a daughter Emmy. Frayn had to undergo IVF to have her daughter, an experience which inspired her novel One Life. Frayn's father is English entrepreneur Peter Rimmer.

References

Rebecca Frayn Wikipedia