Nadia Litz

Nadia Litz

Birthday: 26 December 1976, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Height: 160 cm
Nadia Litz is an award-winning actress turned filmmaker. She debuted at Cannes in Jeremy Podeswa's Genie award-winning film The Five Senses. She played Sam Shepard's daughter in 2002's After The Harvest and was nominated for a Gemini Award for Best Actress for that role. In 2007, she won the Vancouver's Critics Award for her rol... Show more »
Nadia Litz is an award-winning actress turned filmmaker. She debuted at Cannes in Jeremy Podeswa's Genie award-winning film The Five Senses. She played Sam Shepard's daughter in 2002's After The Harvest and was nominated for a Gemini Award for Best Actress for that role. In 2007, she won the Vancouver's Critics Award for her role in Reg Harkema's Money Warfare. While acting, she pursued a Film Theory degree from York University. She was welcomed as a student to the Berlinale Talent Campus, 2009. Months later, she was accepted as a Director-In-Residence at Norman Jewison's highly competitive post-graduate school, the Canadian Film Center. While there she directed the 35 mm short film, How To Rid Your Lover Of A Negative Emotion Caused By You! That film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2010. Since then, the short has played over a dozen film festivals internationally, including out-of-competition at Cannes Court Metrage 2011. It won best short at Austin's Fantastic Fest 2011 and in 2012 it was featured on the prestigious Wholphin anthology, alongside new work by Jay Duplass (Jeff Who Lives At Home) and Sean Durkin (Martha Marcy May Marlene). For TIFF 2011, Litz earned a spot as a director in the coveted TIFF Talent Lab lead by Jason Reitman and the late Bingham Ray. In May of 2012 Litz's made an alternative short portrait called The Frame with Adrienne Clarkson, on Canada's former Governor General which will make it's world premiere at VIFF in September 2012. In July 2012, veteran Canadian indie producer Ingrid Veninger challenged award-winning filmmakers to make a feature film for $1000. In two weeks Litz wrote the feature Hotel Congress, which was then awarded the green light prize to shoot. Together with CFC alum Michel Kandinsky, actor Philip Riccio she wrote, directed, produced and starred in her first feature, which was shot in less than 40 hours in Tucson, Arizona. Litz is in development with Telefilm Canada/Scythia Films on her feature The People Garden. Show less «
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