Dylan Mohan Gray

Dylan Mohan Gray is a globally-acclaimed Indian and Canadian filmmaker. His documentary feature film Fire in the Blood,[1] premiered in competition at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and went on to enjoy the longest theatrical run of any non-fiction film in Indian cinema history (five weeks). 

Dylan Mohan Gray
Alma materDartmouth College, Central European University
OccupationDirector, producer, screenwriter

An official selection at over 100 leading film festivals which was honoured with major awards and accolades worldwide, Fire in the Blood,[1] fundamentally changed the global conversation around access to essential medicine, and in 2018 was included by legendary Australian journalist and documentary filmmaker John Pilger among his "26 landmark documentary films of the past seven decades".[2] 

Of Dylan's filmmaking, critics have said “Dylan Mohan Gray has made cinematic provocation something of a signature" (The Dallas Morning News) and that "Gray's images are exquisite and unsparing... artful in nearly every frame, perhaps so we don’t avert our eyes” (The Village Voice & LA Weekly).  

Dylan's film on the future of global health and human rights, From Durban to Tomorrow, shot in six countries on three continents, premiered in competition at the 2020 Mumbai International Film Festival. His narrative feature script, The Last Day of Winter (co-written with Vikramaditya Motwane), was incubated at the Sundance Institute | Mumbai Mantra Screenwriting Lab. 

In 2017 he was appointed Visiting Professor of History (exploring intersections between history and film) at the Central European University in Budapest, where he had earlier completed his MA, and in 2016 was chosen from over 13,000 graduates to receive the CEU's inaugural Alumni Impact Award. 

Dylan directed Netflix's first Indian-themed non-fiction original film, The King of Good Times (2020), about the spectacular rise and fall of flamboyant Indian tycoon Vijay Mallya and his ill-fated dream venture, Kingfisher Airlines. The film opens the Netflix Original documentary anthology series, Bad Boy Billionaires: India, the release of which was delayed due to legal injunctions in India.[3] It enjoyed a multiple-week run as the #1 most-watched title on Netflix India when it finally released[4] and was the most-watched documentary of the year 2020 in India.[5][6] He lives and works in Mumbai.[7]

Early life

Dylan Mohan Gray, Agra, 2005

Born on remote Prince Edward Island off Canada's Atlantic coast, where his biologist father served as a national park warden, Gray grew up with a keen interest in theatre, first as a child actor, then later moving into writing and directing plays, followed soon thereafter by videos (often using equipment borrowed from school sports programs).

He was originally trained as a contemporary historian and expected to continue his career in academia, but began working in the film industry after a chance meeting in Budapest with a former acting colleague who was there working as an assistant director with David Cronenberg. He would go on to serve in various key capacities (often credited as "D. Dylan Gray") on international feature films in over thirty countries worldwide, working in close collaboration with numerous acclaimed directors including Fatih Akin, Peter Greenaway, Paul Greengrass, Deepa Mehta and Mira Nair.[7]

Gray studied History and Film at Dartmouth College (USA), as well as at the University of Vienna and the Budapest University of Economics. He holds graduate degrees in History from the Central European University and the University of the State of New York, with research focussed on historiography and geographic dimensions of identity.[8] He was also a resident in Film at Canada's renowned Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity.

Awards and nominations

WINNERCentral European University Alumni Impact Award, Budapest, May 2016

WINNERGold Award for Excellence in Nonfiction (Direction)Silver Award for Excellence in Nonfiction (Script)Jury Award for Best Film: Documentary—11th Indian Documentary Producers Association (IDPA) Awards, Mumbai, March 2015

WINNERBest Feature Documentary—Montréal International Black Film Festival, September 2014

WINNERGrand Jury Award (main prize) — The White Sands International Film Festival, New Mexico, September 2014

WINNERBest Documentary—International Film Festival of Kashmir, Srinigar, August 2014

WINNERAudience Award—Best Documentary—16th Fairy Tales International Queer Film Festival, Calgary, June 2014

WINNERDadasaheb Phalke Chitranagari Award for Best Debut Film for a Director, Mumbai International Film Festival, February 2014[9]

WINNER—2013 Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Prize for Political Film, Filmfest Hamburg, October 2013[10][11]

WINNER—DOXA Feature Documentary Award (main prize) -- 2013 DOXA Documentary Film Festival, Vancouver, May 2013[12][11]

WINNER—Justice Matters Award—27th Washington DC International Film Festival, April 2013[11]

Grand Jury Prize, World Documentary (Nominated) -- Sundance Film Festival, January 2013[11]

Directors Guild of Canada (DGC) Team Award, Feature Film (Nominated), 2007

Media

Gray has been featured or profiled on outlets including the BBC (radio and television), BBC World Service (radio and television), CNN-IBN, Democracy Now!, Frontline, Indiewire, Filmmaker Magazine, Movieline, MSNBC, The Dallas Morning News, The Asian Age, The Guardian, The Hindu, India Today, Mumbai Mirror, Indian Express, The Times of India, OPEN (magazine), RTÉ, POZ (magazine), Time Out, The Telegraph and The Wall Street Journal.

References

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