HIGHLIGHTS
Purpose and Values
It’s nighttime in 1980s Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Glittery and glamorous heels climb out of cars. Women shrouded in traditional black abayas make their way into a wedding hall. There, they reveal what’s underneath: dazzling dresses and wild hair. Their true selves set free, unseen by male gaze. There are strict segregation rules in Saudi weddings. All eyes and ears are on the wedding singer; until the electricity cuts out suddenly. “This is the worst wedding singer ever,” guests mutter, condescendingly. Will the young daughter manage to save her mother’s dignity?
The Wedding Singer’s Daughter, directed by Haifaa Al-Mansour, is the 16th commission from Miu Miu Women’s Tales. The acclaimed short-film series invites today’s most profound and original female directors to investigate vanity and femininity in the 21st century.
Based in Los Angeles, Haifaa Al-Mansour is considered the first female Saudi filmmaker. Her debut feature, Wadjda (2013) -about a rebellious girl who wants to break societal laws and ride her bicycle- was a breakout hit, and the first ever foreign-language Oscar entry from Saudi Arabia. As the country undergoes unprecedented cultural reform, which has recently seen women be given the right to drive and the first cinemas open to the public, Al-Mansour’s next film, The Perfect Candidate, will be the first feature to be supported by the new national Saudi Film Council. The comedydrama follows a young female physician who dreams of participating in male-dominated, municipal elections.
“Trying to build things up, step by step, is very important,” says Al-Mansour. “Patience pays off.” Indeed, Saudi popsinger Rotana Tarabzouni -who plays the lead character in The Wedding Singer’s Daughter, and composed the music with The Real Satta- describes herself and the women of her generation as, “the necessary and exciting growing pains of any society going through a reform and artistic renaissance.” About the marital setting of her new Miu Miu film, AlMansour believes that, “weddings are the actual mirror of society in Saudi Arabia: segregated, fragmented, along gender and class. I wanted to tell the story of those people, and capture that tenderness.”
Al-Mansour says that Women’s Tales have been an inspiring project because, “It’s very important for women to tell their stories. And sometimes it’s hard.” In this new story, the singer’s young daughter is the unlikely heroine. She ignores the other girls’ scornful judgment, and instead uses her nimble mind, just like an independent film-director. “For me, the little girl represents the future,” reveals Al-Mansour, “and the future belongs to outsiders.”
HAIFAA AL-MANSOUR
Haifaa Al-Mansour is the first female filmmaker in Saudi Arabia and is regarded as one of its most significant cinematic figures. She studied comparative literature at the American University in Cairo and completed a Master’s degree in Film Studies from the University of Sydney.
The success of her 2005 documentary “Women Without Shadows” influenced a new wave of Saudi filmmakers and made the issue of opening cinemas in the Kingdom front-page news.
“Wadjda”, Al-Mansour’s feature debut, is the first feature film shot entirely in Saudi Arabia and the first by a female director. The film received wide critical acclaim after its premiere at the 2012 Venice Film Festival and established AlMansour as an important talent emerging from the Arab World.
She recently published a novelization of the film titled “The Green Bicycle” for Penguin publishing group.
She is currently working on post-production on her latest film, "Nappily Ever After”, starring Sanaa Lathan.
Her film "Mary Shelley“ starring Elle Fanning and Douglas Booth, and based on the life of “Frankenstein” author Mary Shelley will also come out later this year.
Al-Mansour is the first artist from the Arabian Gulf region to be invited to join the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences.
THE WEDDING SINGER’S DAUGHTER
BY HAIFAA AL-MANSOUR
It’s nighttime in 1980s Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Glittery and glamorous heels climb out of cars. Women shrouded in traditional black abayas make their way into a wedding hall. There, they reveal what’s underneath: dazzling dresses and wild hair. Their true selves set free, unseen by male gaze. There are strict segregation rules in Saudi weddings. All eyes and ears are on the wedding singer; until the electricity cuts out suddenly. “This is the worst wedding singer ever,” guests mutter, condescendingly. Will the young daughter manage to save her mother’s dignity?
Miu Miu Women’s Tales #16
Premiere: On September 2, 2018 at the Giornate degli Autori within the Venice Film Festival
Title:
The Wedding Singer’s Daughter
Written by:
Haifaa Al-Mansour
Directed by:
Haifaa Al-Mansour
Countries:
Italy, USA
Production Companies:
Anonymous Content
Hi Production
Executive Producer:
SueEllen Clair
Max Brun
Producer:
Sara D’Alessio
Director of Photography:
Alar Kivilo
Cast:
Haylie Neimann
Adam Neimann
Rotana Tarabzouni
Music by:
Jordan Satta
Length:
8’22’’