Anne Mungai

{{short description|Kenyan film director (born 1957)}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Anne Mungai

| image = Anne G. Mungai.jpg

| nationality = Kenyan

| citizenship = Kenyan

| occupation = Film Director

| years_active = 1980-till present

| known_for = exploring the stories of young African women and the challenges they face while navigating post-colonial Africa.

| notable_works = Saïkati

}}

Dr. Anne G. Mungai (born 1957) is a Kenyan film director.{{cite book|author=Roy Armes|title=Dictionary of African Filmmakers|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=88sTRTl6yKwC&pg=PA100|year=2008|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=978-0-253-35116-6|page=100|chapter=Mungai, Anne}} She is best known for her feature length film, Saikati (1992). She is known for exploring the stories of young African women and the challenges they face while navigating post-colonial Africa.

Life

Anne Mungai graduated from the Kenya Institute for Mass Communications and went on to work there. She is the founder-director of the Shangilia Street Children's Theatre.

In 1993 Mungai co-founded Women in Cinema in Kenya, affiliated with African Women in Film and Video as the provisional committee of its Kenya section.Beti Ellerson, [https://www.africanwomenincinema.org/AFWC/Mungai.html Interview with Anne Mungai], 1997.

Directorial career

Anne Mungai’s directing career began in 1980 with her first short entitled Nkomani Clinic.{{Cite book|title=Women Filmmakers: Refocusing|last=1 Raoul, Valerie 2 Levitin, Jacueline 3 Plessis, Judith|publisher=UBC Press|year=2002|location=Vancouver}} Since then, she has directed many short- and medium-length films, as well as her first feature film Saïkati. This film, like many of Mungai’s works, focuses on a female character living in Africa during a time that is split between traditional African cultural practices and those brought over from the Western world during colonization.

''Saikati'' (1992)

Saikati was funded by the Kenya Institute of Mass Communication, as Mungai was an alumnus of the school, with the equipment being provided by the Fredrick Engel Foundation. The script was work-shopped at the Institute with help from a script consultant. Mungai and the script consultant, however, did not have the same vision for Saikati during the writing process, meaning Mungai did not have full creative license of the film.{{Cite journal|last=Petty|first=Sheila J|date=Spring 1996|title='How an African Woman Can Be': African Women Filmmakers Construct Women|journal=Discourse|volume=18|pages=72–88}} Some of the scenes added to the film went against Mungai’s wishes for the cultural content and story that she had in mind, though Mungai still succeeded in getting the main message across to her audience. The film looks at topics surrounding the challenges women face because of the urbanization of Kenya: how difficult it is to navigate the rural-urban drift of the country while also working to discover who they are in terms of their education, beliefs, and sexuality and how they fit into post-colonial Africa.{{Cite journal|last=Cham|first=Mbye|date=1994|title=African Women and Cinema: A Conversation With Anne Mungai|journal=Research in African Literatures|volume=25|pages=93–104|jstor=}} Saikati looks at these topics from an intersectional point of view. (i.e. through depictions of class, gender, sexuality, age, and ethnicity)

= Plot =

The film depicts a young woman named Saikati who is conflicted between wanting to attend university to get an education in the city and following her parents' wishes of her marrying the Chief’s son, which her family has already arranged. Ultimately, she decides to run away from traditional life she once knew and goes to live with her cousin Monica in the city. Monica says she can help Saikati get a job so she can afford to go to school. Once Saikati arrives in the city, however, she realizes that her cousin is a prostitute and the job she has lined up for her is in the same profession. Saikati finds herself caught “between two evils: forced marriage and prostitution.” Saikati realizes that although she wants to run away from forced marriage, she does not want to lose the cultural practices she left behind in the Maasai “Maara.” She decides the culture she left behind is still part of who she is, even though she would like to get an education.

Filmography

class="wikitable"

! Film

! Year

Nkomani Clinic

|1980

The Beggar’s Husband

|1980

The Tomorrow’s Adult Citizens

|1981

Together We Build

|1982

Wekesa at Crossroads

|1986

Productive Farmlands

|1990

Faith

|1991

Root 1

|1991

Saikati ([https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lyatc1hrL1g online])

|1993

Pongezi

|1993

Usilie Mtoto wa Africa/Don't Cry Child of Afrika

|1994

Tough Choices

|1998

Saikati The Enkabaani

|1998

Promise of Love

|2000

Awards

class="wikitable"

|+

!Year

!Award

!Type of Award

1993

|FESPACO – UNICEF

|Award for best projection of an African woman's image

1993

|APAC

|Association of Professional in Communication Award for best African Woman Director – Burkina Faso

1994

|HEAD OF STATE COMMENDATION AWARD (H.S.C)

|n/a

1994

|M-NET

|Special merit award

1995

|FESPACO

|Best Video Documentary Award

1996

|Chile Embassy

|Gabriella Mistral Award

1999

|PLAN INTERNATIONAL

|Director's Film Award (For Saikati)

1999

|Zanzibar International Film Festival

|Special Jury Director's Award

2022

|Women in Film Awards

|Most Influential Woman Personality

{{Cite web|url=http://www.spla.pro/file.person.anne-g-mungai.4313.html|title=SPLA {{!}} Anne G. Mungaï|website=www.spla.pro|access-date=2019-10-30}}

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • Mbye Cham, [https://www.jstor.org/stable/3819847 African Women and Cinema: A Conversation with Anne Mungai], Research in African Literatures, Vol. 25, No. 3 (Autumn 1994), pp. 93–104 {{jstor|3819847}}