Djibril Diop Mambéty(1945-1998)
- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Born the son of a Muslim cleric in Colobane, near Dakar, Senegal,
Djibril Diop Mambéty received no formal training in filmmaking. He
experimented with theater, but in 1968, he was asked to leave an
avant-garde theater group. Shortly thereafter, he made his first film
short called Badou Boy (1970), which dealt with the life of a young renegade. By
1973, he directed his first feature, Touki Bouki (1973), about disaffected youth,
and it became an instant classic. It would be nearly twenty years
before he would create another film, Hyenas (1992), which is considered a
sequel to "Touki Bouki" and a parable based on the classic play "The
Visit" by Frederich Durrenmatt. Although his films were considered to
be politically oriented, Mambéty rejected the realism preferred by most
African filmmakers. His films were notable for their dream-like quality
that left the themes of his films entirely to the interpretation of the
viewer; this was, of course, the desired effect. In spite of the fact
that Mambéty only completed a few short films and a meager two
full-length features, the quality of his short body of work has
rendered him legendary status among African filmmakers and, indeed, the
international film community.