Exclusive: APA is bolstering its Physical Production Department with the addition of three new agents – Marina Moyses, Alexa Lopez and Micaela Huber.
Moyses will anchor South American initiatives from San Paulo Brazil; Lopez comes to APA from Panavision and Huber has been elevated from coordinator to head up a hair and make-up department.
“We are proud to be market leaders in diversity within the Physical Production community, and excited to expand upon that with the addition of three women including two Latina agents, all of whom will greatly enhance the scope of what we offer our clients at APA,” said Julian Savodivker, Head of Global Physical Production at APA, who himself is Latino.
Moyses, returns to APA following a two-year stint running her own management firm in Brazil where she shared many clients with APA and where she will based for the agency. With her experience in both domestic and international markets,...
Moyses will anchor South American initiatives from San Paulo Brazil; Lopez comes to APA from Panavision and Huber has been elevated from coordinator to head up a hair and make-up department.
“We are proud to be market leaders in diversity within the Physical Production community, and excited to expand upon that with the addition of three women including two Latina agents, all of whom will greatly enhance the scope of what we offer our clients at APA,” said Julian Savodivker, Head of Global Physical Production at APA, who himself is Latino.
Moyses, returns to APA following a two-year stint running her own management firm in Brazil where she shared many clients with APA and where she will based for the agency. With her experience in both domestic and international markets,...
- 9/29/2022
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Heitor Dhalia, one of Brazil’s foremost and most ambitious movie auteurs, director of “Drained,” “Adrift” and “Bald Mountain,” is teaming with Netflix to make “DNA do Crime,” a banner title for the U.S. streaming giant in Brazil, one of its largest international markets.
Described by Dhalia as “one of the biggest series ever produced in Brazil,” the eight-part scripted skein, which goes into production on Oct. 31, turns on a heist of epic proportions, which takes place on the Brazil-Paraguay border.
When federal police officers are called in to investigate, they discover “the beginning of a thread that unravels, like no other, the construction of crime in the country,” the synopsis runs.
“The series will try to open a new paradigm for the genre,” Dhalia told Variety. “It also talks about the tragic flaws in all of us, our deep nature,” he added.
Inspired by true events, “DNA do Crime” is created by Dhalia.
Described by Dhalia as “one of the biggest series ever produced in Brazil,” the eight-part scripted skein, which goes into production on Oct. 31, turns on a heist of epic proportions, which takes place on the Brazil-Paraguay border.
When federal police officers are called in to investigate, they discover “the beginning of a thread that unravels, like no other, the construction of crime in the country,” the synopsis runs.
“The series will try to open a new paradigm for the genre,” Dhalia told Variety. “It also talks about the tragic flaws in all of us, our deep nature,” he added.
Inspired by true events, “DNA do Crime” is created by Dhalia.
- 9/5/2022
- by John Hopewell
- Variety Film + TV
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