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Anant Singh is recognised as South Africa’s pre-eminent film producer, having
produced more than sixty films since 1984. He is responsible for many of the greatest
anti-apartheid films made in South Africa, including “Place Of Weeping,” Sarafina!
and Cry, the Beloved Country. Nelson Mandela called him “a producer I respect
very much…a man of tremendous ability” when he granted him the film rights to his
autobiography, Long Walk To Freedom. Singh is set to film Long Walk to Freedom
next year.
Singh is the producer of Yesterday (from director, Darrell James Roodt), which
received South Africa’s first Academy Award Nomination in the Best Foreign
Language Picture category in 2005, the Peabody Award and an Emmy Nomination
in 2006 in the “Outstanding Made For Television Movie” category.
Born and raised in Durban Singh began his film career at age 18 when he left his
studies at the University of Durban-Westville to purchase a 16mm movie rental store.
From there, he moved into video distribution, forming Videovision Entertainment). He
moved into film production in 1984 with Darrell James Roodt’s acclaimed Place of
Weeping, the first anti-apartheid film to be made entirely in South Africa.
A selection of his subsequent feature films includes: Sarafina! with Whoopi Goldberg,
Leleti Khumalo and Miriam Makeba; The Road to Mecca, with Kathy Bates; Father
Hood, with Patrick Swayze and Halle Berry; Captives, with Julia Ormond and Tim
Roth; Tobe Hooper’s The Mangler, with Robert Englund and based on a Stephen
King short story; Cry, the Beloved Country, from Alan Paton’s revered novel, with
James Earl Jones and Richard Harris; Paljas (shot in Afrikaans, the first South African
film to be selected for Oscar Consideration in the Best Foreign Language film
category); Face, with Robert Carlyle; The Theory of Flight, with Kenneth Branagh and
Helena Bonham Carter; Bravo Two Zero, with Sean Bean; The Long Run, with Armin
Mueller-Stahl; Tsui Hark’s remake of The Legend of Zu, with Zhang Ziyi; I Capture the
Castle, with Tara Fitzgerald and Henry Thomas and Red Dust, with Hilary Swank and
Chiwetel Ejiofor, a drama centering on South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation
Commission.
Directly after the completion of Yesterday, Singh once again teamed up with
director, Darrell James Roodt to produce Faith’s Corner which starred Leleti Khumalo
and scored by multi-award winner Philip Glass.
Singh’s association with South Africa’s Number One Boxoffice star, Leon Schuster,
saw the production of the hit comedy Mr Bones which became the highest grossing
South African film of all time, earning more than R32 million at the boxoffice.
Following Mr Bones was Mama Jack a further collaboration with Leon Schuster which
was the top performing South African film of 2005, grossing more than R28 million at
the boxoffice.
Prey, also produced by Singh, is directed by Darrell James Roodt and co-written by
Roodt and the writers of Cry Wolf, Beau Bauman and Jeff Wadlow. The film stars
Peter Weller of RoboCop fame, Bridget Moynahan (I, Robot, The Sum Of All Fears,
The Recruit) and Carly Schroeder (Firewall, Mean Creek).
Singh’s latest production is More Than Just A Game, the moving docu-drama
feature which tells the inspiring story of organised soccer among prisoners on
Robben Island (the maximum security prison where Nelson Mandela and other
political prisoners were incarcerated by the apartheid regime in South Africa).
Anant Singh has also been involved in the production of many important
documentaries, including Countdown to Freedom, about the first free election in
South Africa, and Prisoners of Hope, about a reunion on Robben Island of 1250 of its
former political prisoners led by Nelson Mandela.
Singh is a board member of the International Marketing Council Of South Africa, the
Los Angeles-based Artists For A New South Africa and the Mandela 46664 Concert
with Richard Branson, Dave Stewart and Jim Beach. He is also the only South African
member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and was appointed
by President Thabo Mbeki to the Creative Collective, the body responsible for the
organization of South Africa’s Ten Years Of Freedom Celebrations in 2004.
Singh’s expertise in media and entertainment saw him being appointed to the Board
of Governors for Media and Entertainment of the World Economic Forum.
The South African Film Industry recognised Anant Singh for his significant contribution
to the advancement of the industry with the Golden Horn Award for Outstanding
Contributor at the inaugural South African Film And Television Awards in October
2006.
Singh is a recipient of the Crystal Award of the World Economic Forum and the
Lifetime Founder Member Award of the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund. Both the
University of Durban-Westville and the University Of Port Elizabeth have conferred
honorary doctorates on him.
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