Helen Lee is an independent filmmaker
based in Toronto and Seoul. She emigrated from Korea, where she was
born, at age four with her family to Canada.
Lee studied English Literature and
Cinema Studies at the University of Toronto, where she was awarded
the Norman Jewison Fellowship for further studies in film. She received
her Master’s Degree in Cinema Studies at New York University
and attended the Whitney Museum’s Independent Study Program
in Critical and Curatorial Studies as a Helena Rubinstein Fellow.
Through the Academy of Canadian Film and TV’s Director Observer
Program, Lee served a directing internship with Atom Egoyan during
the making of “Exotica.” She completed her film
training at the Canadian Film Centre as Director Resident.
Lee has made a number of acclaimed
films, all of which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Her first short film, “Sally’s Beauty Spot”
(1990) received an Award of Excellence at the Ann Arbor Film Festival
and is screened widely in Asian American cinema classes. “My
Niagara” (1992) was awarded a Special Jury Citation for
Best Short Film at TIFF. Her CFC thesis film,“Prey”
(1995) was an official selection of the Clermont-Ferrand Short Film
Festival. “Subrosa” (2000) received a Director’s
Citation Award from the Black Maria Film Festival. Lee’s debut
feature, “The Art of Woo” (2001) was released
by Odeon Films/Alliance Atlantis domestically and invited to numerous
festivals worldwide.
Prior to filmmaking, Lee was a music
critic and contributing editor of the Toronto weekly, NOW Magazine.
She also worked in film distribution at DEC Films/Full Frame and Women
Make Movies. Lee has taught courses at the Ontario College of Art
and Design, served on various juries, and presented numerous guest
lectures in Canada and the U.S. Her essay, “A Peculiar Sensation:
A Personal Genealogy of Korean American Women’s Cinema,”
was published in Dangerous Women: Gender and Korean Nationalism
(New York: Routledge, 1997), and excerpted in Cineaste and
reprinted in Screening Asian Americans. She co-edited with
Kerri Sakamoto, Like Mangoes in July: The Work of Richard Fung,
for the Images Festival. A conversation with Celine Parrenas Shimizu
about her film work, “Sex Acts: Two Meditations on Race and
Sexuality,” appears in Signs: Journal of Women in Culture
and Society.
Lee’s various film and
screenwriting projects have received support from Telefilm Canada,
the Harold Greenberg Fund, Canada Council, Ontario Arts Council, Toronto
Arts Council, LIFT and other film organizations. In 2002, Lee was
a guest of the DAAD’s Berliner Kunstlerprogramm in Germany,
where she mounted a 3-channel performance-based video installation,
“Cleaving” (2002) at the Werkleitz Biennale in Saxony-Anhalt.
Her films were also the subject of a mini-retrospective at Kino Arsenal
in Berlin. She received the BFC Award at the 2003 Pusan Promotion
Plan (PPP), Pusan International Film Festival, and also a Chalmers
Award from the OAC in 2004. Currently, she sits on the advisory boards
of the Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival and TIFFG’s
Cinematheque Ontario.