Age, Biography and Wiki
Jennifer Baichwal was born on 1965 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, is a Canadian documentary filmmaker. Discover Jennifer Baichwal's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 59 years old?
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Filmmaker |
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59 years old |
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Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
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Canada
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She is a member of famous Filmmaker with the age 59 years old group.
Jennifer Baichwal Height, Weight & Measurements
At 59 years old, Jennifer Baichwal height not available right now. We will update Jennifer Baichwal's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Who Is Jennifer Baichwal's Husband?
Her husband is Nicholas de Pencier
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Nicholas de Pencier |
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Jennifer Baichwal Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Jennifer Baichwal worth at the age of 59 years old? Jennifer Baichwal’s income source is mostly from being a successful Filmmaker. She is from Canada. We have estimated Jennifer Baichwal's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
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Jennifer Baichwal Social Network
Timeline
Jennifer Baichwal is a Canadian documentary filmmaker, writer and producer.
Baichwal was born in Montreal, Quebec and raised in Victoria, British Columbia.
She is the daughter of Krishna Baichwal Sr. a cardiothoracic surgeon, and Elvina Baichwal.
Together they had four children Jennifer, Krishna Jr., Elizabeth and Kristine.
She is of Indian and British heritage.
In 1985, she traveled to Morocco and lived on a farm, inspired by the writing of Paul Bowles, who would become the subject of her first feature-length documentary.
Baichwal studied philosophy and theology at McGill University, writing her Master's thesis on Reinhold Niebuhr and receiving her master's in arts in 1994.
In 1995, Baichwal traveled with her family to India to scatter the ashes of their late father who had died from heart-related issues.
Baichwal is married to cinematographer and director Nicholas de Pencier.
They were brought together by Baichwal's classmate, Canadian journalist Evan Solomon, after he had suggested de Pencier when she needed a cinematographer for her film.
Since their initial collaboration in 1995 and with the exception of Manufactured Landscapes, all of Baichwal's films have been shot by her husband Nick de Pencier.
Looking You in the Back of the Head is a short television documentary produced in 1995 featuring 13 Canadian women exploring what they think of their own identity.
Made near the end of Bowles' life, Baichwal was able to screen the film for the author before his death in 1999.
She says of the experience viewing the film with her subject: "It was very important for me that he see [the film] before he died; he had just turned 88. I was petrified as to what he would think of it, he's a real misanthrope and recluse. I got to his place, and I wanted him to watch it after I left and then write to me. But he was insistent. So he put it on, and he has quite bad glaucoma, so he was sitting six inches from the screen. I shut the door, and I kind of panicked for 75 minutes while he was watching it."
The Holier It Gets is a documentary about Baichwal and her siblings pilgrimage to India to put their father's ashes in the Ganges river.
It was filmed on 16mm by Nick de Pencier.
The film explores themes of grief, closure, the afterlife and spirituality.
The film takes a layered approach to Adams' work, it features interviews with the photographer, his subjects and his critics.
The film's title comes from one of Adam's subjects and defenders in the face of accusations of exploitation and stereotypes from the photographer.
Notable amongst Baichwal's features, the documentary Manufactured Landscapes focuses on the work of Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky in one of his expeditions to China.
The photographs, taken for his China series, provide the frame for the film that explores the effects that rapid and recent industrialization has had on the environment in this manufacturing and economic superpower.
Act of God is a documentary about the metaphysical questions surrounding the event of being struck by lightning.
It features various accounts from people who have either been struck lightning or witnessed the act.
It looks into scientific, cultural and religious interpretations of lightning showers from around the world.
The film features narration from writer Paul Auster and centers his experience witnessing his childhood friend succumb to a fatal lightning strike.
Payback is a documentary film adaptation of Canadian writer Margaret Atwood's non-fiction book Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth.
Watermark, the second collaboration between Baichwal and Burtynsky, sees the photographer co-directing the film alongside her.
Together, they have two children, a son Magnus born in 2000 and a daughter Anna born in 2003.
The couple started a production company in 2000, originally under the name Requisite Productions, now called Mercury Films.
After completing her master's at McGill, Baichwal decided to pursue documentary film work as she found that it provided her the right avenue to explore the questions and issues that she had studied in her program.
Baichwal on her career choice: "I wanted to explore these questions of the human condition, but in a medium that was more lateral and more emotionally accessible than an academic paper."
She has stated that the documentary "allows you to reflect on ... things that are happening in the real world in a way that is creative".
Her films often attempt to investigate problems within documentary film form.
She says: "There has to be some kind of mystery as well - a meta-level problem that the film becomes a response to. Our Paul Bowles film is about the impossibility of biography. The Holier It Gets is about the perils of confessional work, and The True Meaning of Pictures is about issues of representation. Manufactured Landscapes, proceeding from Edward Burtynsky's photographs, is about changing consciousness through witnessing the places we are all responsible for, but normally never get to see."
Baichwal's production company has produced most of her films, along with other short films and documentaries including The Hockey Nomad and Black Code, the latter of which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2016.
Many of her films' subjects are artists of other mediums than film.
In an interview with the Seventh Art, Baichwal mentions how she is drawn to artists, stating: "There is something about art that can't be paraphrased and just living in the complexity of that world is very rich for me..."
In 2016, Baichwal was named a member of the Toronto International Film Festival Board of Directors.