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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Career  





3 Personal life  





4 References  





5 External links  














Sigal Avin






עברית
 

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Sigal Avin

Sigal Avin (also spelled: Segahl Avin, Hebrew: סיגל אבין) is an American-Israeli writer and director.

Early life

[edit]

Sigal Avin was born in Miami, Florida, U.S. and returned to Israel with her Israeli-Jewish parents at the age of ten. When she was sixteen her parents moved back to the States, this time to California. Her father got an offer to manage the Mondrian Hotel in Los Angeles. Avin decided to stay in Israel and finish school. [1] [2] [3]

Career

[edit]

Avin studied acting at the Yoram Lowenstein acting studio. [4] [3]

She wrote and directed her first play How to make a boy in 1999 for Haifa’s International children’s theatre festival. [1]

In 2000 she wrote and directed Shmulik is a new friend for the same festival and won several prizes, among them, best show and best director. The story was about 3 kids who kidnap a grandmother with a banana because they don’t have one. [1] [5]

Her first play for adults, With a gun and a smile, a sad comedy about small people with small dreams, was chosen by the Israeli culture department to participate in the Australian International Playwrights Festival.[6] [7] [8]

In 2002 Avin created a show called Freaks, inspired by the Todd Brownings film of the same name. The show had no words, was highly praised and was invited to festivals all over the world. [8] [9] [1] [3] [10]

In 2003 Avin created and was show-runner of the acclaimed telenovela Game of life. [1] [2]

In 2004 Avin created and was show-runner of Michaella. [1] [2]

In 2005 Avin created and was show-runner of Telenovela Inc, which told her personal story about the struggle she had trying to write her first telenovela, and the hectic, surreal, life around that industry. The shows still air on Israeli TV in syndication. [1] [2]

Between 2005–2007 Avin was Artistic Manager and director of the young Habima Company (Israel’s national theatre), where she created Taxi, a play about lonely souls and the Israeli decadent night life and directed Marivoux’s The Dispute as a modern reality TV show. [11] [2]

In 2007 Avin created the dramedy Mythological Ex for the Israeli channel 2 Keshet. CBS bought the format and the American version entitled The Ex List premiered in 2008 starring Elizabeth Reaser as the lead. [12] [13] [2] [3] [14]

In 2010 Avin wrote and directed a short film called You shall know no grief, in the 48 hour film project, and won first prize. [15]

In 2013, Avin, inspired by the fact she had become a mother, co-created, wrote and directed the comedy series Bilti Hafich (Irreversible), about what happens to a couple after having their first child. The show starring Adi Ashkenazi and Muli Shulman, premiered on channel 2 Reshet and was the number one comedy in Israel that year. [16]

ABC bought the format. Avin teamed up with Peter Tolan and Sony studios and wrote and directed the American pilot Irreversible Starring David Schwimmer as the lead. [17] [18] [2]

In June 2014 she was featured on Variety’s list of, “10 TV Scribes to Watch.” [19]

In February 2016 the second season of Bilti Hafich, that Avin wrote and directed, aired in Israel. [20]

In December 2016, Avin launched a project she created, wrote and directed called ZematridonFacebook in Israel. The project includes five short films that show the dynamic behind sexual harassment. The project went viral in a couple of hours. Among the actors in the films are Lior Ashkenazi and Hadas Yaron. [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26]

In April 2017 Avin launched the American version of her films depicting sexual harassment called #that's harassment. David Schwimmer and Mazdack Rassi from MILK studios produced. The films star – David Schwimmer, Cynthia Nixon, Emmy Rossum, Bobby Cannavale, Michael Kelly, and more. [27] [28] [29]

Personal life

[edit]

Sigal Avin is married to Amit Mashiah, chief executive officer of Mccann, Tel Aviv. They have two daughters.[30][31][32]

Sigal lives both in Tel Aviv and New York.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Gal, Poria (March 4, 2005). ""An interview with Sigal Avin". nrg Maariv
  • ^ a b c d e f g Stern, Itay (March 24, 2016). "A conversation with the most successful script woman in Israel". Haaretz.
  • ^ a b c d Yudovich, Daphna (June 6, 2006). "An Interview with Sigal Avin". Globes.
  • ^ Class of 1998. Studio Alumni. Yoram Lowenstein acting studio site.
  • ^ "Shmulik". Habima Theatre site.
  • ^ With a gun and a smile. Habima Theatre site.
  • ^ With a gun and a smile. Studio show archive. Yoram Lowenstein acting studio site.
  • ^ a b "Freaks". Habima Theatre site.
  • ^ "Freaks". Studio show archive. Yoram Lowenstein acting studio site.
  • ^ (August 19, 2003). ). "About Freaks". Haaretz.
  • ^ "Sigal Avin". Habima Theatre site.
  • ^ Crystal, Meirav (May 13, 2008). "CBS greenlights Israeli-based series ‘Mythological X’".. Ynet.
  • ^ Schneider, Michael (September 12, 2008). "Diane Ruggiero quits 'Ex List'. Variety.
  • ^ (June 18, 2008). "America finds its ex list on israeli tv". israel21c.
  • ^ Canaf, Uria (July 19. 2010). "48 hour film festival". ynet.
  • ^ Averbuch, Li-Or (May 5, 2013). "Bilti Hafich of Reshet had an average of 27.8% this season". Globes.
  • ^ Aschenbrand, Periel (July 22, 2016). "The chosen ones an interview with sigal avin". Tablet.
  • ^ Andreeva. Nellie (August 23, 2013). "Comedy Based On Israeli Format From Peter Tolan And Sony TV Gets Pilot Order At ABC". Deadline.
  • ^ Saval, Malina (October 10, 2014). "Variety’s 10 TV Scribes to Watch". variety.
  • ^ "Bilti Hafich second season". Reshet site.
  • ^ 'zematrid' official site.
  • ^ Makin, Shira (December 12, 2016). 'Zematrid' – short films that expose the dynamic behind sexual harassment'. Haaretz.
  • ^ Eliyahu, Dorin (December 26, 2016). "About 'Zematrid'". mako.
  • ^ Guy Pines show (December 27, 2016). "'zematrid' – Sigal Avin's project about sexual harassment". Nana 10.
  • ^ Stadtmauer, Lori (December 27, 2016). "This is what sexual harassment looks like". Ynet.
  • ^ Ben Noon, Sagi (December 26, 2016). "In the parliameny, in the army, in the theater and at work: short movies that remind us that sexual harassment is everywhere". Walla!.
  • ^ (12 April 2017). That's harassment. David Schwimmer and Sigal Avin tackle sexual harassment – video. Guardian
  • ^ Truong, Peggy (April 3, 2017). David Schwimmer Launches New Campaign to Fight Sexual Harassment. Cosmopolitan
  • ^ Winfrey, Graham (April 3, 2017). Schwimmer Short ‘The Boss’ Kicks Off Campaign to Fight Sexual Harassment — Watch. Indie Wire
  • ^ Moshe Benjamin (June 6. 2015)."Profile of Amit Mashiah". Ice.
  • ^ Bien-Lubobich, Anat (July 7, 2016). "Israel advertising companies 2016". Globes.
  • ^ Toker, Nati (November 22, 2016). "In three years 20% of Mccann Tel Aviv employees will be Haredi, Arabs or Beta Israel". The Marker.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sigal_Avin&oldid=1151079329"

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    This page was last edited on 21 April 2023, at 19:24 (UTC).

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