Does Mania Akbari Dead or Alive?
As per our current Database, Mania Akbari is still alive (as per Wikipedia, Last update: May 10, 2020).
🎂 Mania Akbari - Age, Bio, Faces and Birthday
Currently, Mania Akbari is 50 years, 2 months and 0 days old. Mania Akbari will celebrate 51rd birthday on a Monday 22nd of September 2025. Below we countdown to Mania Akbari upcoming birthday.
Popular As |
Mania Akbari |
Occupation |
Director |
Age |
50 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Virgo |
Born |
September 22, 1974 () |
Birthday |
September 22 |
Town/City |
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Nationality |
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🌙 Zodiac
Mania Akbari’s zodiac sign is Virgo. According to astrologers, Virgos are always paying attention to the smallest details and their deep sense of humanity makes them one of the most careful signs of the zodiac. Their methodical approach to life ensures that nothing is left to chance, and although they are often tender, their heart might be closed for the outer world. This is a sign often misunderstood, not because they lack the ability to express, but because they won’t accept their feelings as valid, true, or even relevant when opposed to reason. The symbolism behind the name speaks well of their nature, born with a feeling they are experiencing everything for the first time.
🌙 Chinese Zodiac Signs
Mania Akbari was born in the Year of the Tiger. Those born under the Chinese Zodiac sign of the Tiger are authoritative, self-possessed, have strong leadership qualities, are charming, ambitious, courageous, warm-hearted, highly seductive, moody, intense, and they’re ready to pounce at any time. Compatible with Horse or Dog.
Mania Akbari was born in 1974 in Tehran, Iran. The daughter of schoolteachers, she started painting at a very early age. Later she worked as cinematographer and assistant director on documentaries, which reoriented her towards cinema.
Her international breakthrough occurred, however, not as a result of her work behind the camera but in front of it. Akbari played a version of herself, together with her son Amin Maher and her sister Roya, in Abbas Kiarostami's 2002 feature Ten, selected for competition at that year's edition of the Cannes Film Festival.
This was followed in 2003 by Crystal, a documentary about a young Kurdish woman who produces crystal stones from various parts of her body, including her eyes, her throat and her vagina.Her debut as sole director was in 2004 with 20 Fingers, which she also wrote and starred in.
It was awarded Best Film in the Digital Cinema section at the Venice Film Festival and was screened - and won further awards - at more than 40 film festivals internationally. During the next three years, Akbari made Six Video Art works, which not only screened at numerous film festivals such as Locarno, but were also exhibited at museums such as Tate Modern in London.
In 2007, Akbari was diagnosed with breast cancer. The experience of successfully battling the disease prompted her to direct and act in her second fictionalized documentary, 10+4, a sequel to Abbas Kiarostami's Ten made four years earlier.
The new film was exhibited at numerous festivals such as San Sebastián and Cannes, and received numerous awards including Nantes Special Public Award Best Film and Best Director at Kerala Film Festival.
Akbari's meditations on death, war, family, memory, beauty, relationships and above all, identity, have formed the bases not only of her filmed work but also of a series of photo-based exhibitions that took place between 2007 to 2010 - This is Mania-This is not Mania (2007), This is not Mania-This is not Mandana (2008), Van Gogh's Ear (2008), Devastation (2009), My Family (2009), My Guernica (2009), To Be Mandana, To Be Not Mandana (2009), Happy Marriage, Mania Akbari & Behnoud Shojaee (2010) - and which toured around the world to countries as various as Switzerland, Slovenia, Brasil, Spain, Italy, UK, France, Dubai and the US.
In 2010, Akbari was back behind the camera making a documentary about the execution of a minor in Iran, called 30 Minutes To 6AM, in which she questions a series of guests on themes such as revenge, justice and pain.
She followed this up with her widely acclaimed fiction feature One.Two.One about a young woman dealing with the very slippery concept of beauty after she is disfigured in an accident.Another decisive moment in Akbari's life occurred during the filming of her next feature, initially titled Women Do Not Have Breasts.
The pronounced toughening of censorship in Iran at that moment meant Akbari was practically forced to leave the country. This prevented the film from being finished. The footage from the abandoned shoot was compiled into a film called From Teheran to London, an unfinished triangular story of love and disenchantment between a young poet, her husband and her maid.
The film is accompanied by a making-of documentary, directed by Akbari's sister, Roya, called Dancing Mania, in which we are shown the intricacies of the various explicit references and comments made throughout the film - for instance, the use of Akbari's portraits to comment upon beauty, domesticity and sexuality.
Recently Akbari has once again come back to the video art with In My Country, Men Have Breasts (2012), and I slept with my mother, my father, my brother and my sister in a country called Iran (2012) both focusing on the links between family and country and their power in defining ourselves.
Akbari has also just published a book of short stories called The Story Without Découpage. In 2013 she had retrospective in "BFI south bank London". Now "Mania Akbari" and "Mark cousins" co-directing a long documentary film in London & Edinburg .
Mania Akbari Movies
- 20 Fingers (2004) as Director
- Yek. Do. Yek (2011) as Director
- 10 + 4 (Dah be alaveh chahar) (2007) as Director
- A Moon for My Father (2019) as Director
Mania Akbari trend