Maren Niemeyer

Maren Niemeyer (born 8 May 1964) is a German journalist, author and documentary filmmaker.

Life

Niemeyer was born in the Hanseatic city of Bremen and took her A-levels at the Kippenberg Gymnasium. She studied journalism, German philology and film studies at the Sorbonne in Paris and Freien Universität Berlin from 1984 till 1990. At her dissertation, which she handed in only a couple of months after the Fall of the Berlin Wall, she studied the film history of the DDR and its film company DEFA which had been largely unknown in West Germany.[1]

While studying, Niemeyer launched her journalistic career. In 1986 she began working as a freelance journalist for the magazine Tempo in Hamburg, the Neue Ruhr Zeitung in Essen and S-F-Beat, a broadcast magazine for youths belonging to broadcast station Sender Freies Berlin (SFB).

In May 1991, Niemeyer travelled on an Arthur-F.-Burns scholarship to the United States. She stayed four months at the WABI TV CBS branch in Bangor, Maine, and WUSF public radio station in Tampa, Florida. Between 1991 and 1994, she worked as Berlin and East Germany correspondent for O137 interview magazine of the Pay TV broadcast station Premiere.

Since 1995, Niemeyer has worked as editor, author and duty editor for various TV shows such as Willemsens Woche, Berlin-Mitte (ZDF), Kulturreport, Sabine Christiansen (ARD), and Kultur 21 (DW-TV). From 2000 to 2006 she was in charge of the German-French ARTE woman-magazine LOLA[2] and the German editorial department of the ARTE lifestyle magazine CHIC. From 2007 to 2009 Niemeyer worked as editor at the head office of the ARTE's culture channel in Strasbourg and in the NDR ARTE editorial department in Hamburg, where she was responsible for various culture and documentary slots.

Niemeyer was producer of various programmes for ARTE, SWR, WDR and Deutsche Welle TV. She produced the miniseries about the magic hippie trail Die Karawane der Blumenkinder (2008) in collaboration with Thomas Kufus and his production company Zero One Film. In 2009 Niemeyer also produced a three-part series about German design, Faszination, Form, Farbe, which was nominated for the German Economy Film Award in 2009.

Niemeyer was one of the episode directors in the ARTE/RBB production 24h Berlin. She also directed the documentary tetralogy Liebe ohne Grenzen ZDF/ARTE, for which she was nominated with the Adolf-Grimme-Preis in 2010. In 2011 Niemeyer created the documentary Planet Goethe – 60 Jahre Goethe-Institut for Goethe-Institut and DW-TV. Since December 2009 Niemeyer has worked as a TV and radio broadcast representative of the Goethe-Institut, where she is responsible for media cooperation worldwide. Since July 2016 Maren Niemeyer is the Director of the Goethe-Institut Thailand in Bangkok.

Jury activities

In 2004 and 2010 Niemeyer was voted onto the Jury of the Deutschen Menschenrechts-Filmpreis, and in 2006 she was a member of the documentary jury at the German Film festival Achtung Berlin.

Travels abroad

To realize her filming projects, Niemeyer travelled regularly to conflict and war zones. From 1999 to 2001 she went on several tours to Kosovo, working on a TV report. Three years later she went to Lebanon holding a travel grant of the Internationalen Journalisten Programme. She has also been to Afghanistan, Ramallah, Israel, Syria, Egypt, Turkey, Cyprus, Azerbaijan, Nigeria, Nepal and Vietnam, from where she reported for ARD, DW TV and ARTE, where she served as a free correspondent.

Volunteer work

Since 2002 Niemeyer has been chairwomen of the association MaikaeferFlieg e.V., a cultural bridge between children of Kosovo and Germany.[3] The association conceived the exhibition Mit anderen Augen, showing children's and teenager's perceptions of the Kosovo war. Since April 2000 the exhibition has toured through European and American cities. Accompanying the exhibition, Niemeyer and Anna Berkenbusch published the trilingual book Ich denke oft an den Krieg, Mit anderen Augen – Kinder fotografieren den Krieg im Kosovo.

Within the scope of that project, Niemeyer has lectured extensively, dealing with the different visual perceptions of war pictures. She gave a lecture in the Edith-Ruß-Haus in Oldenburg in 2004. The lecture was part of the Shock and Awe Kriegsbilder zwischen Dokumentation und Ideologie series.[4] In her speech she discussed whether female war reporters shoot different pictures of war than their male colleagues and in what way the perceptions of war differ between men and women, using the example of war photographer Anja Niedringhaus.[5]

Selected filmography

  • Die Richardstrasse in Neukölln. Student Film Project, Germany 1987, 45 Min., Production: SFB Student Film Project
  • Wie Deutschland sich lieben lernt – drei Ost-West Paare berichten. Documentary, Germany 1995, 30 Min., Production: SFB/WDR
  • Das große Schweigen – Bordelle in Konzentrationslagern. Documentary, Germany, 1995, 30 Min., Director: Maren Niemeyer, Caroline von der Tann, Production: ARD/ORB
  • Learys letzter Trip – Porträt des Drogen-Gurus TIMOTHY LEARY. Documentary, Germany, 1996, 55 Min., Director: Maren Niemeyer, Roger Willemsen, Production: ARTE/ZDF
  • Der letzte Grieche – Portrait von Anthony Quinn. Documentary, Germany 1996, 30 Min,. with Roger Willemsen, Production: ORB
  • Prinzessin für einen Tag, Schloss Hoppenrade und seine Geschichte(n). Documentary, Germany, 2001, 30 Min., Production: ORB
  • 100 Prozent Schokolade, die Geschichte der Schweizer Schokoladenfabrik Cima Norma. Documentary, Germany, 2006, 60 Min., Production: ARTE
  • High Sein, Frei sein, überall dabei sein – Auf dem Hippietrail nach Kabul. Documentary,

Germany 2007, 30 Min., Production: ARTE

  • Bilderbuch Deutschland – Spreewald. Documentary, Germany, 2007, 45 Min., Production: RBB/ ARD
  • Die Karawane der Blumenkinder, Teil 1 - High sein, frei sein, Teil 2 Am Ziel der Träume. Documentary, Germany 2008, 2 x 45 Min., Production: WDR/ SWR[6]

Awards and film festivals

  • 1987: Die Richardstrasse in Neukölln, nominated for the Goldene Taube at the Documentary Film Festival Leipzig.
  • 1995: Das große Schweigen – Bordelle in Konzentrationslagern, nominated for the Prix d'Europe.
  • 2009: Faszination, Form, Farbe – Kommunikationsdesign aus Deutschland, nominated for the German Economy Film Award. The film also participated at the FIFA Film festival Montreal 2010.

References

  1. "- defa.de". defa.de. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
  2. "- taz.de". taz.de. Retrieved 2011-09-30.
  3. "Mit anderen Augen – Zeichnungen & Fotos von Kindern aus dem Kosovo". maikaeferflieg.de. Retrieved 2011-09-30.
  4. "Archiv - Edith-Ruß-Haus für Medienkunst". edith-russ-haus.de. Archived from the original on 2012-04-01. Retrieved 2011-09-30.
  5. "Archiv - oldenburg.de". oldenburg.de. Archived from the original on 2012-04-15. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
  6. "- tagesspiegel.de". tagesspiegel.de. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
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