
Jocelyne Saab was a filmmaker and a photographer. She was born in 1948 and grew up in Beirut. In 1973, she became a war reporter in the Middle-East, covering the war of October for Magazine 52, the third television channel in France. In 1975 she directed her first feature film, a documentary released in Parisian cinemas: Lebanon in Turmoil, distributed by Pascale Dauman. She will then cover the Lebanese war for fifteen years, during which she directs almost thirty films, including Beirut, never again, broadcasted on France 2 in 1976, Letter from Beirut and Beirut, my city, broadcasted on France 3 between 1978 and 1982. In 1977 both Egypt, City of the Dead and The Sahara is not up for sale and were shot and released in Parisian cinemas. In 1981, she shots Iran, Utopia in the making on the days following the Iranian revolution, which received several international prizes. In 1998, she went to Vietnam and directed a documentary called The Lady of Saigon, which is awarded best French documentary by the French senate. It’s broadcasted on France 2, and in many international festivals.

Arab Camera
1987 · as Self

Making of Nahla
1979 · as Self

A Letter from Beirut
1978 · as Self

Lebanon in a Whirlwind
1975 · as Self (uncredited)

Beirut, Never Again
1976 · as Narrator (English Voice-Over) (uncredited)

As Kineastas
1986

Lebanese, Hostages of Their City
1982 · as Self - Narrator (voice)

Beirut, My City
1983 · as Self