Diana Groó


Diana Groó is a Hungarian film director, screenwriter producer and associate professor.

Education

Groó attended the Radnóti Secondary School in Budapest with a specialization in English and Russian, and after graduation she applied to University of Theatre and Film Arts in Budapest, but was not admitted. In 1992 she began her university studies at the Faculty of Humanities of University of Szeged, where she majored in French language and literature, and from 1993 she continued her studies in French and Hebrew at the Faculty of Humanities of Eötvös Loránd University.
Beside her university studies she worked as assistant director of Judit Elek and Pál Schiffer at Hunnia Filmstúdió. Between 1995 and 2000 she studied film and television directing at the University of Theatre and Film Arts in the class of Sándor Simó, where she received an undivided degree. Later, between 2015 and 2018, she completed the doctoral school at the same institution, earning the title of Doctor of Liberal Arts.

Career

Groó's first success came with the short documentary Trapé, which was her first year exam work at the Film Academy. The film tells the story of Erwino, a 70 year old Hungarian trapeze artist of a travelling circus, who decided to perform his show again after a long break. Groó followed her protagonist and lived with the travelling circus for 6 months which was made her possible to film not only the eagerly awaited moment of the premiere but also to reveal the secret Nazi past of the old artist. Groó received her first festival recognition for this documentary at Art Film Fest in 1997. The Award for the Best Newcomer was given by Geraldine Chaplin and Krzysztoff Zanussi. During her film studies she directed the award-winning short documentary Ottavio and the short film Melody of the street. Groó earned her MA in film directing in 2000. After graduation she co-founded Katapult Film Production company along with her director fellows. Between 2001-2006 she turned to making experimental animation and she directed Wild Imagination, an experimental art-history series about Marc Chagall, P. Auguste Renoir, Henrie Rousseau, Pieter Bruegel and Lajos Gulácsy. In 2005 the first four episodes of the series opened the contemporary art exhibition of Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art. The series was selected into the InterMedia courses of Haifa University along with the works of Peter Greenaway, Derek Jarman and others.
Her feature debut, Miracle in Cracow, a piece of Jewish magical realism was co-produced by Krzysztof Zanussi. Her second feature film, Vespa, a Hungarian-Serbian road movie featuring a Romani teenager won the Unicef Award of Terra di Siena Film Festival, and the Prix du Reflet d’Or for best direction at the Geneva International Film Festival Cinema Tous Ecrans. Groó's poetic documentary Regina based on a single photograph tells the story of Regina Jonas, the world's first woman rabbi. Winner of the Lia Award at 30th Jerusalem Film Festival, the Warsaw Phoenix Award of Jewish Motifs International Film Festival, Jury Award of 1.st Moscow Jewish Film Festival and featuring Rachel Weisz and Martina Gedeck as the voice of Regina Jonas. George Weisz the father of actress Rachel Weisz was the film's executive producer. Screened at the International Holocaust Remembrance Day at UNESCO, at the Library of Congress and deposited in the Visual Center Collection at Yad Vashem.
In 2013, she co-founded DunaDock Master Class International Documentary Forum, along with Julianna Ugrin producer, Klára Trencsényi director and Ágnes Böjte executive producer. In 2018, she became the Head of the Film and Media Specialization at Budapest Metropolitan University.

Theatre

In 2008 Diana directed Kathrine Kressmann Taylor's prophetic epistolary novel Address Unknown in Spinóza Theatre Budapest, which was staged first time in Hungary. The play ran for more than 8 years starring with János Kulka, Zsolt László and Kata Pető.