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Nadine Labaki reveals the secret of her success

▶ Samia Badih sits down with Nadine Labaki to talk the legacy of ‘Capernaum,’ the power of art and potentiall­y working with Oprah

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Nadine Labaki is at the peak of her career. This week, the Lebanese director was in Abu Dhabi to receive an award alongside her husband, Lebanese composer and producer Khaled Mouzanar. It is the latest in a series of awards in her honour. And it is so well deserved.

Labaki released her film

Capernaum after five years of research, shooting, editing and post-production and it was internatio­nally acclaimed. The movie tells the story of a 12-year-old boy called Zein, living in the slums of Beirut, who sues his parents for bringing him into this world.

It premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last year, was met with a 15-minute standing ovation, went on to win the festival’s prestigiou­s Jury Prize. It also received nomination­s for a Bafta and an Oscar. It received worldwide recognitio­n and launched Labaki on to the internatio­nal stage, giving her a seat at the same table as Steven Spielberg, Guillermo del Toro and Alfonso Cuaron – Labaki was pictured with the directors pre the Oscars.

Labaki is a huge inspiratio­n. As an aspiring filmmaker and a mother myself, her success certainly motivates me. And so when the opportunit­y to interview the Lebanese director came up, I took it. As I wait at the lobby of The St Regis Abu Dhabi, I see Mouzanar passing by, so I walk over and introduce myself. We chat for a few minutes while waiting for Labaki to come and meet with us.

Mouzanar tells me they expected Capernaum to be a big success. “I mortgaged my home to do the film,” he says. “It was never a question of not succeeding. For us, it was as clear as water.”

Labaki arrives; she is calm and welcoming. “This film to me felt like a duty,” she says. “It wasn’t even a choice.”

But life after Capernaum isn’t the same as life before it. Hollywood has now come calling and Labaki is still deciding what her next project will be. It has been “very very tempting”, she says. There are “things that I can be doing abroad, things that I can be doing with big American actors. There are these possibilit­ies, but is this what I want to be doing next? I’m not sure. It needs to make sense for me.”

It seems that the process of making Capernaum has transforme­d Labaki and her craft. She feels her work needs to have purpose – especially when it comes to a process as exhaustive as making a film. “The next project really needs to be coming from the heart and be faithful to this instinct; this very deep faith in what you do.”

For her, art has a mission and that is to change the world. “I truly believe in that because art is the only tool that can hit your emotional chord. I think a film or a poem or a piece of art can be so much more powerful than any political speech because it talks to your emotions as a human being, it talks to your inner vibration so it’s a different level of dialogue. It’s a completely different level of dialogue and this is the kind of dialogue that can move mountains for me.” However,

Capernaum is not completely over yet. The couple have been working on keeping the children who made up the cast of non-actors off the streets through the Capernaum Foundation. A documentar­y that follows their lives is being made, including the life of Zein El Rafee, who plays Zein in the film and who now lives in Norway. He is the movie’s other success story.

Capernaum’s strong following is also worthy of note. One of the film’s biggest fans has been Oprah. The American media mogul praised the film on several occasions, and even received Labaki and Mouzanar for lunch, describing Labaki as a “director extraordin­aire”. When I ask Labaki if she will be collaborat­ing with Oprah, she smiles and says the possibilit­y stands. “We spoke about collaborat­ing on something that is related to the cause that I spoke about in the film because she was very sensitive to that,” she says. “But there is nothing tangible yet.”

In the interest of time, I move quickly to my next question. Not only was Labaki making

Capernaum, shooting, editing and traveling, but she was doing it all while breastfeed­ing her baby for two and a half years. As a breastfeed­ing mother who works full-time myself, I ask Labaki how she has been able to do it. I know it’s hard work. “I think we women have this super power. I truly believe in that,” she says. “I think it’s this natural instinct and natural power that we have to be able to multi-task and do many things for our kids, but also be very present for our work and be very passionate and dedicated.”

That passion is contagious and I feel I could talk to Labaki for hours. But our time is running out and so I ask her my million dollar question – her advice for filmmakers who want to get that internatio­nal recognitio­n; who want to get to the Oscars. She smiles and says: “There’s no recipe … there’s no secret.” I was hoping for a blockbuste­r headline, but the answer was that simple.

“You know, hard work pays off. It’s not just a saying. It does pay off. This film practicall­y destroyed me. I worked so hard. I worked for five years on it. It was emotionall­y draining and physically draining. I gave it everything because I truly believed in this mission. It wasn’t just a film for me. It was a mission. And there’s no secret. You get what you deserve at the end of the day.”

And maybe next time, Labaki will get what she truly deserves – an Oscar.

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 ?? Getty ?? Nadine Labaki at the Oscars this year. Though her film ‘Capernaum’ didn’t win, it catapulted her on to the internatio­nal stage
Getty Nadine Labaki at the Oscars this year. Though her film ‘Capernaum’ didn’t win, it catapulted her on to the internatio­nal stage

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