Writer/Director Dee Rees is an alumna of New York University's graduate film program and a
Sundance Screenwriting & Directing Lab Fellow.
In 2018, Dee became the first Black woman nominated for an Oscar in the Best Adapted
Screenplay category for her highly-acclaimed film Mudbound (2017). The film, starring Jason
Mitchell, Carey Mulligan and Mary J. Blige, tells the story of two men returning home from World
War II, struggling to deal with racism and post-war life and was nominated for four Oscars, two
Golden Globes, and received over 100 nominations between 2017 and 2018.
Her 1980's political thriller The Last Thing He Wanted is an adaptation of the novel by Joan Didion and will star Anne Hathaway as
hardened journalist Elena McMahon.
Dee's Emmy-Award winning HBO film Bessie (2015) starred Queen Latifah as the legendary
American Blues singer and was nominated for a total of twelve Emmy Awards, including Dee's
individual nominations for Outstanding Writing and Outstanding Directing For A Limited Series,
Movie or Dramatic Special. Bessie was also nominated for four Critics' Choice Awards and
Dee was the recipient of the 2016 Director's Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial
Achievement in Movies for Television and Miniseries as well as the NAACP Image Award for
Outstanding Directing in a Television Movie.
Dee's debut feature film Pariah starring Adepero Oduye and Kim Wayans premiered at the
2011 Sundance Film Festival where it was honored with the festival's U.S. Dramatic Competition
"Excellence in Cinematography" Award and was later released by Focus Features. Pariah went
on to win numerous awards including the John Cassavetes Award at the Independent Spirit
Awards (2011), the Gotham Award for Best Breakthrough Director (2011), Outstanding Film-
Limited Release at the GLAAD Media Awards (2012) and it received seven NAACP Image
Award nominations including Outstanding Motion Picture, Outstanding Directing and
Outstanding Writing and won the award for Outstanding Independent Motion Picture. Pariah
also earned Dee a spot on New York Times' 10 Directors to Watch list in 2013.
Previously, Dee was selected as a 2008 Tribeca Institute/Renew Media Arts Fellow and
appeared on Filmmaker Magazine's 25 New Faces of Independent Film that same year. She is
a 2011 United States Artists Fellow and her notable residencies include Yaddo and The
MacDowell Colony.
Dee Rees was born and raised in Nashville, Tennessee and resides in New York.