Vanessa Alexander is an Australian, New Zealand and British screenwriter, director and producer best known for writing on Vikings: Valhalla and The Great.[1][2][3]
Alexander began her career writing stage plays in New Zealand[9] and almost left the industry to apply for medical school after receiving multiple rejections for short film funding.[10] She won an international student playwriting contest in 1990 with a feminist reinterpretation of T.S. Eliot's poem The Waste Land, titled My Nightingale has Come Unzipped.[4] Her first feature film Magik & Rose, which she wrote and directed at the age of 28, was produced by New Zealand director Larry Parr and funded by the New Zealand Film Commission under a low-budget film development scheme.[11] The film was shot in New Zealand's South Island at the Hokitika Wildfoods Festival with a budget of $350,000[11] and was nominated for four New Zealand Film Awards. It also won a jury prize at the Oporto Film Festival in Portugal.[4]
Alexander was a producer for Taika Waititi’s second short film Two Cars, One Night and has been a board member for the New Zealand Film Commission.[12] Her first job in television was as a producer, writer and director for the New Zealand children television series Being Eve.[13] The series was nominated for an International Emmy Award in the Children and Young People category.
On 21 January 2021, ViacomCBS International named Alexander as the lead writer for its development of a television series about the Italian baroque artist Artemisia Gentileschi.[19][20] Titled "Artemisia", the series is also being produced by former ViacomCBS International Studios UK managing director Jill Offman and Pan's Labyrinth producer Frida Torresblanco, who said the development "will be a contemporary feminist piece that is at once provocative and transgressive, invoking the spirit of our present moment in an eloquent and elegant way”.[21]
After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban in 2021, Vanessa helped more than 100 Afghan women and their families escape Afghanistan and created a network that coordinated the rescue of more than 300 Afghan women fleeing the Taliban. For this she received the Keys to the City of Newcastle in 2023, [22][23] as well as the 2023 Golden Wattle Award, an annual award given to an Australian who has brought honour and inspiration to their fellow Australians over the previous 12 months. [24]
^Alexander, Vanessa (2021). Searching for Utopia on the Small Screen: Comedy of Remarriage in Television Sitcom. University of New South Wales Library: School of the Arts & Media, Arts Design & Architecture, UNSW. (2021). Web.