Oscar Award Winning Director Dies
13 May, 2014
Malik Bendjelloul, the director of Oscar-winning documentary “Searching for Sugar Man,” died on Tuesday evening in the Stockholm area, police said. He was 36.
Stockholm police declined to provide any further details about Bendjelloul’s death.
“What I can say is that there are no suspicions any crime was involved,” Stockholm police duty officer Pia Glenvik said.
Bendjelloul won an Oscar in 2013 as a first-time filmmaker for “Searching for Sugar Man.” The film followed two South African journalists who set out to find what had become of Sixto Rodriguez, an American singer who was popular in South Africa who seemingly vanished without a trace.
The film, structured like a mystery, sought to find Rodriguez who never achieved fame in his home country but had become a popular and influential folk icon unbeknownst to him in South Africa.
“Searching for Sugar Man” swept major awards from the U.S. directors, producers and writers guilds, and also won audience and special jury awards at the Sundance Film Festival.
Bendjelloul was born in the town of Ystad in southern Sweden about 34 miles (55 kilometers) east of Malmo, according to film database IMDB.com.
He had also directed television documentaries about singers Elton John, Rod Stewart, Bjork and German electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk, according to the Swedish Film Institute.
Reuters
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