Yolande Zauberman, born in Paris, came to cinema through Amos Gitaï. In 1987 she directed her first documentary film, an intimate look at apartheid in South Africa, Classified People. The film was nominated for a César award and it won among others the Grand Prix at the Festival de Paris, the Bronze Rosa at the Festival de Bergamo (Italy). Her second film, Caste Criminelle (1989), shot in India, was selected for the Festival de Cannes. Three years later, she made her first feature-length film Moi Ivan, toi Abraham, selected for the New Directors/New Films festival in New York and awarded the Prix de la Jeunesse at the Festival de Cannes, the Golden St. George at the Moscow International Film Festival, the Prix du jury oecuménique at the Festival de Cannes, and the Art prize of Berlin. She then made Clubbed to Death (1996) and La Guerre à Paris (2001) with Elodie Bouchez, Roschdy Zem and Jérémie Regnier. She provided the original ideas for Tanguy (2001) and Agathe Cléry (2008) for Etienne Chatillez, and then returned to documentaries with Paradise Now and Un Juif à la mer, while continuing to do research on images with the creation of CATMASK, a video camera on a cat mask, which has led her to work with artists and dancers. More recently, with Stephen Torton she has filmed Too Soft For Anybody I Know, about Jean-Michel Basquiat. Today, Yolande Zauberman is producing Oh, je vous veux! a film-installation and spends her time producing her next film L’Amant palestsinien. Would you have sex with an Arab? is her 8th feature-length film, produced by Yves Chanvillard and Nadim Cheikhrouha (Screenrunner).