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Ever since Gabriel Noble graduated from UCLA with a BA in Theater, Film, and Television, he has worked as a director and producer of theater, documentary and feature film. As a student he founded and served as Artistic Director of Equal Opportunity Productions (1997-2003), a non-profit arts outreach organization whose mission was to use the theater arts and film to empower youth in Los Angeles, Cuba, and South Africa. In 2003, Gabriel served as Assistant Director on two narrative films, On The Outs, a feature film nominated for IFP Indie Spirit award, Gotham Award, and recipient of the Grand Prize Slamdance Festival 2005, and Victoria Para Chino, recipient of Honorable Mention Award at the Sundance Film Festival, 2005. He produced Death of Two Sons, a political, spiritual, and personal exploration of the death of Amadou Diallo, a Guinean boy who was gunned down by the NYPD, executive produced by HBO.
Gabriel's directorial debut was with the feature documentary, Autumns Eyes, that tells the story of losing a teenage mother to prison through the perspective of her 3-year old daughter, and had its world premiere at South by Southwest film festival. He went on to direct P-Star's Redemption, a feature documentary about a little girl who is determined to fulfill her fathers deferred dream of becoming a rap star, and bring her famly out of poverty with her talent and determination.
Currently, he is directing/producing a feature documentary for MTV News and Docs, Mario- How do I Breath, and serves as Supervising Field Producer for CNBC's talk show, d-Life, He also works as a cinematographer for both television and feature documentaries. |