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Laura Linney, Tamara Jenkins + Philip BoscoNovember 20, 2007
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Considering Horror PanelJune 17, 2007
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Sidney LumetOctober 5, 2005
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Sidney Lumet, Ethan Hawke, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Marisa TomeiOctober 25, 2007
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David LynchFebruary 16, 1997
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Albert MayslesJanuary 20, 2007
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Sam MendesJuly 8, 2002
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Sam Mendes + John KrasinskiJune 2, 2009
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Saturday Night Live and Presidential Politics PanelSeptember 15, 2008
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Bennett MillerJanuary 7, 2006
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Matthew ModineJune 17, 2006
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Michael MooreJune 28, 2007
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Errol MorrisJuly 12, 2011
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Greg Mottola, Ted Hope + Anne CareyMarch 22, 2009
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Mira NairAugust 29, 2004
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Mike NicholsMarch 1, 1990
Mira Nair August 29, 2004
The immigrant's sense of dislocation resonates in the films of Mira Nair, who often focuses on different permutations of the outsider—Bombay street urchins in Salaam Bombay!, Cuban immigrants in The Perez Family, a sixteenth-century Indian servant girl in Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love—and their disconnection from the social order around them. Nair's films often focus on complex female characters, and examine the complications that arise from the intermingling of ethnicities, traditions, and classes. In this talk, Nair discusses the examination of sociopolitical exclusion in her past work and in her adaptation of William Thackeray's Vanity Fair.