Omar Mouallem
Omar Mouallem | |
---|---|
Born | Slave Lake, Alberta, Canada | September 13, 1985
Occupation | Writer, Filmmaker |
Omar Mouallem is a Canadian writer[1] and filmmaker. He has contributed to Wired, The Guardian, NewYorker.com, and RollingStone.com. His essays and features have garnered him recognition from the Canadian National Magazine Awards and Alberta Literary Awards.[2] He co-authored a book about the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire titled Inside the Inferno: A Firefighter's Story of the Brotherhood that Saved Fort McMurray (published by Simon & Schuster Canada).[3] His book “Praying to the West: How Muslims Shaped the Americas,” a travelogue centred around 13 mosques, was named one of the best books of 2021 by The Globe and Mail.[4] It was awarded the 2022 Wilfred Eggelston Nonfiction Award by the Alberta Literary Awards.[5]
He has won three Canadian National Magazine Awards,[6] including best profile in 2014 for the Eighteen Bridges story, "The Kingdom of Haymour", which profiled a man who took the Canadian Embassy in Beirut hostage in the 1970s over a British Columbia land dispute.[1] The article partially inspired the 2020 documentary film “Eddy’s Kingdom”, for which Mouallem was a key interview. [7]
Mouallem directed and produced two documentaries, 2019’s Digging in the Dirt, a CBC coproduction about a mental health crises in the Alberta oil sands workforce, and 2021’s The Last Baron, a first-person film about the unlikely connection between Lebanon’s civil war and the Canadian fast-food chain Burger Baron.[8] After premiering on CBC Gem, it gained notable popularity and it was heralded as one of the “best Canadian food documentaries” by enRoute magazine.[9] Mouallem announced that the short film would be expanded into a feature documentary retitled The Lebanese Burger Mafia and released in 2023.[10]
In 2013, he won Edmonton's Emerging Artist Award and served as the Edmonton Public Library's writer in residence.[11] In 2022, he was awarded an Emerging Artists Award from the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Awards, National Magazine (7 June 2014). "Announcing the Winners of the 37th annual National Magazine Awards!".
- ^ "2017 Alberta Literary Awards Shortlist".
- ^ "Official Page – Inside the Inferno".
- ^ "The Globe 100: The books we loved in 2021". The Globe and Mail. 29 November 2021.
- ^ "Edmonton dominates Alberta Literary Awards, Glen Huser takes Edmonton book prize". edmontonjournal. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
- ^ "A Man of Many Gifts: Omar Mouallem – Creative Nonfiction Collective". creativenonfictioncollective.ca. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
- ^ "Eddy's Kingdom (2020)". IMDb.
- ^ "The Last Baron documentary looks at Edmonton fast food royalty's legacy".
- ^ "Best Canadian Food Documentaries – Air Canada enRoute". enroute.aircanada.com. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
- ^ Mckenzie, Kevin Hinton & Ryan (9 May 2022). "Western Living Magazine". Western Living Magazine. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
- ^ "Lund wins Ambassador for the Arts Award". Archived from the original on 2013-12-12. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
- ^ "Edmonton Journal". edmontonjournal. Retrieved 2022-06-17.