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Jocelyne Bourgeois was a film editor for more than 40 years at GTC. Created in Joinville-le-Pont (France) by Pathé and Gaumont, GTC was one of the leading French film laboratories after World War II.

She started working on weekly breaking news editions screened in theaters on Wednesdays before advancing to collaborate on movies.

 

 

Throughout her career, Jocelyne had the pleasure of working with famous and talented filmmakers including Gerard Oury, Michel Audiard, Georges Lautner, Agnès Varda and François Truffaut. 

Filmmaking and editing were passions she shared with her brother, Richard Fellous, and her cousin, Maurice Fellous, who was Georges Lautner’s director of photography.

 
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Mathieu Faure is currently a producer at Apple TV. As a producer and independent filmmaker, he won the 2018 Student Academy Awards in the Domestic Documentary category for his personal film called An Edited Life. His film was also selected for different film festivals across the country such as the DOC NYC, The Global Peace Film Festival, the Peekskill Film Festival and won multiple awards.

In 2018 he graduated from the News and Documentary Masters program at the L. Carter Journalism Institute at NYU. During his time at NYU, Faure reported in Cambodia on deforestation, illegal immigrants and the genocide perpetuated by the Khmer Rouge regime. The reports filmed and produced by his classmate journalists and him were published on The New York Times and The Huffington Post, and aired on PBS NewsHour. Since then, Faure worked for the CNN Documentary unit, before joining Don Lemon's team on his show CNN Tonight. Before joining Apple TV in 2022, Faure produced a series of documentaries hosted by Fareed Zakaria on CNN.

 

Independently and for the past three years, Faure produced, co-wrote and co-edited his first feature documentary, "Eat Bitter". The film received grants from different organizations such as Hot Docs, IDFA, The Ford Foundation, Chicken & Egg and the Sundance Institute. The film premiered at CPH:DOX in Copenhagen in March 2023. Since then, it has been selected for about 40 prestigious film festivals.

Prior to his career in the US, Mathieu Faure was a reporter inside a breaking newsroom in Paris, France. He worked for four years and produced articles and video reports for M6 television. Prior to this experience, he graduated Magna Cum Laude from La Sorbonne University in Paris where he obtained his Master's degree in Political Science. There, he wrote his master’s thesis about Neve Shalom Wahat Al-Salam, the only village in Israel where Jewish Israeli, Arab Israeli and Palestinian families have developed a peace resolution method and have been living in peace for more than 50 years.