Yaba Badoe


Yaba Badoe is a Ghanaian-British documentary filmmaker, journalist and author.

Career

Yaba Badoe was born in Tamale, northern Ghana. She left Ghana to be educated in Britain at a very young age. A graduate of King's College, Cambridge, Badoe worked as a civil servant at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Ghana, before beginning her career in journalism as a trainee at the BBC. She also was a researcher at the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana. She has taught in Spain and Jamaica and has worked as a producer and director making documentaries for the main television channels in Britain. Among her credits are: Black and White, an investigation into race and racism in Bristol, using hidden video cameras for BBC1; I Want Your Sex, an arts documentary exploring images and myths surrounding black sexuality in Western art, literature, film and photography, for Channel 4; and the six-part series Voluntary Service Overseas for ITV in 2002.
In addition to making films, Badoe is a creative writer, her first novel, True Murder, being published in London by Jonathan Cape in 2009. Her short story "The Rivals" was included in the anthology African Love Stories, edited by Ama Ata Aidoo. She also authored children's book with Title Jigsaw of Fire and Stars
Badoe directed and co-produced the documentary film The Witches of Gambaga, which won Best Documentary at the Black International Film Festival in 2010, and was awarded Second Prize in the Documentary section of FESPACO 2011. Her most recent film, launched in 2014, is entitled The Art of Ama Ata Aidoo.
In 2016, she participated in in Chapel Hill, NC.
She is a contributor to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby.

Filmography