Greta Gerwig

Gerwig began her career working with Joe Swanberg on films such as ''Hannah Takes the Stairs'' (2007) and ''Nights and Weekends'' (2008). She has collaborated with her husband Noah Baumbach on several films, including ''Greenberg'' (2010) and ''Frances Ha'' (2012), for which she received a Golden Globe Award nomination, ''Mistress America'' (2015), and ''White Noise'' (2022). She also acted in such films as Whit Stillman's ''Damsels in Distress'' (2011), Woody Allen's ''To Rome with Love'' (2012), Rebecca Miller's ''Maggie's Plan'' (2015), Pablo Larraín's ''Jackie'' (2016), Mike Mills's ''20th Century Women'' (2016), and Wes Anderson's ''Isle of Dogs'' (2018).
As a solo filmmaker, Gerwig has written and directed coming-of-age films ''Lady Bird'' (2017) and ''Little Women'' (2019), and the fantasy-comedy ''Barbie'' (2023), all of which earned nominations for the Academy Award for Best Picture. For ''Lady Bird'', she received Academy Award nominations for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, and for ''Little Women'', she was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay. ''Barbie'', which she co-wrote with Baumbach, became the only film from a solo female director to gross over a billion dollars worldwide, and earned her a second Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay. Provided by Wikipedia
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