Camille Mỹ Giang is a young French-Vietnamese storyteller, born and raised between the vineyards of central France and the community of former South-Vietnamese political refugees of the Parisian suburbs. This particular upbringing brought her to dedicate her work to telling stories enabling people to see the world through a different set of eyes. After months working in film distribution for EuropaCorp in Paris, Camille crosses the channel to enroll in Film School where she becomes a screenwriter. This newfound love leads her to work for GlobalGate Entertainement as a Content Consultant. This experience comes to confirm what she already appreciated when travelling the world throughout Business School: all stories have not been told yet, and something can (and should) be done about it. Then started her dedication to telling new forms of stories. She began by deepening her skills in the storytelling crafts of the Great Pacific and now performs alongside London School of Hula and ‘Ori and Te Hei Tiare in Paris. In parallel, she co-founded ‘Indigo Magazine’, a yearly printed medium supporting the spread of new voices from the Southeast Asian arts scene in order to provide a foreign space to young artists for them express their views on certain identity matters. Today, she shares her time in between Paris, London, and various other places of the world as she collects bits and pieces to enrich her already complex and colorful creative canvas. She writes and illustrate children books, researches depictions of mixed-race children around the world, explores new forms of dances, and carries on with her activities of script-doctor and content consultant. ‘The Vahine’ is her first film as a writer-director.