Hi, ich bin Dani Kouyaté
Born in 1961 in Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso, Dani grew up in a family of griots, the keepers of memory and the spoken word in West Africa. That's where it all began: this deep passion for stories, those we tell and those we film. Dani's academic journey first led him to the ”Institut Africain d'Education Cinématographique” in Ouagadougou where he earned a ”Licence de Cinéma”, then to Paris where he obtained a ”Maîtrise d'Animation Culturelle et Sociale” at La Sorbonne, as well as a ”Diplôme d'Études Approfondies” (DEA) in Film Aesthetics at Université Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis. Dani Kouyaté also graduated from the ”École Internationale d'Anthropologie de Paris”. After several years in France, he settled in Sweden in 2007.
Between 1990 and 1996, Dani toured Europe and America with ”La Voix du Griot”, a family show created by his father Sotigui Kouyaté. An experience that profoundly shaped him, both artistically and humanly.
On the cinema front, the adventure began in 1989 with the short film ”Bilakoro”, co-directed with his friends Sékou Traoré and Issa Traoré de Brahima. Three years later, in 1992, they founded the production company ”Sahélis Productions” together, joined by Abdoulaye Dao and Lacina Ouédraogo. After three short films, Dani directed ”Kéita! L'Héritage du Griot” in 1995, his first feature film which received the prize for best first work at Fespaco, the ”Grand Prix Cannes Junior”, as well as numerous awards at international festivals.
In 1999, he worked on several episodes of the Burkinabé series ”À nous la vie”, before embarking in 2000 on ”Sia, le rêve du python”, his second feature film. This film, carried by his father Sotigui in the complex role of Army Chief Wakhané Sakho, explores the connections between power, myths, and madness through a story rooted in Africa's mythical past, while casting a universal gaze on our contemporary world.
There followed ”Ouaga Saga” in 2005, an urban comedy with teenagers from Ouagadougou, then ”Soleils” in 2013, co-directed with Olivier Delahaye, a philosophical road movie about African traditions and the complex relationship between Africa and Europe. His first Swedish film ”Medan vi lever” (As Long as We Live) was released in 2015 and examines the question of identity in our globalized world.
His most recent feature film, ”Katanga – La Danse des Scorpions” (Katanga - The Dance of the Scorpions), released in cinemas in February 2025, is an African adaptation of William Shakespeare’s ”The Tragedy of Macbeth”. The film has received widespread critical acclaim and numerous awards, including six distinctions at the 2025 Festival panafricain du cinéma et de la télévision de Ouagadougou (FESPACO), among them the prestigious Étalon d’Or de Yennenga. It also won four awards at the 2025 African Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) in Lagos, Nigeria, and was honoured at several international festivals, notably the Festival International du Film Francophone, the Festival Cinéma et Migration in Agadir, and 7 Jours du 7e Art in Conakry (Guinea).
Alongside his work as a filmmaker, theater director, and actor, Dani shares his experience as a lecturer at Uppsala University in the Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, as well as at Wiks Folkhögskola in Uppsala, in the film and theater department.
«Tout ce qui est enseigne en une parole muette. La forme est language, l'être est language, tout est language».
Works and activities
A broad experience in many domains.
«Je suis guinéen d'origine, malien de naissance et burkinabè d'adoption. Je ne suis passé par aucune école de théâtre, si ce n'est la grande école de la rue, de la vie».
Contact me
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«En Afrique quand un vieillard meurt, c'est une bibliothèque qui brûle».