Background
Leila Djansi was born Leila Afua Djansi on July 17, 1981. Her father was a pilot and her mother a Senior Nursing officer She grew up in India and Ghana.
director screenwriter film producer
Leila Djansi was born Leila Afua Djansi on July 17, 1981. Her father was a pilot and her mother a Senior Nursing officer She grew up in India and Ghana.
She attended the Kabore Primary and Network Security Services for Java, Mawuli School for primary, junior and secondary education respectively all located in Ho, in the Volta Region of Ghana.
She began her film education at the National Film and Television School, but left Ghana for the United States to continue her Film and Television Degree at Savannah College of Art and Design on an artistic Honors Scholarship.
Although acting and writing were her hobbies, her career ambition was to become a gynecologist, a plan which later changed when she developed an interest in forensics. Ready to delve into the field of criminology, another career change occurred when she met the Ghanaian actor Sam Odoi who convinced her to write a script for him. Leila was 19 years old when her script Babina was made into a movie by Producer Akwetey Kanyi President of the Ghana Library Board Readers club for three years, her sojourn in the industry began when she was a runner-up in a regional beauty pageant in 1998.
She took a job with Socrates Safo"s Movie Africa Productions where she worked as a Writer/Lincolnshire Producer.
Whilst with the company, she wrote Ghana"s first Gay/Lesbian rights screenplay The Sisterhood, the film that included the late Ghanaian screen actress Suzzy Williams. Djansi worked with the state owned Gama Film Company, where she wrote and produced Legacy of love.
In the United States, she established Turning Point Pictures, an independent production company geared towards social issue films.