Kidron began making documentaries in the 1980s. In 1983, she made her first documentary,
Carry Greenham Home, with co-director Amanda Richardson. It was filmed during the year that they spent at the
Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp during the anti nuclear protests. The film was shown at the
Berlin Film Festival and, to celebrate Greenham's 25th anniversary, it was revived through
The Guardian-backed website, www.yourgreenham.com. In 1988, she made her first feature film,
Vroom, which starred
Clive Owen in his debut film. The following year, she came to greater prominence with
her adaptation of
Jeanette Winterson's autobiographical novel
Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit. It won three Baftas, including Best Drama Series/Serial. In 2010,
The Guardian named
Oranges the eighth best TV series of all time. Following the success of
Oranges, Kidron continued to work for the BBC, making the TV feature film
Antonia and Jane, distributed by
Miramax in the US, as well as
Itch, starring and co-written by
Alexei Sayle for
Channel 4's
4 Play anthology series. In 1992, Kidron moved to Hollywood to make
Used People with
Shirley MacLaine and
Marcello Mastroianni. The following year, she directed
Hookers, Hustlers, Pimps and Their Johns, a documentary about the
New York City sex industry. She then returned to the UK to pair up with Winterson for the BBC film
Great Moments in Aviation starring
Vanessa Redgrave and
Jonathan Pryce, which was subsequently renamed
Shades of Fear by Miramax CEO
Harvey Weinstein. The 1990s and early 2000s saw Kidron move between Hollywood, New York and London, making features, TV programmes and documentaries. In 1995, she made
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar, a drag queen road movie starring
Wesley Snipes and
Patrick Swayze. 1997 brought
Swept from the Sea, a romantic adaptation of the
Joseph Conrad story "Amy Foster", starring
Rachel Weisz and
Vincent Perez, which
Variety called "masterfully crafted and heartfelt". Over the next few years, Kidron made a number of TV films both at home and abroad, including
Cinderella,
Texarkana and
Murder, for which she was nominated for a second Bafta. In 2004, she directed the second installment of the
Bridget Jones series,
Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, starring
Renée Zellweger,
Colin Firth and
Hugh Grant. In 2007, she made a documentary about neighbour and friend, the sculptor
Antony Gormley. Kidron and her husband, playwright and author of
Billy Elliot,
Lee Hall, began work on
Hippie Hippie Shake, a film about the
Oz magazine trials. The film was shot in 2009 with
Sienna Miller and
Cillian Murphy; however, Kidron and Hall left during post-production, citing artistic differences with the producers. Kidron spent much of 2010 in Southern India researching and shooting a documentary on the
Devadasi.
Sex, Death and the Gods premiered on BBC 4 as part of the
Storyville series. In 2013, Kidron directed the documentary
InRealLife, a co-production between Cross Street Films and
Studio Lambert. The film explored teenagers and their relationship to the internet. It was this film that acted as a catalyst for her campaign work around children's rights in the online world. Following a period away from feature films, Kidron produced the
Stephen Frears-directed
Victoria & Abdul, which was released in 2017. It was the first feature film produced by Cross Street Films, and starred
Judi Dench as
Queen Victoria and
Ali Fazal as
Abdul Karim.
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar was re-released in 2019 and was named by
The New York Times as among the top ten comedies on
Netflix. In 2025, Kidron appeared in the BBC documentary
Hunting the Online Sex Predators, where she met with presenter
James Blake to discuss the dangers of social media. She highlighted how users can be just two clicks away from accessing child abuse content online. ==Filmclub and Into Film==