Rhombus Media is a film and television production company formed in 1978 at the York University Film Department by Barbara Willis Sweete and Niv Fichman, and based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Rhombus Media developed a reputation for producing high-quality, lush art films focusing on music, theatre, and dance.
[1] The company has received many national and international awards for their work, including several Emmys: one for Le Dortoir in 1990,[2] one for Canadian Brass: Home Movies in 1992, and one win in 1993 for an episode of the Channel 4 Series Concerto, featuring Aaron Copland.
[3] They have also won numerous Genie Awards, including Best Motion Picture in 1993 for Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould[4] and for The Red Violin in 1999.
[6] Rhombus also produced the award-winning television series Slings & Arrows[7] and Sensitive Skin.