Year-Long Fellowship For Underrepresented Filmmakers Enters Second Year, Supporting Eight Visionary Artists New Launch Grant Fund Empowers Underrepresented Artists to Break Systemic Barriers in Launching First Feature Film
Los Angeles - Sundance Institute announced today two support tracks for artists from underrepresented communities, continuing the Institute's commitment to fostering inclusive artistic visions. Announced today are the eight members of the second class of the Momentum Fellowship, a full-year program of deep, customized creative and professional support for writers, directors, and producers from underrepresented communities who are poised to take the next step in their careers, working across documentary and feature filmmaking, and episodic content. Sundance Institute also announced the four awardees of the inaugural Launch Grant Fund, a new opportunity for emerging filmmakers from underrepresented communities launching their first feature film.
Each of the exceptionally talented artists in these two programs brings a bold creative vision to their work, and we are thrilled to support them at such critical junctures - launching their first feature films and building sustainable careers, said Karim Ahmad, Director, Outreach & Inclusion.
The Momentum Fellowship, which launched last year, evolved from the Women at Sundance Fellowship, a highly successful model that merited expansion for impact across a broader cohort of underrepresented communities. Those eligible for this larger, more intersectional program include artists identifying as women, non-binary and/or transgender, artists of color, and artists with disabilities.
The 2020 Momentum Fellows are: Andrew Ahn, Linda Yvette Ch vez, Christina Choe, Deborah Esquenazi, Rodney Evans, Penny Lane, Avril Z. Speaks and Malika Zouhali-Worrall.
As part of the fellowship, Sundance Institute has partnered with Warner Bros. Pictures again to continue the Sundance Institute | Warner Bros. Feature Film Directors Track granting access to executives and workshops hosted on the studio's Burbank lot.. In keeping with the company's greater goals of inclusion and commitment to diversity in front of and behind the camera, Warner Bros. is dedicated to helping nurture and grow this new class of Fellows, which includes access to executives and workshops hosted on the studio's Burbank lot. Sundance Institute gratefully acknowledges each of the contributors to its Outreach and Inclusion Department and Women at Sundance, whose partnership has enabled the Institute to support dozens of bold and underrepresented voices in independent storytelling throughout the evolution of its programming.
In addition, each Momentum fellow receives professional coaching made possible by The Harnisch Foundation in partnership with Renee Freedman & Co.
Sundance Institute's Launch Grant Fund will offer three to five artists per year up to $10,000 each in funding, designed to take feature films from the development stage into pre-production and beyond. The Launch Grant Fund was born out of an analysis by Dr. Stacy L. Smith and the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, which found systemic barriers for artists from underrepresented communities seeking to complete major works and build sustainable careers.
The 2020 Launch Grant Fund Recipients are: Marion Hill, Meryam Joobeur, Anais Blondet Medina and Kase Pe a. More information on both the Momentum Fellows and Launch Grant Recipients appears below.
The Sundance Institute Outreach and Inclusion initiative is made possible by support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Emerson Collective, Will and Jada Smith Family Foundation, NBCUniversal, The Harnisch Foundation, Warner Bros. Pictures, Ford Foundation, Jason Delane Lee and Yvonne Huff Lee, Rene and Rena Cruz - Esperanza Arts Foundation, Netflix, SAGindie, Asante Family Philanthropic Fund,The Nathan Cummings Foundation, Philip Fung - A3 Foundation, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Open Society Foundations, and Adobe.
Women at Sundance is made possible by leadership support from CBS Corporation, The Harnisch Foundation, and Refinery29. Additional support is provided by Hollywood Foreign Press Association, Kimberly Steward, Paul and Katy Drake Bettner, Barbara Bridges, Abigail Disney and Pierre Hauser - Like a River Fund, Rhianon Jones, Suzanne Lerner, Cristina Ljungberg, Susan Bay Nimoy, Brenda Robinson, Lynda Weinman and Bruce Heavin, Jenifer and Jeffrey Westphal, Ann Lovell, Mercer, MAJORITY, The Female Quotient, Visionary Women, Gruber Family Foundation, Pat Mitchell and Scott Seydel, The Jacquelyn & Gregory Zehner Foundation, and an anonymous donor.
MOMENTUM FELLOWS
Andrew Ahn is a queer Korean-American filmmaker born and raised in Los Angeles. His latest feature Driveways, starring Brian Dennehy and Hong Chau and produced by Symbolic Exchange, premiered at the 2019 Berlinale. His first feature film Spa Night premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival in US Dramatic Competition. The films lead actor Joe Seo won a Special Jury Award at the festival for Breakthrough Performance. The film went on to win the 2017 John Cassavetes Independent Spirit Award and was distributed by Strand Releasing.
In 2017, Ahn directed the entire first season of the Sundance Now original show This Close from creators Shoshannah Stern and Josh Feldman. Ahn and the other producers of the show were honored with the Producers Guild of America George Sunga Media Access Award. Ahns other television directing credits include narrative and documentary episodes for Netflix, FX, and KCET. He has promoted diversity in the arts by mentoring youth filmmakers through programs like Pacific Arts Movement's Reel Voices, Outfest's OutSet, and the Sundance Institutes Native Filmmaker Lab and Ignite Program. He graduated from Brow










