Directors Lab Marks Its 45th Year of Supporting Groundbreaking Independent Filmmakers
PARK CITY, UTAH, April 28, 2025 — The nonprofit Sundance Institute announced today the fellows selected for the 2025 Directors, Screenwriters, and Native Labs. The Native Lab, the signature initiative of Sundance Institute’s Indigenous Program, kicks off in person today through May 3 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Directors Lab, a core component of the Institute’s Feature Film Program, returns for its 45th year from June 1–16 in Estes Park, Colorado. Fellows will then participate in the Screenwriters Lab held online from June 24–27. Sundance Institute’s signature labs offer filmmakers a nurturing, immersive environment to develop their projects and refine their artistic voice under the guidance of accomplished creative advisors.
This year’s Native Lab supports four fellows and two artists-in-residence. The Directors Lab will support the development of eight projects and nine fellows, with two additional fellows joining for the Screenwriters Lab. Marking its 45th year, the Directors Lab has built a supportive community for visionary artists to convene and cultivate bold storytelling that has continued to resonate for decades.
Sundance Institute founder Robert Redford included Indigenous artists in the very first Sundance Institute lab in 1981. The Indigenous Program was formalized in the mid-’90s to uplift Native talent. Its alumni have brought Indigenous stories to mainstream audiences across film and television, earning recognition and awards for writers, directors, and actors alike.
The Native Lab is designed for artists of Native and Indigenous backgrounds who aim to center Indigeneity in their work. Over five days, fellows refine their scripts for feature and episodic projects in one-on-one feedback sessions, screenplay readings, and roundtable discussions with experienced advisors while building community on Native land in Santa Fe. Four fellows were selected: three U.S.-based (Jared Lank, Mi’kmaq; Isabella Dionne Madrigal, Cahuilla/Turtle Mountain Ojibwe; and Alex Nystrom, Ojibwe) and one from Canada (Jordan Waunch, Métis), selected in partnership with the Indigenous Screen Office (ISO). Also attending will be two artists-in-residence, Sabrina Saleha (Diné) and Svetlana Romanova (Sakha/Even), experiencing the lab while in script development. This year’s Native Lab creative advisors are: Bryson Chun (Kanaka Maoli), Sarah Friedland, Kiva Reardon, and Erica Tremblay (Seneca-Cayuga). The Native Lab is overseen by Adam Piron (Kiowa and Mohawk), Director of the Institute’s Indigenous Program, alongside Ianeta Le’i, the program’s Senior Manager.
The Directors Lab, in its second year at the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, will offer hands-on experience to fellows as they rehearse, shoot, and edit scenes from their original screenplays under the guidance of experienced advisors. Fellows will focus on building a visual language, directing actors, and refining their overall creative vision. Led by Artistic Director Gyula Gazdag, this year’s advisor cohort includes Joan Darling, Rick Famuyiwa, Jomo Fray, Keith Gordon,Catherine Hardwicke, Ed Harris, Nicole Holofcener, Karyn Kusama, Christine Lahti, Kasi Lemmons, Joi McMillon, Jason Reitman, Nancy Richardson, Estes Tarver, and Amy Vincent.
The Screenwriters Lab will take place online, where fellows will refine their scripts through individual story sessions with screenwriter advisors and group sessions on the art and craft of screenwriting. Led by Artistic Director Howard Rodman, the Screenwriters Lab advisor cohort includes Haifaa Al Mansour, John August, Andrea Berloff, Reggie Rock Bythewood, D.V. DeVincentis, Stephen Gaghan, John Gatins, Jenny Lumet, Darnell Martin, Joan Tewkesbury, Robin Swicord, and Bill Wheeler. The Directors and Screenwriters Labs are overseen by Michelle Satter, Sundance Institute Founding Senior Director of Artist Programs, and Ilyse McKimmie, Sundance Institute Deputy Director of the Feature Film Program.
Previous Sundance Institute lab fellows whose early career work has been fostered at the labs include award-winning filmmakers Andrew Ahn, Paul Thomas Anderson, Gregg Araki, Darren Aronofsky, Lisa Cholodenko, Nia DaCosta, The Daniels, Rick Famuyiwa, Sydney Freeland, David Gordon Green, Sterlin Harjo, Marielle Heller, Sky Hopinka, Miranda July, Nikyatu Jusu, James Mangold, John Cameron Mitchell, Kimberly Peirce, Gina Prince-Bythewood, Boots Riley, A.V. Rockwell, Ira Sachs, Quentin Tarantino, Shaandiin Tome, Erica Tremblay, Taika Waititi, Lulu Wang, Charlotte Wells, and Chloé Zhao.
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The Sundance Institute Indigenous Program is supported by Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, Mellon Foundation, The 11th Hour Project, a program of the Schmidt Family Foundation, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, WBD Access, Indigenous Screen Office, NBCUniversal LAUNCH, SAGindie, and Indigenous Media Initiatives.
The Sundance Institute Feature Film Program is supported by explore.org, a direct charitable activity of the Annenberg Foundation; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation; The Asian American Foundation (TAAF); Hartbeat; United Airlines; The Walt Disney Company; Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT); Salman Al-Rashid; NBCUniversal; Ray and Dagmar Dolby Fund; Scott and Jennifer Frank; Golden Globe Foundation; NHK; Steward Family Foundation; Levantine Films; Daniel Crown; Essex County Community Foundation; SAGIndie; Spotlight on San Francisco; Rosalie Swedlin and Robert Cort; Adobe; Karen and Ian Calderon; ShivHans Pictures; River Road Entertainment; the Deborah Reinisch & Michael Theodore Fund; and Brian Siberell.