Poppins Advisory Board - Realscreen Summit 2023

Your health comes first, and meaningful measures will be enforced to keep you safe. Learn more.

MONDAY, JANUARY 27 - THURSDAY, JANUARY 30
SHERATON NEW ORLEANS
Marriott Marquis | Washington, DC | Sunday, January 28 – Wednesday, January 31, 2023

Advisory Board

You are not currently viewing the most recent Realscreen Summit. Go to Realscreen Summit 2025.


Dawn Porter

Founder & Director
Trilogy Films

Award-winning filmmaker Dawn Porter has emerged in the entertainment industry as a leader in the art of storytelling; directing and producing critically acclaimed projects that have impacted generations of people from all walks of life.

In 2021, Porter directed and executive produced the Apple TV+ mental health documentary series “The Me You Can’t See” alongside Oprah and Prince Harry. The 6-part series featured a variety of high-profile guests including Lady Gaga and Glenn Close, while illuminating stories from across the globe and giving viewers the opportunity to seek truth, understanding, and
newfound hope for the future.

Porter’s short film “Bree Wayy: Promise Witness Remembrance” (MTV Documentary Films), which looks at how the art world responded to the death of Breonna Taylor by using art not only as a form of protest, but as a space to heal, was also released in 2021, as was “Rise Again: Tulsa and the Red Summer” (National Geographic), which was directed by Porter, and sheds new light on a century-old period of intense racial conflict — and comes one hundred years after the two-day Tulsa Massacre in 1921 that led to the murder of hundreds of Black people and left thousands homeless and displaced. The two-hour special broadcast globally in 72 countries and 43 languages on Hulu and is nominated for a 2022 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Directing in a Documentary.

In 2020, Porter directed two Emmy® Award-nominated documentaries: “The Way I See It” (Focus Features) which is a look into two American presidencies, Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama, from the lens of official White House photographer Pete Souza, and “John Lewis: Good Trouble” (CNN, Magnolia Pictures), the story of the congressman and civil rights icon. Porter received Mill Valley Film Festival’s prestigious 2020 Mind the Gap Award for Documentarian of the Year and was awarded the 2020 Marlon Riggs Award at The San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle Awards. In addition, both documentaries received a slew of Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards nominations, with wins for Best Political Documentary (“John Lewis: Good Trouble”) & Best Score (“The Way I See It”), along with a Best Documentary (“The Way I See It”)
win at the New York Film Critics Online Awards. Most recently, “John Lewis: Good Trouble” won
the 2021 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Documentary (Film).

As a two-time Sundance film festival director, Porter discovered her passion for filmmakingfollowing her time as an attorney. She made her feature directorial debut in 2013 with “Gideon's Army,” which premiered on HBO, was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award and an Emmy, won Best Editing at Sundance, and is now part of the U.S. Department of State’s American Film Showcase. Her 2016 film “Trapped,” which explores laws regulating abortion clinics in the South, won the Special Jury Social-Impact Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, and a Peabody Award. Additional directing credits for Porter include Netflix’s 2018 four-part series “Bobby Kennedy for President,” PBS’ “Spies of Mississippi,” and The Discovery Channel’s “Rise: The Promise of My Brother’s Keeper.”

Up next, Porter is working on a documentary feature for MGM, highlighting the return of Cirque du Soleil after the Montreal-based entertainment company was shuttered during the global coronavirus crisis. In addition, Porter is directing “Fifty/50,” a multi-part feature for ESPN about Title IX’s impact on women in sports, a documentary series for Showtime Networks about the United States Supreme Court and a 6 part series on the continuation of the historic civil rights
documentary series Eyes on the Prize for HBO.  When she isn’t working behind the camera, Porter frequently lectures at universities across the nation, a passion she honed during her time as professor and Head of the Documentary
Program at the prestigious UC Berkeley School of Journalism. Porter currently resides in New York City with her family.

Speaking on: THE PROGNOSIS FOR PREMIUM DOCS

Event Menu

Brand Menu