← Back

Julie Dash

Julie Dash

Born: 1952-10-22 • Long Island City, New York, USA

Julie Ethel Dash (born October 22, 1952) is an American film director, writer and producer. Dash received her MFA in 1985 at the UCLA Film School and is one of the graduates and filmmakers known as the L.A. Rebellion. The L.A. Rebellion refers to the first African and African-American students who studied film at UCLA. After she had written and directed several shorts, her 1991 feature Daughters of the Dust became the first full-length film directed by an African-American woman to obtain general theatrical release in the United States. Daughters of the Dust was named one of the most significant films of the last 30 years, by IndieWire.

Dash has worked in television since the late 1990s. Her television movies include Funny Valentines (1999), Incognito (1999), Love Song (2000), and The Rosa Parks Story (2002), starring Angela Bassett. The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center commissioned Dash to direct Brothers of the Borderland in 2004, as an immersive film exhibit narrated by Oprah Winfrey following the path of women gaining freedom on the Underground Railroad. In 2017, Dash directed episodes of Queen Sugar on the Oprah Winfrey Network.

Filmography
Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power poster
Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power
2022 • Self
This Changes Everything poster
This Changes Everything
2019 • Self
Spirits of Rebellion: Black Cinema at UCLA poster
Spirits of Rebellion: Black Cinema at UCLA
2016 • Herslef
These Amazing Shadows poster
These Amazing Shadows
2011 • Self
No Image
Sisters in Cinema
2003 • Self
No Image
The Cinematic Jazz of Julie Dash
1992 • Herself