Sara Fishko

Director and filmmaker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sara Fishko is an American broadcast journalist and documentary filmmaker known for her coverage of art, music, culture and media.

Career

From 1999 to 2021, she was the creator and host of Fishko Files on WNYC, producing hundreds of short-form episodes on culture and cultural history.[1] In 2015, she directed The Jazz Loft According to W. Eugene Smith which debuted at the New Orleans Film Festival and was a New York Times critics' pick.

Earlier, she edited numerous award-winning documentary films.[2] Her work at WNYC also featured longer interviews with important musical figures including Keith Jarrett, Oscar Peterson and Dave Brubeck.[3]

Awards and honors

  • 2013 National Headliners Grand Award[4]
  • 2010 Deems Taylor Multimedia Award[5]
  • 1989 News and Documentary Emmy Award for Film Editing[6]

Filmography

As Director

As Film Editor

  • Jerusalem Peace (1977)[12]
  • A Doonesbury Special (1977)[13]
  • In Dark Places (1978)[14]
  • Carl Sandburg: Echoes and Silences (1982)[15]
  • The Global Assembly Line (1986)[16]
  • No Applause, Just Throw Money (1989)[17]
  • Destination Mozart: A Night at the Opera with Peter Sellars (1990)[18]
  • Frontline: Innocence Lost (1991)[19]
  • Buckminster Fuller: Thinking Out Loud (1996)

References

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.