Hilan Warshaw
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Hilan Warshaw is an Emmy-nominated director and writer of documentaries including THROUGH THE DARKNESS (broadcast on ORF, SVT, YLE, and Medici TV); SECRET SONG (SVT, Allegro HD, EuroArts); WAGNER'S JEWS (WDR/ARTE, PBS-WNET, Israel's Channel 8 and others); IN THE KEY OF BACH (PBS-Georgia Public Broadcasting); MY BOLERO (PBS-Georgia Public Broadcasting); the forthcoming MAHLER IN NEW YORK (SVT); and RACHMANINOFF REVISITED (WDR-ARTE; co-producer and editor). Hilan is also video director and host of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's "Behind the Curtain" series, directing multi-camera captures of the ASO's concert season for digital on-demand release and local television broadcasts. He is a 2021 Hermitage Artist Retreat Fellow and has served as an International Emmy Awards juror. He is in development on a feature screenplay, and completing the feature documentary HONORABLE MR. MORGENTHAU.
Hilan's other writing and video editing credits include documentaries broadcast on PBS stations, ARTE, NHK and other international networks. He has produced and edited short-form video content for Carnegie Hall, New York City Opera, the League of American Orchestras, Fund for the City of New York, and other organizations.
Alongside his film work, he has taught at Barnard College and Western Carolina University, and has been a lecturer and panelist at venues including London's Barbican Centre, Stockholm's Royal Academy of Arts, Yale University, Boston University, NYU's Deutsches Haus, and the Morgan Library & Museum. Educated as a violinist and orchestral conductor as well as a filmmaker, his essays on film and music, and other writings, have been published in anthologies from Cambridge University Press, McFarland Press, and Königshausen & Neumann. He has a B.F.A. and M.F.A. from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts.
Hilan's other writing and video editing credits include documentaries broadcast on PBS stations, ARTE, NHK and other international networks. He has produced and edited short-form video content for Carnegie Hall, New York City Opera, the League of American Orchestras, Fund for the City of New York, and other organizations.
Alongside his film work, he has taught at Barnard College and Western Carolina University, and has been a lecturer and panelist at venues including London's Barbican Centre, Stockholm's Royal Academy of Arts, Yale University, Boston University, NYU's Deutsches Haus, and the Morgan Library & Museum. Educated as a violinist and orchestral conductor as well as a filmmaker, his essays on film and music, and other writings, have been published in anthologies from Cambridge University Press, McFarland Press, and Königshausen & Neumann. He has a B.F.A. and M.F.A. from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts.