Lynn Novick

Lynn Novick is an American director and producer of documentary films, widely known for her work with Ken Burns.

Lynn Novick
Born1962 (age 5758)
OccupationDirector, producer
Years active1997present

Early life

Novick was born in 1962, raised in New York City, and graduated from Horace Mann School in 1979.[1] She is also a magna cum laude graduate of Yale University with honors in American Studies.[2]

Career

Novick was a research assistant at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History before beginning her film career as a production assistant at WNET, a public television station in Manhattan. She then worked on Bill Moyers' projects Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth and A World of Ideas with Bill Moyers before moving to Florentine Films in 1989 to work on Burns's 1990 series, The Civil War, as associate producer for post production.

In 1994, she produced Burns's nine-part series, Baseball, (1994) for which she received an Emmy Award. In 1998, she was director and producer (with Burns) of two-part biographical documentary, Frank Lloyd Wright, for which she received a Peabody Award. In 2001, Novick produced Burns’ 10-part series, Jazz.[2]

Among her most recent collaborations with Burns are The War (2007), Baseball: The Tenth Inning (2010), and Prohibition (2011).[3] Her latest collaboration was an 18-hour documentary film series, The Vietnam War, with Burns and Geoffrey Ward, which aired in September 2017.[4]

Novick's most recent project was College Behind Bars, a four-part series that was broadcast on PBS in 2019.[5]

gollark: In an array language, this is the natural representation.
gollark: See, mathematically, a function is just a specific type of set of ordered pairs.
gollark: You may admittedly want to optimise this for finite-memory machines.
gollark: [[1, 1], [0, 0], [2, 2^43], [0.2, 0.2^43], ...]
gollark: Yes, however.

References

  1. "Distinguished Achievement Award - Horace Mann School". www.horacemann.org. Retrieved 2020-01-22.
  2. "Lynn Novick - Ken Burns". Ken Burns. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  3. Florentine Films Prohibition
  4. Elizabeth Jensen (23 September 2011). "A Steady Presence Out of the Limelight". The New York Times. The New York Times Company.
  5. "College Behind Bars". The Better Angels Society. The Better Angels Society. Retrieved 7 March 2019.


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