Biography

Julieta Lozano is a producer who’s love for film emerged from intergenerational storytelling and a New York City childhood of carefully watching strangers at the Mexican restaurant where her mom cooked. These memories incited a deep interest in human stories and familiarizing the strange within communities. Now, she is passionate about building teams and bringing stories to life through collaborative and intentional preparation. 

At an early age, she got the opportunity to expand on her production skills at the Ghetto Film School and Bronx Documentary Center and has been recognized by the New York Times for her freelance photojournalism. In 2021 she won the UrbanWorld 150 grant at Warner Media to produce a documentary about maternal lineage and the passing of memories through the lens of a Mexican grandmother’s conversation with her granddaughter as she faces the early stages of Alzheimers. That same year, she was awarded the REI X Scope grant where she produced and directed an animated documentary in Mexico City about plant therapy and holistic healing grounded in indigenous tradition. Recently, she graduated NYU with a BFA in Film & TV and a minor in Business Management Technology as a recipient of the 2018 Gordon Parks Scholarship. She hopes to continue to explore stories rooted in community and innovation.