Independent filmmaker Shon Keane makes innovative documentaries about people overlooked by history and dark, funny portraits of dysfunctional families learning to love and laugh while living with catastrophe.
Shon was selected for the “Filmmakers of Tomorrow” program at Telluride with their teen misfit dramedy “The Prom Queen” and they are currently completing their first feature documentary “Finding Bernie” about the search for their gender non-conforming role model from the 1970s. Shon has written several award-winning feature screenplays including “Pansy,” a queer forbidden love story, which won the IFP Emerging Narrative Screenplay Award and the Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition. They also co-wrote, with Melanie R.W. Oram, “She’s All Right,” which won Best Screenplay at The Imagine This Women’s Festival. The dramatic biopic is based on a memoir by Reverend Debra Hopkins, a Black Baptist minister and trans woman who was wrongfully arrested for armed robbery and struggles to hold onto her mental health as she fights a coverup in the Alabama State Police.
A graduate of the Columbia University Film Division, Shon is an Associate Professor of Media Arts at the City University of New York (BMCC) and a yoga and mindfulness instructor who in their spare time can be found in Central Park staring at trees or spinning like a whirling dervish.
Independent filmmaker Shon Keane makes innovative documentaries about people overlooked by history and dark, funny portraits of dysfunctional families learning to love and laugh while living with catastrophe.
Shon was selected for the “Filmmakers of Tomorrow” program at Telluride with their teen misfit dramedy “The Prom Queen” and they are currently completing their first feature documentary “Finding Bernie” about the search for their gender non-conforming role model from the 1970s. Shon has written several award-winning feature screenplays including “Pansy,” a queer forbidden love story, which won the IFP Emerging Narrative Screenplay Award and the Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition. They also co-wrote, with Melanie R.W. Oram, “She’s All Right,” which won Best Screenplay at The Imagine This Women’s Festival. The dramatic biopic is based on a memoir by Reverend Debra Hopkins, a Black Baptist minister and trans woman who was wrongfully arrested for armed robbery and struggles to hold onto her mental health as she fights a coverup in the Alabama State Police.
A graduate of the Columbia University Film Division, Shon is an Associate Professor of Media Arts at the City University of New York (BMCC) and a yoga and mindfulness instructor who in their spare time can be found in Central Park staring at trees or spinning like a whirling dervish.Independent filmmaker Shon Keane makes innovative documentaries about people overlooked by history and dark, funny portraits of dysfunctional families learning to love and laugh while living with catastrophe.
Independent filmmaker Shon Keane makes innovative documentaries about people overlooked by history and dark, funny portraits of dysfunctional families learning to love and laugh while living with catastrophe.
Shon was selected for the “Filmmakers of Tomorrow” program at Telluride with their teen misfit dramedy “The Prom Queen” and they are currently completing their first feature documentary “Finding Bernie” about the search for their gender non-conforming role model from the 1970s. Shon has written several award-winning feature screenplays including “Pansy,” a queer forbidden love story, which won the IFP Emerging Narrative Screenplay Award and the Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition. They also co-wrote, with Melanie R.W. Oram, “She’s All Right,” which won Best Screenplay at The Imagine This Women’s Festival. The dramatic biopic is based on a memoir by Reverend Debra Hopkins, a Black Baptist minister and trans woman who was wrongfully arrested for armed robbery and struggles to hold onto her mental health as she fights a coverup in the Alabama State Police.
A graduate of the Columbia University Film Division, Shon is an Associate Professor of Media Arts at the City University of New York (BMCC) and a yoga and mindfulness instructor who in their spare time can be found in Central Park staring at trees or spinning like a whirling dervish.