Elizabeth Hummer

producer, director & educator

Elizabeth Hummer is a producer, director and educator. Her work has received two Emmy Awards and four nominations in children’s programming and five nominations for fashion content. Projects span production of a live after-school show for teenagers to covering fashion for Condé Nast. She has worked for Sesame Workshop, Nickelodeon, PBS (Cyberchase, In the Mix), and MTV, giving kids cameras to help them tell their stories.

For BYkids, Elizabeth mentored Ndèye Fatou Fall for her film “Walk on My Own”, capturing the voices of a diverse group of women – young and old – working to end child marriage and FGC (female genital cutting) in their Senegalese village. The film has won the gender equity prize at the 2020 Prix Jeunesse and is a finalist in the youth division of the Japan Prize.

Elizabeth also helped produce “Poet Against Prejudice” about Islamophobia, bullying and immigration, by mentoring 19-year-old filmmaker, Faiza Almontaser in the final scenes of the film and supervising post production.

Elizabeth has served on the board of the Children’s Media Association, is on the Board of Trustees of the Shelburne Museum in Vermont and is a leader of Harlem fifth graders with Sierra Club ICO’s nature excursions.

Elizabeth Hummer
“Youth never cease to amaze me with their innate wisdom and adaptability to a world in constant motion. Mentoring young filmmakers with BYkids gives me the opportunity to amplify their individual voices and help them feel empowered to continue using them.”

— Elizabeth Hummer, Mentor

Walk on My Own

Walk on My Own

Directed by Ndèye Fatou Fall (Senegal) mentored by Elizabeth Hummer
In her film, 13-year-old Ndèye Fatou Fall tells how her life has been affected by profound changes that occurred in her village a few years before she was born.
Poet Against Prejudice

Poet Against Prejudice

Directed by Directed by Faiza Almontaser (USA) mentored by Albert Maysles
Faiza Almontaser is a 17-year-old senior attending the Brooklyn International High School. Raised as a religious Muslim, she often struggles to reconcile her cultural background with the realities she meets as a high school student in one of New York City’s most socially dynamic neighborhoods.

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