SAM POLLARD is an accomplished feature film and television video editor, and
documentary producer/director.
Between 1990 and 2010, Mr. Pollard edited a number of Spike Lee’s films: “Mo’ Better Blues,” “Jungle Fever,” “Girl 6,” “Clockers” and “Bamboozled”. Mr. Pollard and Mr. Lee co-produced a number of documentary productions for the small and big screen, “Four Little Girls,” a feature-length documentary about the 1963 Birmingham church bombings which was nominated for an Academy Award and “When The Levees Broke,” a four part documentary that won numerous awards, including a Peabody and three Emmy Awards. Five years later in 2010 he co-produced and supervised the edit on the follow up to “Levees If God Is Willing and da Creek Don’t Rise”.
Since 2012 Mr. Pollard has completed as a producer/director “Slavery By Another
Name” a 90-minute documentary for PBS that was in competition at the Sundance Festival, “August Wilson: The Ground On Which I Stand” a 90-minute documentary in 2015 for American Masters, “Two Trains Runnin’” a feature length documentary in 2016 that premiered at the Full Frame Film Festival. Sammy Davis Jr., “I’ve Gotta Be Me” for American Masters premièred at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival. In 2019 Mr. Pollard co-directed the six part series “Why We Hate” that premiered on The Discovery Channel.
In 2020 he was one of the directors on the HBO Series “Atlanta’s Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children”. He also completed in 2020 “MLK/FBI” that premiered at the Toronto Film Festival and the New York Film Festival. In 2021 HBO premiered two of his films “Black Art: In the Absence of Light” and “Citizen Ashe”.
His latest film “The League” premiered at the 2023 Tribeca Film Festival and is currently in theaters.