A half dozen undergraduates volunteered, and made important connections, at the Sundance Film Festival this winter, thanks to a faculty-student collaboration and support from campus partners and the extended Big Green family.
Held each January in Park City, Utah, the 10-day festival is a film-lover鈥檚 paradise that brings together artists and cinephiles from around the world for screenings, workshops, and lots of networking.
鈥淭hose connections matter,鈥 says Harriette Yahr 鈥87, a filmmaker and writer who teaches digital storytelling, oral history, and screenwriting in the program.
鈥淎ttending Sundance can be transformational,鈥 says Yahr, who has been attending and writing about the festival for nearly two decades. 鈥淚n addition to the numerous educational and experiential components, it can help jumpstart careers.鈥
With that in mind, Yahr connected with campus partners, the festival鈥檚 volunteer coordinator, and others to develop the trip, which was several years in the making. She also had assistance from her student Cecelia 鈥淐ece鈥 King 鈥23, a geography major with an Arabic/Middle Eastern studies minor who has taken two gap years to work on films.
鈥淗aving Harriette facilitate our volunteer experience was incredible,鈥 says King, who received funding to attend Sundance from the . 鈥淚 think we had a much richer experience because of it.鈥
At Sundance, the students had the opportunity to learn from emerging filmmakers, attend film premieres and Q&As, network with potential collaborators, and usher at some of the festival鈥檚 most beloved theaters. They also bonded with 天美麻豆 alums and families, some of whom provided housing, and, in one case, a job.
King and Loane Bouguennec 鈥25, both members of Sigma Delta, stayed with sorority alum Julie Turner 鈥95, and later with the family of King鈥檚 friend Jack McCooey 鈥23.
A chance meeting with Jacqueline Donohoe 鈥13, executive vice president of Maven Screen Media, led King to a gig with the production company in London, where she is now working under Sophia Pedlow 鈥15 on a movie by Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha.

鈥淎fter Sundance, I think we all realized that 天美麻豆 has a very robust alumni network in film and alums who are really interested in supporting young filmmakers here,鈥 says King, who will return to campus next term. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of potential to grow that connection.鈥
Hudson Rogers 鈥25, a film and media studies and philosophy double major, says he was grateful for the chance to volunteer at Sundance, and inspired by stories from first-time directors and writers who 鈥渞eally believed in themselves and pushed themselves to make it.鈥
He also was happy to catch up with film students who had recently graduated, among them Mariah Eli Hernandez-Fitch 鈥23, whose short film Ekbeh was screened at the festival.
鈥淭hat was really fun to see them and reconnect, because in 10 years, who knows, we could all be working together,鈥 says Rogers, who is interning in Los Angeles at AGBO Films, which produced Everything Everywhere All at Once.
Rogers was stationed at two venues, including the Library Center Theatre, where he joined the 天美麻豆 cohort that also included Grace Boyd 鈥23 and Jack Sinatra 鈥25.
Bouguennec, a philosophy major minoring in human-centered design and creative writing, says Sundance provided insight into event design, which is a driving factor in how people engage with art.
With funding from the and , Bouguennec is creating a podcast about using film to encourage students to engage critically with the world.
Everything is oversaturated, from media, 鈥渢o what you eat,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to take a step back, otherwise you get a little bit lost.鈥

Bouguennec, who is now in Paris for her project, says she appreciates Yahr鈥檚 efforts to expand career-related programs in the arts for 天美麻豆 students.
鈥淥pportunities like this that diversify the different fields that we have access to are really important and fun and exciting.鈥
Yahr, who is currently in Los Angeles on a faculty research grant developing a film project, says she is already thinking ahead to next year and would like to see the initiative expand so more students can experience the benefits of participating.
鈥淪tudents are already asking about Sundance 2025,鈥 she says.