THE TEAM

Key Creative Personnel & Advisors

 
Director & Producer Bryan Pitcher (Misima Documentary)
 
"Lets give Misimans the chance to tell their story." —Bryan Pitcher

BRYAN PITCHER edited and associate-produced the feature documentary, Conversations With Nickle, which won Best Feature Documentary Award (Sedona Intl. FF) and was picked up by HBO. He associate-produced Faye Dunaway's short film, The Yellow Bird, which made its world premiere at Cannes. Bryan associate-produced and was a consulting editor for the international award-winning short film, The Bake Shop Ghost, which screened at 80 festivals around the world and won 20 awards for best short film. After directing and editing Scott Grimes' (American Dad!, The Orville, ER) music video for his top 20 contemporary hit Sunset Blvd., Bryan looks ahead to directing his first feature documentary, Misima.

Bryan graduated at the top of his class from The Los Angeles Film School, where he produced, wrote, and directed three 35mm student shorts. His thesis project, The Purple Flowers, was fiscally sponsored by the American Cancer Society and screened in United Artist Theaters in Los Angeles to promote cancer awareness. After graduation, Bryan was one of two people selected to study screenwriting at Columbia University's Graduate Film Program for a one-off, two-semester exchange program.


 

MARK JOEL, a resident of West Liak Village on the North Coast of Misima Island, plays a vital role in the film's production. Drawn to the purpose behind the project after meeting Bryan Pitcher, Mark quickly became an indispensable asset. His dedication and passion are evident in the extensive responsibilities he has taken on.

As the Assistant Director, Mark ensures the smooth progress of daily filming, meticulously tracking against the schedule. He adeptly handles logistics and travel routes through the bush, maintains essential filming equipment, and maintains order while the camera is rolling. His commitment to safety extends to the entire crew, while his expertise in translating the spoken language of Pana Misima to English assists the Director and Content Advisor in capturing the essence of the narratives.

Mark's unwavering dedication and invaluable contributions have truly become a cornerstone of the project's success.


Content Advisor Jordan Haug (Misima Documentary)
 
"The world needs to know their story." —Jordan Haug

JORDAN HAUG, Ph.D. discovered his love for anthropology at the early age of 12 when he checked out a copy of Margaret Mead's Growing Up in New Guinea from a library in Tokyo, Japan. It was then and there he decided to devote his life to anthropology and understanding different cultures. This led him to seek a Ph.D. in sociocultural anthropology at the University of California - San Diego. He conducted 20 months of ethnographic research on Misima Island, Papua New Guinea, for his dissertation. His fieldwork included learning the local vernacular and utilizing the typical anthropological methods of participant observation of daily Misiman life. 

Jordan's research concerns how people on Misima hope for greater social equality in times of dramatic deindustrialization and geopolitical decline. In a country heavily dependent on the mineral extraction economy, Misima provides a critical case study on the long-term social impacts of industrial development in the region.


ERIC WADDELL is an ethnogeographer. Trained at the University of Oxford, McGill University, and the Australian National University, he has spent some fifteen years of his life engaged in research and teaching in Oceania. As a researcher, he conducted extended fieldwork in the 1960s and 1970s among the Orokaiva and the Enga of Papua New Guinea.

Eric first met Epeli Hau’ofa in Canberra in the mid-1960s, but their friendship deepened in the 1990s when both were teaching at the University of the South Pacific (Fiji). Epeli, a prolific writer, gifted Eric copies of many of his publications. On one occasion, Epeli gave him an audio cassette of a conference he had delivered in Honolulu in 1993, after visiting Misima island—his childhood home. In doing so, Epeli commented that he had never transcribed the recording and had no plans to do so in the future: "It’s going to remain an oral tradition."

Eric is the lead editor of Remembering Epeli Hau’ofa: His Life and Legacy (Christchurch: Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, 2023).


Editorial Advisor Maysie Hoy A.C.E. (Misima Documentary)
 
"It has the potential to be far reaching." —Maysie Hoy A.C.E.

MAYSIE HOY (ACE) edited The Joy Luck Club, The Player (co-edited), Smoke, What Dreams May Come (shared credit), Freedom Song, Crazy In Alabama, Love Jones, and Freeway. Some of her recent editing credits include Breakthrough, Love Beats Rhymes, and Spare Parts. She received an Emmy nomination for Dolly Parton's Coat of Many Colors and has been featured with thirty accomplished craftswomen in a book called Great Women in Films.

It was on Robert Altman's Buffalo Bill and the Indians that she first landed a job as an apprentice. There she discovered her passion for film editing. She moved up quickly to a film assistant. Later, she worked as a film and sound assistant on many Altman films and on projects that he produced with directors Alan Rudolph and Robert Benton. Today, she is on the Board of Directors in both the Motion Picture Editors Guild and American Cinema Editors.


LOI ALMEERA ALMERON is an accomplished investigative producer and editor renowned for her work on award-winning documentaries in the United States and the Philippines. With over 35 film projects to her credit, she has delved into diverse topics, showcasing her exceptional talent and commitment to storytelling.

Her notable contributions include collaborating on the Emmy-nominated film "Rape on the Night Shift," the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting finalist "Trafficked in America" for PBS Frontline, and the critically acclaimed HBO documentary series "Agents of Chaos," which received two Emmy nominations and a 2021 Writers Guild Award. Loi also worked on "The Culture of America: A Cross-Country Visit with the 2021 National Endowment for the Arts National Heritage Fellows" and "Hale," the latter of which won the prestigious Student Academy Award for Documentary in 2017.


Music Composer Russ Howard (Misima Documentary)
 
"I need to compose a score for this one." —Russ Howard

RUSS HOWARD grew up in the wilds of Southern Oregon on a small farm. Between milking goats and bailing hay, Russ studied the mysterious arts of classical piano and punk guitar. After studying formally at the Berklee College of Music, he moved to Los Angeles where he is a music composer with more than 100 film and TV credits.

Russ began his career doing production work and support writing for many of Hollywood's most celebrated composers, including Oscar winner Mychael Danna (Life of PI, Capote, Little Miss Sunshine). He has scored dozens of features (Hobo With a Shotgun, Family Weekend, Naughty or Nice), television episodes (Dollhouse, Teen Wolf, Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Burn Notice), video games (Monsters vs. Aliens, Slims 3, Army of Two), and advertisements. Russ' clients have included Sony, WB Games, Best Buy, and Verizon; and, his music has been heard on every major network and at film festivals around the world, including Sundance, SXSW, and Cannes.


Project Advisor Denise Zmekhol (Misima Documentary)
 
"Glad to help in any way that I can." —Amedeo D'Adamo

DENISE ZMEKHOL is a Brazilian-American journalist, an award-winning producer, and director of documentary films and media projects that span the globe. Her documentary films, commercials, and innovative transmedia projects are known internationally for their elegant visual style and deft storytelling.

Her feature documentary Children of the Amazon was supported by the Independent Television Service and broadcast on PBS, as well as on European and Latin American television. Through captivating photos and interviews, Children of the Amazon tells the story of struggle and hope to protect the world’s largest tropical rainforest and its inhabitants. The film won multiple awards at film festivals around the world. Denise co-produced and co-directed the Emmy award-winning PBS series Digital Journey, which explored emerging technologies in their social, environmental, and cultural contexts. She recently co-directed Bridge to the Future a short for PBS/TED Talks and was co-producer on Amir Soltani’s Dogtown Redemption that was exhibited on the PBS series Independent Lens.


Project Advisor Carolyn Pfeiffer (Misima Documentary)
 
"Yes, count me in!" —Carolyn Pfeiffer

CAROLYN PFEIFFER started her own public relations company in London. Her numerous clients included Robert Redford, Barbara Streisand, Liza Minnelli, Francois Truffaut, and Robert Altman. In Los Angeles, Carolyn formed Alive Films with Shep Gordon. Together they produced Roadie, starring Meatloaf, and Return Engagement, a feature documentary directed by Alan Rudolph about the Timothy Leary & G. Gordon Liddy debates.

Carolyn produced a series of award-winning films including Trouble In Mind and The Moderns (both directed by Alan Rudolph), A Time of Destiny, The Whales of August, Grand Isle, Far North, and Silent Tongue. Today she resides in Marfa, Texas where her work as a producer continues. She just recently executive produced Far Marfa and the documentary Children of Giant for PBS. Carolyn is an active member of the Academy, the former president of IFP West, and was awarded the Pioneer Award by the Lone Star Film Festival in Fort Worth.