Pioneering filmmaker and television producer Madeline Anderson is often credited as being the first black woman to produce and direct a televised documentary film, the first black woman to produce and direct a syndicated TV series, the first black employee at New York-based public television station National Educational Television (WNET), and one of the first black women to join the film editor’s union. Anderson went on to become the in-house producer and director for Sesame Street and The Electric Company for the Children’s Television Workshop. During the early 1970s, she also helped create what would become WHUT-TV at Howard University, the country's first, and only, black-owned public television station. Anderson was critical of Hollywood and preferred to work outside of that system.
I Am Somebody
(Director)
Integration Report 1
(Producer)
A Tribute to Malcolm X
(Director)
Let the Church Say Amen!
(Editor)
A Tribute to Malcolm X
(Editor)
A Tribute to Malcolm X
(Producer)
Integration Report 1
(Director)
I Am Somebody
(Producer)
I Am Somebody
(Editor)
Being Me
(Director)
The Walls Come Tumbling Down
(Director)