Alexandra Pelosi

Director

Birthday October 5, 1970

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace San Francisco, California, U.S.

Age 53 years old

Nationality United States

#25061 Most Popular

1970

Alexandra Corinne Pelosi (born October 5, 1970) is an American journalist, documentary filmmaker, and writer.

She is a daughter of Nancy Pelosi, the former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, and Paul Pelosi.

Pelosi was born and raised in San Francisco, California.

The youngest of five children, she earned a B.A.

from Loyola Marymount University.

1993

In 1993, she received a master's degree from the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

While a student at Loyola Marymount, Pelosi interned at SST Records.

Before making documentaries, Pelosi spent a decade as a field producer at NBC News.

2000

In 2000, while working as a producer for NBC covering George W. Bush's presidential campaign, she brought along a handheld camcorder documenting 18 months of her experience on the campaign trail; the footage was used to create Journeys with George, a documentary that earned her six Emmy nominations.

2001

In 2001, Sheila Nevins convinced Pelosi to leave network news to work exclusively for HBO.

2004

During the 2004 Democratic primaries, Pelosi returned to the campaign trail, this time following the Democratic candidates.

Her HBO documentary, Diary of a Political Tourist, was accompanied by her first book Sneaking into the Flying Circus: How the Media Turn Our Presidential Campaigns into Freak Shows, about the process of selecting candidates for President of the United States.

She stated that her conversations with Candy Crowley of CNN, Howard Dean, and Wesley Clark inspired her to write a book.

2007

Pelosi's documentary Friends of God: A Road Trip with Alexandra Pelosi, focusing on evangelical Christians in America, aired on HBO in 2007.

Pelosi interviewed former pastor Ted Haggard for the documentary.

She followed this with The Trials of Ted Haggard, chronicling Haggard's exile from New Life Church after his sex and drug scandal.

Alessandra Stanley, reviewing the documentary for The New York Times, called the film "strangely intriguing".

Los Angeles Times critic Mary McNamara favorably reviewed the documentary, writing that "this heartbreaking little film that may wind up being the most powerful indictment of homophobia since Brokeback Mountain."

2008

Pelosi went back on the campaign trail in 2008 to document the birth of the Tea Party movement at Republican campaign events for her film Right America: Feeling Wronged - Some Voices from the Campaign Trail, which premiered on HBO on President's Day 2009.

2010

In 2010, Pelosi turned away from political documentaries to make a 2010 HBO film, Homeless: The Motel Kids of Orange County, follows the children of the working poor in Orange County, California.

The New York Times praised the film for "advancing a theme of the failed American dream."

2013

Pelosi was at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival with her film Fall to Grace, about disgraced former New Jersey governor Jim McGreevey.

2015

In 2015, Pelosi returned to San Francisco to make a film about the tech boom's impact on the city.

The film, San Francisco 2.0 was described by Recode, as "a clear-eyed, sober recap of what's been going on...Pelosi's tale is also deeply personal; she grew up in San Francisco, but she has lived in New York for a long time. A key theme of the documentary is that the San Francisco to which she's returning is very different from the one she left."

Variety called San Francisco 2.0 "one of her finest."

The film was nominated for an Emmy for best business reporting.

2016

In 2016, Pelosi made Meet the Donors: Does Money Talk? about money's influence in politics.

In a profile in Vogue, Pelosi calls her film a "light romp into the road map of the people and places that are funding our elections."

The film drops in on a handful of folks who rank on the OpenSecrets.org list of top donors.

Uproxx described it as watching "Pelosi meet with an assortment of billionaire donors, asking them why they give millions to candidates, how this funding affects campaigns, and all the access these hefty donations can get you."

On the press tour for the film, Pelosi talked about everything she has learned in her lifetime on the political fundraising circuit.

2017

By 2017, Pelosi had filmed, produced and directed 14 documentary films, of which 13 were collaborations with Sheila Nevins.

Pelosi's documentary The Words That Built America aired on HBO on July 4, 2017.

The Independence Day special, narrated by historian David McCullough, including a reading of the U.S. Constitution read by all six living presidents, vice presidents, 50 US senators of both parties, Supreme Court justices, and others.

It includes a reading of the Declaration of Independence read by The Rock, Meryl Streep, Robert De Niro, Robert Redford, Sean Hannity, Kid Rock, and other celebrities, as well as Pelosi's interviews with various figures at the National Republican Senatorial Committee in Washington.

It closes with middle-school children from the United Nations International School reading the Bill of Rights and summaries of the other amendments.

2018

Outside the Bubble: A Roadtrip with Alexandra Pelosi aired on HBO in October 2018.

Reviewing the documentary for The New York Times, critic Shawn McCreesh wrote, "Though she is Democratic royalty, Ms. Pelosi has spent much of her career dissecting, with compassion, the psyche of the political right in America."

2019

In January 2019, Pelosi debuted Goodbye Congress on HBO's Vice News Tonight, a film that features exit interviews with 14 retiring members of Congress, including Speaker Paul Ryan and 7 other Republicans who explain how Washington works.

2020

In October 2020, Pelosi released American Selfie: One Nation Shoots Itself on Showtime.