Summer 2020
Rising to the Occasion
1st AD Jennifer Reiss and 2nd AD Jason Melius discuss the challenges of filming the season finale of CBS' All Rise, which was prepped and filmed entirely remotely.
Fall 2019
Changing Drivers in Midstream
1st AD Shawn Pipkin-West brainstorms simple solutions for seemingly complex problems.
Summer 2019
The Advantage of Slowing Things Down
1st AD Leo N. Bauer take his time on set.
Spring 2019
Ironing Out Wrinkles
1st AD Michael J. Moore's scheduling system worked like a charm on A Wrinkle in Time.
Winter 2019
Piling up frequent flyer miles for The Romanoffs
1st AD Rebecca Strickland filmed all around the world, including on international waters, for The Romanoffs.
Winter 2019
Scaling Black Panther to Epic Proportions
1st AD Lisa C. Satriano uses cover sets rain or shine on Black Panther.
Fall 2018
From East Harlem to the Universal Backlot
1st AD Gerard DiNardi has made a name for himself as a go-to horror AD.
Spring 2018
Schwartz's Comfort Zone
For 1st AD Marty Eli Schwartz, making sure the actors feel comfortable is all part of the job.
Fall 2017
When It Comes to Safety, No Stone Is Left Unturned
1st AD Carol Vitkay explains how she prepped for a house fire in How to Get Away With Murder
Spring 2017
Going Rogue in London's Underground
1st AD Toby Hefferman on the "biggest challenge" of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
Fall/Winter 2016-17
Backup Plans Fit for a Superhero
1st AD Lars Winther fights inclement weather on Marvel films.
Fall/Winter 2016-17
Maintaining Order in the Court on People v. O.J.
1st AD Chris Della Penna loves the challenge of the job.
Spring 2016
Horse Sense
Danielle Rigby’s love of all things equine has made her a better assistant director.
Fall 2015
Pond-Hopping AD
1st AD Richard Styles spends lots of time traveling across the Atlantic from the U.K. to American locations like Oklahoma, Atlanta, and Beverly Hills.
Summer 2015
While working the sometimes treacherous water locations on Baywatch, Ken Wada learned staying safe is a team effort.
Summer 2015
Not many ADs who have worked on four Martin Scorsese features can say they owe their career to their janitorial services. But that's how 1st AD Chris Surgent got his foot in the door.
Spring 2015
Atlanta AD
Rick R. Johnson talks about what it’s like being a 1st AD on a variety of projects, from family features like, D3: The Mighty Ducks to hit TV dramas like Being Mary Jane.
Spring 2015
Big Easy AD
Eric Fox Hays discusses working in Louisiana on such shows as Common Law, Star-Crossed, and NCIS: New Orleans.
Winter 2015
Adventurous AD
Bruce Moriarty explains how his experiences training horses prepared him in becoming a skilled 1st AD.
Fall 2014
Thinking Big
1st AD David Webb discusses how his early interest in political science and journalism helped pave the way to working on such films as Argo, The Ides of March, and Milk.
Fall 2014
Reality AD
1st AD Thomas Kuk says he loves the unpredictability of non-scripted television, working on dozens of reality shows, including Punk’d, Fear Factor, and Stars Earn Stripes.
Summer 2014
AD on the Move
Eric Henriquez has traveled all over America as a 1st AD—working in as diverse cities as New York City, Baltimore, and New Orleans.
Summer 2014
All-Around AD
1st AD Michele Panelli-Venetis' natural gift for organizing led her to a 30-year career working on films as diverse as Alvin and the Chipmunks and Endless Love.
Spring 2014
First Place
Mark Little went from managing a helicopter courier firm to a 20-year career as a 1st AD, working with directors such as Brett Ratner, Jay Roach, Thomas Carter, and the late George Hickenlooper.
Winter 2014
Hit Woman
1st AD Anne Berger credits directors Michael Watkins and Michael Dinner on Justified for teaching her to schedule big stunt scenes with special effects in a fraction of the time they’re done.
Fall 2013
Top of the World
With a career that includes sterling art house indies and mega tentpole movies, Michael Lerman has seen the full horizon of the AD’s craft--and the view has never been less than incredible.
Summer 2013
Surfing AD
Assistant Director Carla Bowen does what it takes to ensure a smooth production-even if it means sitting on a surfboard out in the ocean for six hours.
Spring 2013
AD on the Go
New York-based Julie Bloom says her favorite part of being a 1st AD is visiting places she’s never been.
Spring 2013
New York Indie
As an AD in the busy production world of New York, no one gets more out of less than Doug Torres.
Spring 2011
From Silents to Spielberg
If there were an Ironman award for production professionals, Moore would have won hands down. His career began in 1916 as a child actor.
Winter 2013
Do-It-All AD
Richard Cowan, a film school dropout from Vancouver, Canada, says becoming a 1st AD by the tender age of 25 was a dream come true.
Fall 2012
Politically Correct
1st AD Josh King, whose partial resume includes movies starring Mike Myers, Jim Carrey and Eddie Murphy, says running comedy sets is rarely all fun and games.
Fall 2012
Set Diplomat
On the set of the recent USA Network miniseries, Political Animals, 1st AD Richard Coad's biggest challenge was uniting crews from a trio of production centers in the most diplomatic way.
Spring 2012
Hometown AD
Her love for spontaneous filmmaking began on the streets of her hometown Baltimore, where she worked on her first feature as a production assistant on Barry Levinson's Avalon.
Summer 2012
Resourceful AD
Some are born to it, and others just fall in. For 1st AD Justin Muller it was the former. His grandmother was one of the first women film editors in Italy and his grandfather was head of publicity for MGM Italia.
Winter 2012
Waterlogged AD
First Assistant Director Peter Kohn laughs when asked what it is with him and water. "I have spent a fair bit of time around islands," he admits.
Fall 2011
British Know-How
One of Hollywood’s most sought after 1st ADs is Adam Somner, whose résumé before he even crossed the Atlantic included some of the most revered names in the British film industry.
Summer 2011
Paving the Way
As one of the first female assistant directors in Hollywood, Daisy Gerber has been called a lot of things, but studio big shot was not among them.
Summer 2011
Charlie Star Trek
Charles Washburn, would never have come to Hollywood if not for experiencing the same racial bias in Chicago that blacks in the industry had endured for so many years.
Spring 2011
Nuts and Bolts AD
Callow was among the original ADs to join the Guild in 1938 and became one of the savviest nuts and bolts production pros in the industry.
Spring 2011
Groundbreaker
The first black member of the Screen Directors Guild and the second black stage manager to work in network television, Franklin was as determined as he was skilled.
Winter 2011
Gentleman AD
The first Mexican-American admitted to the Guild (in 1937), Day was known for his professionalism - so much so that C.B. DeMille told him he'd never do a picture without him.
Winter 2011
Blowing in the Wind
With one letter of reference and a British taxi, Stacey arrived in LA from England and worked his way up to AD, a profession he chose because it paid $5 more per week than DP.
Winter 2011
New York to Hollywood
Starting out cleaning lights at Biograph Studios, Jacobson worked his way up to 1st AD with on-the-fly solutions like substituting iced tea for whiskey to keep W.C. Fields sober.
Summer 2010
Moving Up
A former theater stage manager in San Francisco, Koster - a 1st AD on Private Practice who spent time as 2nd AD on JAG - says the stage is Spanish and film is Portuguese.
Winter 2010
Tall Texan
A veteran of Six Feet Under and True Blood, this graduate of the DGA's Assistant Director Training Program jokes she's the go-to AD for shows about death, dying, or the undead.
Winter 2010
Adventures of an AD
After switching majors from engineering to film, this AD has fulfilled childhood dreams of chasing pirates and launching rockets.
Fall 2009
1st Adventures
Comparing his job to that of a flight attendant's, this 1st AD maintains that each film can make for a bumpy ride.
Summer 2009
Natural-Born AD
A veteran of Home Improvement and One Day at a Time, this 1st AD has had almost as many yucks behind the camera as when the red light went on.
Spring 2009
AD on the Line
As a 1st AD, Robinson sees his job as balancing the needs of the crew with the director, actors, and department heads and walk a political tightrope every single day.
Winter 2009
Raising the Bar
Having spent the majority of her life on set, Blymyer finds herself now making the move from 2nd AD to 1st.
Winter 2009
At the Ballpark
Twohie, a Queens native (and Mets fan), has spent seven seasons - over 525 games - as an AD for the New York Yankee broadcasts in the Bronx.
Summer 2008
Windy City AD
Working on tabletop food commercials and network dramas, Harris says he'd rather work with a group of infants over a tray of deli meats any day and that there's a right way to AD beer.
Winter 2007/2008
1st AD to the Rescue
Known for his laid-back rapport with the crew, the Samoan-born Porter will still dash through burning buildings or wade through farm refuse to keep the production on track.
Fall 2007
Home on the Range
A former stockbroker at Merrill Lynch, Hausman calls himself a "repeat customer" for directors such as Milos Forman, Mike Nichols, Martin Scorsese, Ang Lee, and Sydney Pollack.
Summer 2007
Windy City AD
Choosing filmmaking over the family restaurant, this AD helped cement Chicago's straight-shooting image on-screen in films like Ferris Bueller's Day Off and Home Alone.
Winter 2006
The Shot Known 'Round the World
Though his shot precedes him, the longtime AD, UPM, and producer gets a kick out of how his name has become standard production slang.
Winter 2006
AD to the Rescue
Working as a messenger boy at Columbia in January 1936, McWhorter attended the DGA's first public meeting at the Hollywood Athletic Club.
Fall 2006
AD With a Plan
After moving to LA after college (a trip given to her by her parents), Green enrolled in the DGA Training Program and began building her two decade career in television.
Summer 2006
Movie Lover
Like his boss, Scorsese's 1st AD is an avowed cinephile, mentally storing the images he comes across at MOMA, Film Forum and Lincoln Center for visual references later.