Michelle Amor Gillie

Clinical Assistant Professor of Screenwriting

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES

School of Film and Television

Contact

Biography

Michelle Amor Gillie co-wrote PLAYIN’ FOR LOVE, directed by and starring Robert Townsend (FIVE HEARTBEATS, HOLLYWOOD SHUFFLE) and Jenifer Lewis (BLACK-ISH), wrote OF BOYS & MEN starring Academy® Award-nominated actress Angela Bassett (BLACK PANTHER) and Robert Townsend, and co-produced and co-wrote the documentary film TUPAC SHAKUR: BEFORE I WAKE. In November 2019 she and collaborator Ali LeRoi (EVERYBODY HATES CHRIS) sold her one-hour drama THE HONORABLE to CBS, a project inspired by her childhood in Chicago.

She previously taught at UCLA, Chapman University, Cal State, Northridge, and AFI, and is serving her third elected term as co-chair of the WGAW Committee of Black Writers (CBW), whose mission is to create career and networking opportunities for Black writers in Hollywood. She was the lead author of the committee’s ”Dear Hollywood” letter released on June 12, 2020, which demanded sweeping changes in the business to end systemic racism in media and entertainment.

Her projects have garnered numerous accolades. PLAYIN' FOR LOVE debuted on the UP Cable Network in July 2015; on the Urban Movie channel in November 2015; was released on video and Amazon Prime in February 2016; played on Magic Johnson’s Aspire TV in November 2016; and aired on Bounce TV in January 2017. Her film OF BOYS & MEN won Best of the Fest at the 2008 Chicago International Film Festival and was the 2008 Pan-African Film Festival’s Centerpiece Selection. It was released on Warner Bros Home Video in 2011. TUPAC SHAKUR: BEFORE I WAKE sold 4 million copies worldwide.

Michelle received her B.A. from Columbia College, Chicago, and her M.F.A. from UCLA. She has developed stories, written scripts for, and has had original work optioned by veteran producer Todd Garner, Academy® Award-nominated director Lee Daniels, and international film company Atlas Entertainment, R&B singer Michel’le, and Academy® Award-winning producer Al Ruddy (The Godfather & Million Dollar Baby). She is currently shopping a TV drama series with New York Times bestselling author Shaka Senghor (Writing My Wrongs). She's also developing numerous other film and TV projects. A proud native Chicagoan, she resides in Los Angeles with her family.

Education

University of California, Los Angeles

MFA

Theater, Film, and Television

2014

Columbia College, Chicago

BA

Arts, Entertainment & Media Management

1995

Areas of Expertise

Narrative Structure
Book Proposals
Feature Film Screenwriting
TV Writing
Outlining

Accomplishments

Semi-Finalist

Universal Feature Writers Program, 2018

Second Round Finalist in both Feature and One-Hour Pilot categories

Austin Film Festival, 2017

Second Round Finalist

New York Television Festival, 2017

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Affiliations

  • Co-Chair, Committee of Black Writers, Writers Guild of America West
  • Co-Founder, LMU's School of Film and Television (SFTV) Students of Color Organization (SCO), whose mission to empower, increase visibility and create career opportunities for Students of Color. Won LMU’s 2019 New Outstanding Organization of the Year.

Event Appearances

HOLIDAY SOUL 2017, sponsored by UTA, NETFLIX, GOOGLE, HBO, CBS, OWN

WGA West Event  Los Angeles, CA

2017-12-13

HOLIDAY SOUL 2016, sponsored by UTA, NETFLIX, GOOGLE, HBO, CBS, OWN

WGA West Event  Los Angeles, CA

2016-12-12

The 25th Anniversary of The Five Heartbeats Screening

WGA West Event  Los Angeles, CA

2016-03-07

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Articles

My Image, My World

NAACP Hollywood

Michelle Amor-Gillie

2017-02-04

A 1,000-word essay about representation in film and TV. The essay was also featured in the 48th Annual NAACP Image Awards show booklet in 2017, which was given to every attendee.

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Raoul Peck Brings Life to James Baldwin’s Unfinished Manuscript

Los Angeles Review of Books

Michelle Amor-Gillie

2017-02-04

Interview of Academy® Award-nominated director Raoul Peck for his documentary "I Am Not Your Negro."

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Black Film Then…And The ‘Eternal Now'

UCLA Film & Television Archive

Michelle Amor-Gillie

2011-12-05

Blog post about the “L.A. Rebellion,” a group of Black students who entered UCLA’s School of Theater, Film, and Television in the 1960s.

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