Jonathan Stack
Biography and photo from a retired page on the Documentary.org web site

Jonathan Stack began his documentary career as a co-curator at the Margaret Mead Film Festival. In 1991, he started his own company, Gabriel Films, and began making documentaries with filmmakers and international television partners. His first film, "One Generation More," which he produced with the BBC, examined the resurgence of Jewish culture in Estonia. Stack has gone on to produce over 20 films, all of which have been broadcast on major television networks both in the United States and abroad. His film, THE FARM: ANGOLA, USA (1998), was nominated for an Academy Award® and won Grand Jury Prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival, two Emmy® Awards, the National Film Critics Award for Best Non-Fiction Film and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Documentary. Other recent credits include THE WILDEST SHOW IN THE SOUTH: THE ANGOLA PRISON RODEO (1999, also nominated for an Academy Award), NO ESCAPE: PRISON RAPE and 900 WOMEN (both 2001), JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE (2002), "Liberia: An Uncivil War" (2004, TV), and "Youth Authority: California" (TV), IRON LADIES OF LIBERIA and DEAR TALULA (all 2007).

 Nominated for Achievement in Documentary Features 1998: THE FARM: ANGOLA, USA - Producer (w. Liz Garbus)
 Nominated for Achievement in Documentary Features 1999: THE WILDEST SHOW IN THE SOUTH: THE ANGOLA PRISON RODEO - Producer (w. Simeon Soffer)

2 nominations