Erik Angra

Erik Angra Resume

The son of Indian immigrants, Angra began his career touring alongside hardcore punk musicians in the US. The footage he released in 2006 featured rare performances from some of the final shows at the hardcore and punk club CBGB’s in New York. His editing on the feature-length documentary, The Minister’s War, won a special jury prize at the Amsterdam Film Festival in 2012. Angra was also one of the editors on the Emmy Award-winning series The Folklorist and was one of the cinematographers for the Emmy Award-winning series 30 for 30. His regular clients include Sony, Ken Burns, Coca Cola, Jet Airways, Vice and the Discovery Networks. His work has appeared on almost every major television outlet.

Angra was also the director of a cult reality series called Quiet Desperation showcasing Boston’s creative scene alongside Rob Potylo. It was scheduled to be broadcast on CBS on Sunday afternoons for a six-episode season in spring 2014, but CBS allegedly breached the agreement and refused to view the pilot that had been made for them, despite thousands of dollars being spent by the filmmakers. In April 2014, Potylo and Angra sued CBS for “breach of contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and unfair and deceptive acts and practices.” The matter was settled out of court.

The Kickstarter campaign for Angra’s documentary Portrait of Harry was supported by Amanda Palmer who tweeted: “I’ve never cried almost all the way through a Kickstarter pitch”. The film documents Harry Somers, a man with only weeks to live, revealing how he escaped from Nazi Germany to eventually become an acclaimed impressionist painter. Somers’ work often includes landscapes and other natural settings inhabited by people. Angra began production on the documentary in 2012.

Angra recently completed editing the Ken Burns film Two Who Defied the Nazis starring Tom Hanks. He is the youngest editor of a Ken Burns film. The movie is set for national release in fall 2016.