View the full Project VoiceScape documentary short films and vote your favorite until Sept. 30, 2011!

Project VoiceScape is a partnership with Adobe Youth Voices, PBS and POV to mentor today’s best young documentary filmmakers. Keep up with news from the filmmakers and their mentors on the Project VoiceScape blog.

Watch a trailer for Drew Morton Goldsmith’s documentary No Pity.

Drew Morton Goldsmith - Project VoiceScape

Project VoiceScape filmmaker
Drew Morton Goldsmith

Drew Morton Goldsmith is no stranger to the art of filmmaking. In the past six years he has already built a resume that would make any Tisch student green around the gills: participation in more than 20 international film festivals with his film Treasure Diversity and awards from YouTube (at age 10, for the Sky’s the Limit contest) and the United Nations.

But it’s not the accolades that motivate Drew to continue his work. As a fifteen year old with “significant disabilities,” Drew is passionate about using filmmaking to open people’s hearts and expand their minds.

Drew found inspiration in a challenging moment several years ago, when his favorite English teacher, in a well-meaning gesture, told him that she was going to make a donation to a certain Autism charity. As an Autism self-advocate, Drew knew this charity to rely on what he calls “pity-based marketing.”

He decided to use filmmaking as a means to expose this technique, and to articulate the way it feels to be the person who is characterized as pitiable for the sake of fundraising.

Aaron Matthews (A Panther in Africa, My American Girls)

Drew’s mentor is
Aaron Matthews
(A Panther in Africa,
My American Girls)

When Drew was accepted into the Project VoiceScape program, he was coming to the table with a rough cut of his documentary, No Pity. Drew has used his time with his mentor, Aaron Matthews (A Panther in Africa, My American Girls), to expand the rough cut from its original format — entirely archival footage — to include original footage Drew shot himself. “Aaron encouraged me to give my film more of my own image — literally begin the film with a sequence involving me. Aaron has also taught me about leaving just a bit more on the editing room floor.”

“At each turn, Aaron reminded me that it was my work — I had the final say — but he was there as a responsive sounding board. It was an ideal working relationship.”

What is the most important message he wants his audience to take away from No Pity?

“[This is] a disabled teenager’s heartfelt appeal for respect and dignity,” says Drew. “Dignity always trumps pity.”

Follow the progress of all the Project VoiceScape filmmakers and their award-winning documentary mentors, along with videos and more behind the scenes coverage, at the Project VoiceScape blog.

Published by

POV Staff
POV (a cinema term for "point of view") is television's longest-running showcase for independent non-fiction films. POV premieres 14-16 of the best, boldest and most innovative programs every year on PBS. Since 1988, POV has presented over 400 films to public television audiences across the country. POV films are known for their intimacy, their unforgettable storytelling and their timeliness, putting a human face on contemporary social issues.