Dewi Marquis is an independent film director and editor based in Boulder, Colorado. She was born in Bandung, Indonesia, in 1978 to a young Indonesian birthmother, adopted as an infant by white, middle-class American parents, and raised in Lexington, Kentucky, with multiple journeys back to Southeast Asia for her father’s work as a geographer and academic. As far back as she can remember, she’s seen the world through cinematic eyes, made sense of her life through music, and found heroes (and, often, films) in the shadow of the mainstream. Her love of nature and story led her to Washington, D.C., in 2000, where she honed her skills as a magazine editor for conservation nonprofits. In 2011, she made her first two documentaries on-set in Yosemite National Park, and two years later, she dove into filmmaking full time. Having spent years observing a conservation movement that’s disproportionately white, she founded and co-directed the award-winning National Park Experience film series, amplifying diverse cultural stories in documentary films— including her first feature— that appeared in national parks, film festivals, and on PBS and nationalgeographic.com. is an independent film director and editor based in Boulder, Colorado. She was born in Bandung, Indonesia, in 1978 to a young Indonesian birthmother, adopted as an infant by white, middle-class American parents, and raised in Lexington, Kentucky, with multiple journeys back to Southeast Asia for her father’s work as a geographer and academic. As far back as she can remember, she’s seen the world through cinematic eyes, made sense of her life through music, and found heroes (and, often, films) in the shadow of the mainstream. Her love of nature and story led her to Washington, D.C., in 2000, where she honed her skills as a magazine editor for conservation nonprofits. In 2011, she made her first two documentaries on-set in Yosemite National Park, and two years later, she dove into filmmaking full time. Having spent years observing a conservation movement that’s disproportionately white, she founded and co-directed the award-winning National Park Experience film series, amplifying diverse cultural stories in documentary films— including her first feature— that appeared in national parks, film festivals, and on PBS and nationalgeographic.com.