2020 – 2023: The New York Film Festival, Revivals (Program Advisor)
at Film at Lincoln Center with Florence Almozini and Dan Sullivan



Revivals showcases important works from renowned filmmakers that have been digitally remastered, restored, and preserved with the assistance of generous partners.
October 2019: Bird’s-Eye View: The Films of Mikael Kristersson (Co-Programmer)
at the Museum of the Moving Image in collaboration with Science on Screen and educator Annie Novak.



Featuring screenings of his films PICA PICA (1987), KESTREL’S EYE (1998), and LIGHT YEAR (2008) and talks with filmmaker Mikael Kristersson, Paul Sweet (American Museum of Natural History), Kaitlyn Parkins (New York City Audubon), Dr. Eric Sanderson (Mannahatta), and researcher and filmmaker Erin Espelie.
February & August 2018: Martin Scorsese Presents Republic Rediscovered: New Restorations from Paramount Pictures (Consultant)
at the Museum of Modern Art in collaboration with The Film Foundation and Paramount Pictures.



A two-part, 30-film devoted to the famous Poverty Row studio that loved westerns, noirs, serials, and all that any and every B-movie could offer. The program celebrates a new beginning for the Republic library, which is currently being restored and returned to wide distribution by Paramount.
November 2013: CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS: ‘TRAVELING LIGHT’ + TRAINS ON FILM (Filmmaker/Programmer)
at Anthology Film Archives



“TRAVELING LIGHT is at once a meditation on the play of light and motion in the tradition of Stan Brakhage’s WONDER RING, an experiment in the limits of narrative filmmaking (though plot- and dialogue-free, its genesis as a scripted film and the presence of actors suggest a ghost of a story), and a love letter to train travel. To emphasize the latter dimension of Telaroli’s film, we’ll be presenting it alongside three classic train films that she’s selected, movies whose classical structures contrast dramatically with TRAVELING LIGHT even as they share the same railroad fever.”
June/July 2013: Allan Dwan and the Rise and Decline of the Hollywood Studios (Consultant)
at the Museum of the Modern Art



“Allan Dwan (1885–1981), dubbed ‘the last pioneer’ by Peter Bogdanovich, had a 50-year career as a director (from 1911 to 1961) that encompasses the history of the classic American movie industry. During that span he made over 400 films, a substantial minority of which survive.”