About.
ELIZABETH'S BIO
Elizabeth Martin is a film producer and lawyer who executive produced the Academy Award winning, live-action short film, THE NEIGHBORS’ WINDOW (2019) and is currently producing the live-action short film ROSALIE GETS A DOG. She also produced THE NEW YORKER AT 100 documentary for Netflix and POINT AND SHOOT (2014), which won Best Documentary at the Tribeca Film Festival, among other awards. She has worked on many other award-winning films, most often with her husband and producing partner, Marshall Curry. Elizabeth is also an attorney focused on film/entertainment and nonprofit law at The Kelley Firm, PLLC. Prior to film production, Elizabeth founded and served as Executive Director of WomensLaw.org, a national nonprofit providing legal information and support for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault, now a project of the National Network to End Domestic Violence. In this capacity, Elizabeth and WomensLaw received the Peace Award from Doris Buffet's The Sunshine Lady Foundation (2004), the Mary S. Byron Celebrating Solutions Award (2005), a Webby Award for Best Legal Website (2009), the Mary Byron Project Award for Excellence (2021). Elizabeth has been profiled in several articles and books on social change and philanthropy, including Giving 2.0 (2011). Elizabeth serves on the board of RAWtools South (Asheville) is a Trustee of Queens University of Charlotte, and volunteers with asylum-seeking families as an Elder of Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church and as a pro bono attorney through Sanctuary for Families. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Elizabeth Martin is a film producer and lawyer who executive produced the Academy Award winning, live-action short film, THE NEIGHBORS’ WINDOW (2019) and is currently producing the live-action short film ROSALIE GETS A DOG. She also produced THE NEW YORKER AT 100 documentary for Netflix and POINT AND SHOOT (2014), which won Best Documentary at the Tribeca Film Festival, among other awards. She has worked on many other award-winning films, most often with her husband and producing partner, Marshall Curry. Elizabeth is also an attorney focused on film/entertainment and nonprofit law at The Kelley Firm, PLLC. Prior to film production, Elizabeth founded and served as Executive Director of WomensLaw.org, a national nonprofit providing legal information and support for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault, now a project of the National Network to End Domestic Violence. In this capacity, Elizabeth and WomensLaw received the Peace Award from Doris Buffet's The Sunshine Lady Foundation (2004), the Mary S. Byron Celebrating Solutions Award (2005), a Webby Award for Best Legal Website (2009), the Mary Byron Project Award for Excellence (2021). Elizabeth has been profiled in several articles and books on social change and philanthropy, including Giving 2.0 (2011). Elizabeth serves on the board of RAWtools South (Asheville) is a Trustee of Queens University of Charlotte, and volunteers with asylum-seeking families as an Elder of Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church and as a pro bono attorney through Sanctuary for Families. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.
ELIZABETH'S EDUCATION
West Charlotte High School, Charlotte, NC, 1989
Duke University, A.B., 1993, Comparative Area Studies: Western Europe and The Middle East
University of North Carolina School of Law, J.D., 1998
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Certificate in Horticulture, 2017
West Charlotte High School, Charlotte, NC, 1989
Duke University, A.B., 1993, Comparative Area Studies: Western Europe and The Middle East
University of North Carolina School of Law, J.D., 1998
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Certificate in Horticulture, 2017