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Sundance Revs Up Operations in Boulder, Hires New Managing Director

Source: The Hollywood ReporterView Original
entertainmentApril 16, 2026

Boulder, Colorado

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With just nine months remaining before the first Boulder, Colorado, edition of the Sundance Film Festival, the organizers of the world’s most important showcase for independent cinema — which was held in Park City, Utah, for the last 45 years — are making big moves, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

Sundance has hired Paula Dupré Pesmen, an Oscar-nominated producer of narrative film franchises (Home Alone and Harry Potter) and documentaries (The Cove and Porcelain War), and the founder of a multi-state organization that helps sick children and their families (There With Care), as managing director of festival and institute operations. Pesmen, who has lived in Boulder for 30 years — she helped the city put together its pitch for Sundance and then was brought on by the fest as managing director of its relocation — is now the fest’s highest-ranking official based in town.

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Paula DuPré Pesmen

Matthew Jonas/MediaNews Group/Boulder Daily Camera/Getty Images

There are currently 10 Sundance employees based in Colorado, six in the Boulder area. Jeff Levine, the fest’s head of audience development and experience, recently relocated his family to Boulder; he is conducting outreach to people across the state, from which the fest hopes to draw two-thirds of its attendees, as it did when it was held in Utah. Dana Bacardi, who has lived in Boulder for years and previously worked with Pesmen at There With Care, is now the fest’s associate director of individual giving, tasked with raising some $10 million to help pay for the upgrading of fest venues and equipment.

Sundance intends to recruit additional local hires and volunteers in the coming months.

In late March, Sundance — represented by Pesmen, festival director and head of public programming Eugene Hernandez, senior programmer and director of strategic initiatives John Nein, senior director of programming Kim Yutani, producer of film festival and public programming Bill Curran, director of industry relations Rosie Wong, assistant director of industry relations Laura Henneman, interim head of communications Tiffany Duersch and PR consultant Laura Kim — welcomed to Boulder some 75 publicists, sales reps and distributors who handle fest logistics for their respective companies.

The out-of-towners had cocktails with Colorado Governor Jared Polis and were introduced, by foot and bus, to the 13 screening venues that have been selected for the first Sundance in Boulder. Three of those venues are on the campus of the University of Colorado Boulder — Macky Auditorium Concert Hall, which seats more than 2,000, plus the smaller Muenzinger Auditorium and Roe Green Theatre — and others are on or near the Pearl Street Mall, which runs through the center of downtown, including the 90-year-old Boulder Theater, which is being modernized; the 125-year-old Chautauqua Auditorium, which is being winterized; and eTown Hall.

Press and industry screenings, meanwhile, will take place at the Cinemark Century Boulder. And talks and other programming will be held at the Canyon Theater, Dairy Arts Center, Old Main and eTown Hall.

Trip attendees tell THR they found the fest’s screening venues to be highly impressive — “I thought the theaters were gorgeous and I am very comfortable with showing our films there, especially at Macky,” remarked one studio flack. But several expressed concern about the quantity, quality and cost of accommodations in the area. “We are capital-S stressed about that,” one put it, noting that, in recent years, finding desirable housing in and around Park City had become a “nightmare.”

Sundance is aiming to mitigate those frustrations in Boulder by partnering with local establishments “to offer rooms at negotiated preferred rates to select eligible members of our community within a limited window of time,” as fest officials recently put it in an email. The fest’s lodging portal, which will open to fest regulars — including members of the press — in waves starting on April 21, will include the most appealing establishments in the city’s downtown area, including the modern luxury St Julien Hotel & Spa (201 rooms) and the 117-year-old Hotel Boulderado (160 rooms), and on the CU Boulder campus, including two that opened within the last three

Sundance Revs Up Operations in Boulder, Hires New Managing Director | TrendPulse