Sterlin Harjo (born November 14, 1979)[1][2] is an American Seminole filmmaker. He has directed three feature films, a documentary, and the FX comedy drama series Reservation Dogs,[2] all of them set in his home state of Oklahoma and concerned primarily with Native American people and content.
In 2004, he received a fellowship from the Sundance Institute.[5] His short film Goodnight, Irene[6] premiered at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival [3] and received a special jury award at the Aspen Shortsfest.[3] In 2006, he received a fellowship from the newly formed organization United States Artists.[7][8]
Harjo has also directed a number of short-form projects. His 2009 short film Cepanvkuce Tutcenen ("three little boys") was part of the Embargo Collective project commissioned by the imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival.[24] He has directed a series of shorts for This Land Press in Tulsa, where Harjo is the staff video director.[25] He was a member of the 2010 Sundance shorts competition jury.[26]
Harjo is a founding member of a five-member Native American comedy group, the 1491s.[27] He is also one of the directors of the Cherokee Nation's monthly television news magazine, Osiyo, Voices of the Cherokee People.[28]
In 2021, FX released the first season of the Indigenous comedy series Reservation Dogs. It is executive-produced, directed, and co-written by Harjo, with Taika Waititi co-writing and executive-producing.[29] On September 2, 2021, FX renewed the series for a second season.[30] In 2022, Reservation Dogs was recognized at the 37th Annual Film Independent Spirit Awards as Best New Scripted Series and Best Ensemble Cast in a New Scripted Series.[31] During the ceremony, actor Devery Jacobs said: "This prize is so much bigger than ourselves, just ourselves. Each of us come from different nations across Turtle Island who survived 500 years of colonization. And in the 100 years of film and TV, Reservation Dogs now marks the first project with all Indigenous creatives at the helm."[32]
In 2023, Harjo directed the music video for the song "Mean Old Sun" by the Oklahoma country rock band Turnpike Troubadours.[33]
In October 2024, Harjo created a pilot episode for a series titled The Sensitive Kind with Ethan Hawke, which subsequently received a series order by FX.[34][35]
^Angelica Lawson, "American Indian Feature Filmmakers and Popular Culture", in Elizabeth Delaney Hoffman. ed., American Indians and Popular Culture, (ABC-CLIO, 2012), ISBN978-0313379918, pp. 98-99. Excerpts available at Google Books.