Susan-Sojourna Collier
Assistant Arts Professor
With a background in poetry & playwriting, Susan-Sojourna Collier received an Emmy® Nomination for Outstanding Writing in a Dramatic Series for All My Children. A veteran television writer, Susan-Sojourna, has written for many daytime drama series, including All My Children, Port Charles, and One Life to Live. Susan-Sojourna partnered with the late Tommy Ford (Martin, Who Got Jokes & Harlem Night) to produce two films distributed by Lionsgate/Grindstone. The first feature film Conflict of Interest premiered at the Las Vegas Black Film Festival, BronzeLens Festival, and Peachtree Village International Film Festival. Presently, the film airs on Aspire TV and it is the highest-rated film on the network. The second feature, Switching Lanes, received the Best Feature honor at the Kingdomwood Christian Film Festival. Also, she pinned the screenplay Get the Show on the Road, an adaptation of a romantic comedy novel, which was a semi-finalist in the Tribeca Screenwriting Festival. Currently, she is finishing the documentary - Through My Lens: A Study of Bullying in the African American Community.
Susan-Sojourna is an educator and motivational speaker focusing on building self-esteem through writing. Most recently, she was awarded the Writer in Resident at Abu Dhabi Women’s College. She designed their Digital Storytelling course and edited the college’s first book of poetry – Insights into Emirati Life. She has taught screenwriting at School of Visual Arts, Syracuse University – Newhouse, and Georgia State University. She serves on Advisory Board for Authoring Action! Winston-Salem, NC (a nonprofit arts education & outreach organization) and a mentor for Girls Write Now, NYC (creative writing program for at-risk girls). She developed the creative writing workshop Messages to My Younger Brother/ Messages to My Younger Sister (addressing issues of incarcerated and youth-at-risk) which was implemented at Rikers Island Correctional Facility, Youth and Congregations in Partnership (Brooklyn) & Girls Re-Entry Assistance Support Project (GRASP). In addition, she is the co-founder of the Mamie and Jimmie Collier Writing Fellowship – established to identify and encourage emerging, talented, BIPOC playwrights and screenwriters through mentorship and writing competitions.
Courses
Feature Screenwriting, Writing the TV Teleplay, Dramatic Writing, Writing the Webseries, Short Screenwriting
Education
BA from Talladega College, MFA from Spalding University