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CYNTHIA MOSES
Founder & Executive Director
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Cynthia Moses, founder of Moses Films Ltd., has been making award-winning wildlife and conservation films for nearly two decades. Her work has aired on National Geographic, PBS, the Discovery Channel, NBC, and the Arts and Entertainment Television Network as well as internationally. Almost a decade after it was produced, New Chimpanzees (1995) is still considered the definitive film on chimpanzee cultural traditions. Odzala: Islands in the Forest (1999) was essential in convincing the government of the Republic of Congo to expand that park to four times its original size. Living with Gorillas (2000) was the first film to document the behavior of Western Lowland Gorillas. She was part of the team that produced the Emmy nominated Discover Magazine (1995-1999) science series. Her two-hour special Gorillas: Primal Contact (2003) is the first film to cover all three recognized subspecies of gorillas.Her work in Africa and around the world has motivated her to become more involved in conservation serving as a consultant for the Bushmeat Crisis Task Force, producing several short films for The Wildlife Conservation Society on conservation issues in central Africa, and more recently as founder of the International Conservation and Education Fund whose mission is to integrate conservation and health issues through grassroots outreach education.

Before becoming a filmmaker, Cynthia worked for CBS 60 Minutes as an associate producer traveling from Burma to Ghana to the Soviet Union. She also worked as an assignment editor for ABC News’ London Bureau handling news coverage in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. She holds a Masters Degree in Journalism from Stanford University, attended Columbia University Teacher’s College where she received a Masters in Educational Media and Technology, served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ivory Coast, West Africa, and worked as a stringer for various newspapers in the western Massachusetts while teaching English in the public school system.

She lives in Washington DC, and is currently working on a book combining wildlife filmmaking with conservation concerns focusing on the recent Ebola outbreaks in the Republic of Congo.
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