Stevan Lee Mraovitch
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Stevan Lee Mraovitch is a Serbo-American writer, director, producer, and poet whose emotionally grounded storytelling is shaped by a rich multicultural heritage. Born in New York to Taiwanese and Serbian parents and raised in Paris, he crafts human-centered narratives that explore themes of exile, faith, and social invisibility.
A graduate of Columbia University's MFA Film program, Mraovitch refined his cinematic voice under the mentorship of Michael Hausman and has collaborated with figures including David Mamet, Barry Levinson, and Julie Delpy. His work blends humor and heart, often focusing on characters living at society's margins and the quiet, transformative connections they forge.
His debut feature, Holidays at All Cost, won both the Audience and Jury Awards at the Austin Film Festival. He followed with Doctor, Doctor, a dark comedy about a hypochondriac turned accidental hero, and Where There Is Love, There Is No Darkness, a poetic exploration of dignity and spiritual resilience. The latter won Best Feature - World Cinema in Kansas City, the Special Jury Award in Arizona, and screened at the 47th Moscow International Film Festival, a prestigious Category A event.
Also a published poet, Mraovitch authored Analgesia - The Scars of Love and Revolts, a collection meditating on memory, identity, and brotherhood. Across film and poetry, he creates intimate portraits of the unseen-stories that listen where the world turns away.
A graduate of Columbia University's MFA Film program, Mraovitch refined his cinematic voice under the mentorship of Michael Hausman and has collaborated with figures including David Mamet, Barry Levinson, and Julie Delpy. His work blends humor and heart, often focusing on characters living at society's margins and the quiet, transformative connections they forge.
His debut feature, Holidays at All Cost, won both the Audience and Jury Awards at the Austin Film Festival. He followed with Doctor, Doctor, a dark comedy about a hypochondriac turned accidental hero, and Where There Is Love, There Is No Darkness, a poetic exploration of dignity and spiritual resilience. The latter won Best Feature - World Cinema in Kansas City, the Special Jury Award in Arizona, and screened at the 47th Moscow International Film Festival, a prestigious Category A event.
Also a published poet, Mraovitch authored Analgesia - The Scars of Love and Revolts, a collection meditating on memory, identity, and brotherhood. Across film and poetry, he creates intimate portraits of the unseen-stories that listen where the world turns away.