Lawrence Hott has been producing documentary films since 1978, when he left the practice of law to join Florentine Films. His awards include an Emmy, two Academy Award nominations, a George Foster Peabody Award, the duPont-Columbia Journalism Award, the Erik Barnouw Award, five American Film Festival Blue Ribbons, fourteen CINE Golden Eagles, screenings at Telluride and first-place awards from the San Francisco, Chicago, National Educational, and New England Film Festivals.  

Hott was the Fulbright Fellow in Film and Television in the United Kingdom in 1994.  He received the Humanities Achievement Award from the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities in 1995; a Massachusetts Cultural Council/Boston Film and Video Foundation Fellowship in 2001; and the Rosalynn Carter Fellowship for Mental Health Journalism in 2001.  He has been on the board of non-fiction writers at Smith College and has served as a panelist for the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Massachusetts Cultural Commission, and the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities.  In 2009, 2010, and 2012 Hott presented his films in Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela and Algeria as part of the American Documentary Showcase, a program of the US Department of State. In 2015 he was a Fulbright Specialist in Vietnam teaching documentary in Hanoi, Da Nang, and Ho Chi Minh City. Hott currently teaches documentary production for the University Without Walls degree program for the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts Sciences.

His films for national PBS broadcast include Through Deaf Eyes, American Masters: John James Audubon: Drawn From Nature, Niagara Falls, The Return of the Cuyahoga, Imagining Robert, The War of 1812, The Warrior Tradition, Frederick Law Olmsted: Designing America,  Rising Voices/ Hótȟaŋiŋpi : The Revitalization of the Lakota LanguageSciTech Band: Pride of Springfield, and North America By Design: A Series of Five Short Films for the Library of American Landscape History.

For more information visit florentinefilms.org

    Upcoming Workshops taught by Lawrence Hott