
DANIELA
I. QUIROZ

FEATURE LENGTH
FEATURE LENGTH
BROADCAST TV
BROADCAST TV
SHORT FILMS
SHORT FILMS
DIGITAL
DIGITAL
BRANDED
BRANDED
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PowerPlay Videographer/Editor STARS CGI is a collaboration of ten leading NYC nonprofits that support girls and young women of color overcome barriers to success, grow emotionally, academically and physically stronger, and develop as leaders in their communities.
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Sandenwolff Editor On view April 12 - September 8, 2019 at the Jewish Museum in New York, this exhibition offers a deep and rich exploration of the beloved global icon through the lens of contemporary art.
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Sandenwolff Co-Editor Brooklyn-based artist Harold Ancart (b. 1980, Brussels, Belgium) has created this painted concrete sculpture as an homage to the accidental abstract compositions that appear on New York City’s ubiquitous freestanding handball walls.
EDITOR
DIRECTOR
VIDEOGRAPHER
EQUIPMENT/SOFTWARE
Adobe Premiere
After Effects
Final Cut Pro
Panasonic GH5
Basic lighting and sound package

Based in NYC, Daniela I. Quiroz is a recipient of
The Sundance Film Festival's Jonathan Oppenheim Editing Award and a 2017 Front Page Award winner (The Newswomen’s Club of New York). She edited "Going Varsity in Mariachi" (2023 Sundance U.S. Documentary Competition, Jonathan Oppenheim Editing Award), which follows a year in the life of a competitive High School Mariachi team in South Texas.
She was a co-editor on "Queen of New York" (2023). She edited “Latino Vote: Dispatches from the Battleground”
which broadcast on PBS ahead of the 2020 November election. She was one of the editors on “The Last Out”
(Tribeca Special Jury Mention) alongside Carla Gutierrez and Mark Becker, which follows 3 Cuban migrants pursuing their dream to make it to Major League Baseball.
She edited for the VICE on HBO and VICE News Tonight shows, including GOODBYE CONGRESS with Alexandra Pelosi when she sat down with 15 departing members of Congress at the end of 2018. Daniela co-edited the feature length film, REBEL CITIZEN with Skylight Pictures, an in-depth look at Haskell Wexler's use of cinematography as a tool for social justice, which premiered at the 2015 New York Film Festival. She is currently involved in the post-production of several documentaries and TV series set to release in 2025.
In addition to her film career, Daniela runs a non-profit, The Hope Reichbach Fund, which provides paid stipends to low-income college students through internships at Brooklyn non-profits.
Daniela spends her free time brewing beer and playing fetch with her rescue dog, Kobe.