Mel Eslyn is a film and television producer, writer and director, and President of Duplass Brothers Productions. Winner of the 2016 Independent Spirit Producer’s Award, Eslyn is the veteran producer behind films that include the 2014 Sundance hit “The One I Love”, Clea DuVall’s debut “The Intervention”, Lynn Shelton’s “Outside In”, Miguel Arteta’s “Duck Butter”, Natalie Morales’ “Language Lessons”, and Roshan Sethi’s “7 Days”, for which she won her 2nd Spirit Award. In the documentary space Eslyn frequently collaborates with filmmaker Sam Jones, most recently on his HBO features “Tony Hawk: Until the Wheels Fall Off” for which she won the Producers Guild of America Award for Outstanding Sports Program, and “Jason Isbell: Running with Our Eyes Closed”. She also produced the award-winning documentary “Not Going Quietly”, which follows the activist and lawyer Ady Barkan as he embarks on a national campaign for healthcare reform. On the smaller screen, her narrative television producing credits include HBO’s “Room 104” on which she also frequently wrote and directed, and the breakout HBO comedy “Somebody Somewhere”, which was named an AFI Television Program of the Year in its 1st season and won a Peabody Award in its 2nd.
Her documentary series credits include the Independent Spirit Award-nominated docu-series “The Lady and the Dale, the Hulu series “Sasquatch”, and Netflix’s “American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murderers”. Last year Eslyn released her narrative feature directorial debut “Biosphere”, starring Sterling K. Brown and Mark Duplass, after a well-received premiere at the Toronto Film Festival. Most recently she co-created the series “Penelope” with Mark Duplass, on which she acted as both showrunner and director. The series will be released in the US on September 24 on Netflix. Additional upcoming releases include the Hulu true-crime series “Out There: Crimes of the Paranormal”, the horror series “The Creep Tapes”, and season 3 of “Somebody Somewhere”, all out this fall.