NYWIFT Blog

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Achiro P. Olwoch

By Katie Chambers

Please join us in welcoming Achiro P. Olwoch to the NYWIFT community! Achiro P. Olwoch is a queer artist in exile from Gulu in Northern Uganda, currently living in New York. She is an award-winning writer, director, and producer who created and wrote the TV series Coffee Shop, was head writer for Yat Madit, created several short films including The Surrogate, The Mineral Basket, and Maraya Ni.

She is in the process of completing her late father’s manuscripts alongside her first novel Sex or Slave, set in 1940s Uganda during colonialism. She also has two memoirs in the works: They are Who I Was, about her life as a lesbian in Uganda and her eventual escape, and The Girl from Koro Abili, about her journey being born in exile, living through the war in Northern Uganda, through to her present life in exile.

Olwoch been published by Guernica, Exposition Review, Westbeth online newsletter, and PEN America. Her play The Survival recently had its debut performance at Lincoln Center, produced by the National Queer Theatre. And she recently graduated with certificates in screenwriting, TV Writing, and Film and TV Producing from New York Film Academy.

In her spare time, Olwoch volunteers as the African Representative on the Women Playwrights International management committee as well as the Artistic Collective of the National Queer Theater in New York.

Olwoch spoke to us about living in exile, her artistic journey, and her resilience.

 

NYWIFT Member Achiro P. Olwoch

 

Tell us about yourself – give us your elevator pitch!

My name is Achiro P. Olwoch and I am a Ugandan writer currently in exile in the U.S. My name Achiro, by the way, means ‘the resilient one’ — so it is like my late parents predestined my path when I was born. I love writing like I like to breathe and after getting COVID twice, believe me, I love breathing. I write to get away from the world but also, I write because I love to create another world even if the stories are close to reality. The art of storytelling on film is like being transported to that story — this is what I live for as a filmmaker. 

 

 

You started in the airline industry and moved to a creative field in 2007 – wow! That’s quite the transition. What inspired you to devote yourself full-time to creative work?

I think I was restless and really tired of the repetitiveness of my schedule at the airline, and I wanted more. I started by writing a book from a transcription and I loved the editing process. Then I got a column in the newspaper and when the money started trickling in, however small, I thought, “I could make this my life” and I dared and quit the airlines. 

Naturally life got hard, and I needed an even bigger job — I got that with a lifestyle magazine as a sub editor. It was there in 2008 that I learned about Maisha film training – it was the only training for film [in Uganda]. There was no film at the universities then. The idea of seeing my work on screen got me excited. That was when I ventured into film. 

 

 

And what brings you to New York? 

Sadly, nothing glamorous. I am in exile after fleeing my country for my sexuality and my work with political and LGBTQ themes. But thanks to my close friends here and all the organizations supporting me, I have started to make it home. 

 

What has been your favorite project to date and why? 

Two projects: The Survival, my play that recently showed at Lincoln Center produced by the National Queer Theater. This because it was this play that got me on the ‘watchlist’ back home but here I was able to rewrite it and produce it in all its glory — the gay characters holding hands and even sharing a kiss. This would have not been able to slide in Uganda. 

Secondly — my new screenplay, The General’s Amnesty, set in contemporary Uganda following the life of a gay man fighting for his life in a safehouse after being unlawfully arrested for his sexuality and political support of the opposition. This I love because it is based on my late father’s book of the same title that was set in 1970’s Uganda — minus the homosexual theme, but it mirrors the corruption and political unrest and torment of the locals today like it was in the 70’s. 

 

 

We’d love to hear more about the work you are doing completing your late father’s manuscripts. 

I am doing final edits on the first one — after getting professional editors on board then I will self-publish it on Amazon. I have applied to publishers and gotten so many rejections I am exhausted. So yes, The General’s Amnesty and The Smell of the Poor, both set in 1970’s Uganda and completely mirroring contemporary Uganda will finally be on the market in late 2022 into early 2023. 

 

What do you hope audiences will take away from your work?

Oh, I hope they are transported and learn something new about another country, another culture. This is why, when I can, I make my films in my local language and have subtitles. 

 

 

What is the best advice you’ve ever received? And the worst?

I will start with the worst: my managing editor at the lifestyle magazine once told me I could not write and I should not be writing. This haunted me for a while. 

The best was from my late mother who told me, “Be the kind of person everyone will be happy to be around.” 

 

And what is next for you?

I am writing and keeping writing. I have written a new book and a memoir and two films since being here —my hope is that someone, a publisher or producer or both will discover me and love my work.

This is a new start for me. I have learned how to uncensor myself as an artist and also be more comfortable in my skin as a queer person. It is still a work in progress, but my work is better for it. 

 

Connect with Achiro on Twitter, Instagram, and at www.achiropolwoch.com.

PUBLISHED BY

Katie Chambers

Katie Chambers Katie Chambers is the Senior Director of Community & Public Relations at New York Women in Film & Television (NYWIFT). She is also a regular contributing writer for From Day One, an outlet focused on innovations in HR. She serves on othe Board of Directors of the New Jersey State Federation of Women's Clubs and is a freelance writer, copyeditor, and digital marketing strategist. Follow her @KatieGChambers.

View all posts by Katie Chambers

Comments are closed

Related Posts

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Naomi Pemberton

Welcome to NYWIFT, Naomi Pemberton! Naomi is a Bronx-born healthcare leader and storyteller whose work centers on resilience, faith, and the lived experiences of women navigating complex systems and personal transformation. An Afro-Latina with Jamaican and Dominican heritage, Naomi brings more than 25 years of experience in healthcare administration into her creative work, drawing on real-world insight to shape powerful, socially conscious narratives. Her writing includes the Paradigms of Life trilogy, a series that explores sisterhood, identity, systemic challenges, and personal growth. Her books—including The Paradigms of Life: Sisterhood, Loss, and Unbreakable Bonds, Paradigms: The Experiment, and Life Paradigms: Work-Life Balance—follow women navigating betrayal, bias, ambition, and healing. Through her storytelling, Naomi blends emotional depth with broader social commentary, addressing issues such as workplace bias, faith, and the pursuit of balance in a demanding world. In addition to her writing, Naomi continues to mentor, lead, and inspire through her professional and community work. A dedicated advocate for underserved communities, she has held senior roles across healthcare systems and nonprofit organizations focused on health equity and community engagement, and serves on Bronx Community Board 11. Across healthcare, literature, and media, her mission remains the same: to create impact, amplify voices, and inspire the next generation of leaders and storytellers. In our interview, she reflects on her journey as a healthcare leader and author, the inspiration behind her book trilogy, and how storytelling can be a powerful tool for advocacy.

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Simone Butler

Welcome to NYWIFT, Simone Butler! Simone Butler is a New York–based actor and producer originally from California’s Bay Area, and a graduate of the College of Santa Fe and Royal Holloway University of London. She appeared as a recurring day player on the long-running daytime drama All My Children and has worked across mainstream and independent film, with her work screening at festivals including the LA Film Festival, Queens Film Festival, and Coney Island Film Festival. Simone trained with renowned acting coach Larry Moss and studied improv at The Groundlings and Upright Citizens Brigade. As the creator, co-producer, and co-star of the web series Below the Line, alongside writer-producer and fellow NYWIFT Member Erika Yeomans, Simone continues to develop bold, original stories that center complex characters and collaborative storytelling.

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Georeen Tanner

Welcome to NYWIFT, Georeen Tanner! Georeen Tanner is a versatile producer with over 15 years of experience working cross-platform for FOX News Media. She has produced live and taped programming for FOX News Channel and FOX Business Network, and has created content for FOX News Digital. With FOX News Audio, she ventured into podcasting, winning an award from the San Francisco Press Club for her 2022 podcast Nightmare in Chowchilla: The School Bus Kidnapping. She now produces for the streaming service FOX Nation. Her latest project is the four-part series He Killed Them All? The Robert Durst Investigation, which she produced and narrated.

READ MORE

Tribeca Festival 2026: “The Gymnasts of Fisherman Colony” Shines a Light on Courage, Community, and Opportunity

At the 2026 Tribeca Festival, audiences were introduced to an inspiring story of resilience, determination, and hope through The Gymnasts of Fisherman Colony, a powerful documentary that follows a group of young girls in Pakistan who dare to dream beyond the limitations placed upon them. Directed and written by Habiba Nosheen with Mariska Hargitay as an executive producer, the film takes viewers into Machar Colony, a marginalized fishing community in Karachi where many residents live without official documentation, limiting access to education, healthcare, and economic opportunities. Against these challenges, a gymnastics team emerges as a beacon of possibility for a group of girls determined to create a different future for themselves. Tammy Reese and LaKisa Renee brings us exclusive red carpet interviews with Nosheen and Hargitay.

READ MORE
JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER
css.php