Natasha Lewin started her writing career at Boston’s The Weekly Dig. She then served as the Managing Editor for High Times magazine, and published her first book with Chronicle Books in 2008. In 2016, Natasha co-authored the children’s book Missy President with American businesswoman Randi Zuckerberg. Alongside Randi, Natasha also co-wrote the New York Times bestseller Pick Three: You Can Have It All (Just Not Every Day), published in 2018.
Natasha has won numerous screenwriting awards, including Hollywood’s Black List Feature Fellowship. In 2017, she won a diversity scholarship as a playwright to put up her first play, CHATTER, which was sponsored by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. After the sold-out run ended, Natasha turned CHATTER into a short film. The short won multiple awards, including the UCLAxFilmFest, and qualified for Best Live Action Short Film at the 2020 Oscars.
Natasha has written about her Black and Jewish lineage in both The Christian Science Monitor and Kveller. She is an Archival Producer for HBO Documentary and built the research team for HBO’s “1000% Me: Growing Up Mixed” directed by W. Kamau Bell. Natasha is also in post-production on a documentary about her father, who was hidden as a newborn during the occupation of France. She lives in LA and is engaged to an incredible Canadian man, eh!