Sarita Khurana

Khurana was the first Desi woman to win the Albert Maysles New Documentary Director Award at Tribeca Film Festival with her collaborator, Smriti Mundhra.

[2] Khurana contributed an essay to Sara Hill's 2007 anthology, Afterschool Matters: Creative Programs That Connect Youth Development and Student Achievement published by Corwin Press.

Ritu, Dipti and Amrita are educated, financially stable contemporary middle-class women living in Mumbai and New Delhi.

Documenting the matchmaking process in vérité over four years, A Suitable Girl examines the complex relationships between marriage, family, and culture.

They followed Dipti, Amrita, and Ritu over four years as they navigated their daily lives, careers, families, and friends.

[2][9] A Suitable Girl, premiered in the Tribeca Film Festival in 2017 and won the Albert Maysles New Documentary Director Award.

is a documentary that focuses that ways working-class Bangladeshi immigrant youth remap the geography of downtown Manhattan and create new spaces that link their memories of Dhaka with their everyday realities living in New York City.

Mahfuja, Maroofa, Saleh and Jemi immigrated to New York as children, and as all four of them are juniors and seniors at a public high school.

[3][15] In May 2020, Khurana made a short film called Home, Delivered for A-Doc's Covid Stories series about work community groups are doing in support of South Asian seniors in Queens, NY.