Little White Lie

A personal story about race, dual identity and the legacy of family secrets and denial

Little White Lie USA iTunes

USA GooglePlay

Lacey Schwartz grew up convinced she was white. She has copper skin, black curls, and full lips - features which distinguish her instantly from her pale Jewish parents. Throughout her childhood her differences set her apart. But it wasn't until she was 18 that she learned the truth: her real father was black. Eight years in the making and put together by Lacey herself, Little White Lie tells the compelling story of an uncomfortable, unacknowledged truth.

Laurel Official Selection - Sundance Film Forward, 2015
Laurel Winner - Best Documentary and Audience Award, Teaneck International Film Festival
Laurel Winner - Special Award for Excellence, San Diego Jewish Film Festival
Laurel Winner - Tribeca Film Institute, Documentary Creative Promise Award
Laurel Winner - Slingshot Award for One of the Most Innovative Jewish Projects
Laurel Official Selection - Run&shoot Filmworks MVAAFF
Laurel Official Selection - Trinidad + Tobago Film Festival
Laurel Official Selection - Sidewalk Film Festival
Laurel Official Selection - Philadelphia Jewish Film Festival

The Producers


Lacey Schwartz is the CEO of Truth Aid. She is a director/producer and outreach strategist who has worked with a variety of production companies, organizations and networks, including MTV, BET, @radical.media, NASCAR and Be'chol Lashon. She also Executive Produced the narrative film DIFRET which won audience awards at the 2014 Sundance and Berlin Film Festivals. Lacey has a BA from Georgetown University and a JD from Harvard Law School. She is a member of the NYS Bar.


Mehret Mandefro is President of Truth Aid. She is a producer/ writer that draws on her experience as a physician and anthropologist to make films about the social determinants of health. She produced the film DIFRET which won audience awards at the 2014 Sundance and Berlin Film Festivals. Mehret received a BA & MD from Harvard University, and a MSc in Public Health from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine as Fulbright Scholar. She was also a White House Fellow.


James Adolphus makes motion picture films about social, cultural and political issues of global relevance. A cinematography alumnus from the American Film Institute Conservatory and winner of their prestigious Fisher Fellow Award, Adolphus cut his teeth in television on Sundance Channel's provocative documentary series "Brick City", winner of a 2010 Peabody Award. Other cinematography credits include "Mother of Murder" for Lifetime Television, "Poisoned Passions" for Investigation Discovery Channel and "Second Coming" for BET.

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