The producers who end up running things aren’t always the ones you’d predict. They’re not always the loudest people in the room or the ones with the most aggressive personal branding. More often they’re the ones who keep showing up, keep delivering, and keep getting hired back. Paula Iglesias fits that mold.
She moved from Granada to the United States about five years ago. That’s a short window to build the kind of career she’s built, and the projects haven’t all come from one corner of the industry. She’s worked her way through different formats, different scales, and different production cultures, and the work keeps getting more varied rather than narrowing down.
The thing about Iglesias is that she’s not chasing one type of project. Some producers spend their whole careers trying to land in a specific lane. She’s done the opposite. In the past year alone, she’s worked on genre features for The Asylum, vertical drama series built for phone screens, and small independent shorts she develops with friends. Each format demands something different from a producer. She seems to enjoy the switching.
Part of that comes from how she got here. Iglesias didn’t start in the producer’s chair. She came up through costume departments on Spanish television, including stretches on Netflix’s Cable Girls and High Seas, both made by Bambú Producciones. Department-level experience like that gives you a different relationship with a set, well before you’re sitting in a producer’s chair. By the time she started taking producer credits, she’d already absorbed how the parts fit together.
The recognition has followed. Three Telly Awards in 2025 across Shark Warning, Prepare to Die, and Continental Split. A Davey Award for Sneak Me In Your Closet, My Prince. Earlier wins for short films like A Masterpiece and It Never Rains in LA at festivals across the US, Italy, and the Netherlands. None of those came from a single category of work, which is the part worth paying attention to.
What’s interesting now is that she’s starting to build out her own world rather than just contributing to other people’s. She’s part of Mini Nation Pictures, a multilingual production company that specializes in water-based film work, where she serves as Co-Producer, Line Producer, and Production Manager. That kind of niche specialization, working with a team that has the technical setup for underwater and ocean-based shoots, gives a producer a real lane of her own. It’s a specific kind of technical setup to be plugged into.
Her independent slate keeps moving in parallel. Our State recently premiered with a meet-and-greet for the team and audience. Endless Death, The Night Hag, and Tabata are all in post-production. These aren’t projects designed to chase a market. They’re the work she does because she wants to.
What you can see across all of it is someone treating her career like a long game. The full range of her work is on her IMDb, and the list keeps growing in directions you wouldn’t necessarily predict. The producers who stay versatile tend to stick around. Iglesias seems to know that already.




























