

Currently signed for the third season, Naroth coordinates Ramy's entire art department. Played by Egyptian-American Ramy Youssef, only he himself and Naroth have been working on the show from day one. The Peabody Award and Golden Globe-winning TV series follows a first-generation American Muslim on a spiritual journey in his politically divided New Jersey neighborhood. Naroth is the main art department coordinator for the acclaimed Hulu TV Series Ramy. Naroth has recently joined prominent US labor union IATSE - The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, Moving Picture Technicians, Artists and Allied Crafts of the United States - to help create a better work environment in the TV and film industry. "Being myself a representative for "diversity" on crews in Hollywood, I am passionate about projects that aim to promote diversity and inclusivity," said the Indian filmmaker. In 2019, Naroth coordinated the art department for See you Yesterday, a Spike Lee-produced award-winning sci-fi with a socially relevant story in which a young black girl builds a time machine to bring back her brother who was killed in an accidental shooting. She has also worked on several high-profile projects with Chinese companies, including romantic TV fantasy The Starry Night, the Starry Sea, for which Naroth acted as the main NYC art director. She captured the performance of one hundred Chinese women, each dressed in a colorful traditional qipao dress.

Naroth worked as a cinematographer for an ICN TV Network project titled Qipao Flash Mob at Times Square in New York City. Some projects that she has worked on include the Oscar-nominated Marriage Story, Mojin: The Lost Legend, After The Wedding starring Julianne Moore and Michelle Williams, and Slava (Fetisov),a TV series dedicated to the famous NHL hockey player. Since then, the filmmaker has performed as art director and coordinator for multi-million dollar productions by some of the most important American, Chinese and Russian entertainment companies.

Naroth took the industry by storm in 2014 when a short movie she produced, The Bicycle, won the Beijing Student Film Festival in China.

Grand-Nannies was conceived as a future full-scale exhibition at Broadway Stages in Brooklyn, NY. With Naroth's rare and distinct artistic style of candid shot and philosophical reflection, Grand-Nannies will elevate the dark Covid-19 chronicle into the humanistic panorama of Indian grandparents playing crucial role in the bringing up of Indian-American children and instilling them with the rich culture and traditions of their Indian heritage.
