The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA), in partnership with Rocliffe, and supported by The London Book Fair, has announced today the names of three writers of children’s media who will showcase their work to influential members of the film and television industries.
The showcase, now in its third year, is a special iteration of the BAFTA Rocliffe New Writing Competition, a long-running initiative which aims to give a platform to undiscovered screenwriters and help them to develop their careers. This is the third year that BAFTA and Rocliffe have worked with The London Book Fair to support writers for children.
Andy Gilchrist, Ben Weiner and Stephen Sunderland – who were selected by an industry jury of writers, commissioners, programmers, producers and development executives – will see extracts from their scripts performed live by professional actors at a public showcase at BAFTA headquarters, 195 Piccadilly in London, on Saturday 24 September.
In addition to the showcased writers, the details of three additional entrants will be published in the BAFTA Rocliffe Forum List, a new spotlight for screenwriting talent. This year’s Forum List includes Diane Taylor-Karrer’s Ana’s Holiday, Katie Lee and Alex Milway’s Darke Times and Robert Robert Frimston’s Not Bad Beth.
This year’s showcase will be chaired by BAFTA-winning writer Ben Ward (Danger Mouse, Horrible Histories, Gigglebiz) and Sarah Muller, Creative Director of Scripted, Animation and Co-Productions at CBBC, who will critique and provide feedback on the three winning scripts, as well as sharing insights into their own working process. The finalists will also receive a full year’s access to BAFTA events and workshops, industry introductions and a bespoke career planning and profile building session to provide support in navigating the industry.
One of the writers will then be selected to receive an expenses-paid trip and full delegate pass to the MIP Junior international children’s programming market in Cannes in October, where they will receive extensive industry introductions and networking opportunities, organised by The London Book Fair.
Helen Blakeman, BAFTA-winning writer (Dustbin Baby) and Chair of the BAFTA Children’s Committee, said: “We are delighted to be showcasing such outstanding new talent for children’s media, and are proud to be providing these emerging writers with a fantastic introduction to the wider industry. We hope that they all gain valuable insights and feedback from our industry experts and look forward to seeing this year’s new voices for children’s media go on to make the same successful progress within the industry as our past participants.”
Farah Abushwesha, Founder of Rocliffe, said: “It’s wonderful to see this third incarnation and the paths that those writers who have gone before have forged. To know the industry has come together to select these three new voices and the potentially career changing doors that may now open for them is hugely exciting.”
Jacks Thomas, Director of The London Book Fair, said: “We’re delighted to have joined together with BAFTA and Rocliffe again this year to support emerging talent in screen writing for children; it is endlessly interesting to see how writing books and scripts for this market coalesce. The standard of entries has been exceptionally high, and we’re hugely excited to see what the future holds for Andy, Ben and Stephen. We’re very much looking forward to welcoming one writer as part of our MIP Junior delegation in October.”
Public tickets for BAFTA Rocliffe New Writing Forum: Children’s Film and Television are on sale now. To book tickets, go to www.bafta.org/whats-on/.
Event details:
‘BAFTA Rocliffe New Writing Showcase: Children’s Media’
Saturday 24 September 2016, 16:30 at BAFTA 195 Piccadilly, London
Biographies and project synopses of the writers:
Andy Gilchrist – The Undead Detectives Agency
Synopsis: Lost soul, Malcolm, joins forces with a motley crew of undead detectives to solve the mystery of his own death.
Andy Gilchrist was raised in Worcestershire, and now lives in London. Andy had his work first published at the age of 14 as part of a collection of short stories showcasing new writing talent, selected by the late Poet Laureate Ted Hughes. He now works as a full time intellectual property lawyer, but continues to write whenever he can. He has won various international screenwriting competitions, including being awarded the Empire Award in the New York Screenplay Contest in 2015. In that year, he also wrote an episode for the web series All Good Things produced by Box Room Films.
Ben Weiner – Mirror Worlds
Synopsis: After opening and travelling through a gateway between worlds, mother and son team, Penny and Albie navigate the fantastical Mirror Worlds trying to get back home.
Ben grew up and lives in London, but has travelled in China, Taiwan, France and India. As a writer, he has benefited from training courses at the National Film and Television School (NFTS) and the Script Factory and developed a feature script as part of the NFTS development diploma. Current projects include a feature script based in the Scottish Highlands, a children’s TV fantasy adventure series, a TV comedy series about the colourful characters of the 1970s Tennis Tour, and a spoken word piece to be broadcast as part of a series of monologues by up‐and‐coming writers.
Stephen Sunderland – The Fifth Dimension
Synopsis: Youngsters mastering time travel through DIY TV get stranded with the inventor of a 1950s fantasy show wanting to alter the future – their present….
Stephen lives in Manchester and studied English at Sidney Sussex College. He went on to teach English Literature and more recently ran a Film Studies department. He is the writer of three dramas – Ice Dreams, Paradise Hazard, and Phonebreaker – broadcast on BBC Radio 4. He is currently working on a number of original projects for TV and film including a sitcom, (The Booze Ambulance), two feature films (Black Sun and Fever) and a ten part drama series (The Undiscovered Country). The Fifth Dimension is his first project for children.
For further information, please contact:
Eleanor Pickering at BAFTA
T (0) 20 7292 5863
E [email protected]
Niyi Akeju at BAFTA
T (0) 20 7292 5865
E [email protected]