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BFI Flare x BAFTA Crew reveal 2021 industry mentors for emerging talent support programme

17 December 2021
BFI BAFTA Crew 2018BAFTA

Six emerging LGBTQIA+ UK filmmakers have received career support from industry figures including Iain Canning, Tze Chun, Russell T Davies, Sean Durkin, Terence Nance, and Joey Soloway.

BFI Flare and BAFTA have revealed six emerging LGBTQIA+ filmmakers and the industry figures who have been supporting them for the BFI Flare x BAFTA Crew mentoring programme.

The scheme, now in its seventh year, is a partnership between BAFTA, BFI Flare: London LGBTQIA+ and BFI NETWORK (thanks to National Lottery funding), which discovers, develops and funds emerging and new filmmakers with National Lottery funding.

Meet the mentees that are breaking new ground in LGBTQIA+ representation on screen, along with their mentors (in alphabetical order):

Jack Goessens (writer/director)

Jack is a trans writer and director. In 2018 he won the Glasgow Short Film Festival Production Attic pitch with his film, Bouba & Kiki (2019), which premiered in competition at the festival the following year. His short film Everyman (2021) was commissioned through the Scottish Documentary Institute’s Bridging the Gap programme and won Best short film at SQIFF, as well as being shortlisted for a Grierson Award and screening at multiple BAFTA and Oscar qualifying festivals. They are about to release the Creative Scotland-funded short film Who I Am Now and have received early development funding through Short Circuit for their first feature Boifriend.

Jack is a graduate of the BA in filmmaking at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. In addition to his work as a writer-director, he works as an editor in high-end drama.

Jack is mentored by Iain Canning (BAFTA-winning producer The King’s Speech, Ammonite)

Jasmine Lee Jones (writer)

Jasmine is a writer and actor from north London. A graduate of the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, her debut full length play, seven methods of killing kylie jenner, opened at the Royal Court in July 2019 and won the Evening Standard award, Stage Debut best writer award, Alfred Fagon award, European New Talent award and the Critics’ Circle award for most promising playwright, and was nominated for an Olivier for outstanding achievement in an affiliate theatre.

In 2018, Jasmine was selected for the BBC Writersroom London Voices group. Her short film, home(body) (2020), was commissioned by the Young Vic through their Taking Part programme, and her recent digital play, batshit, was part of Headlong’s Unprecedented – a series of shorts performed in isolation, supported by Century Films and BBC Arts. Her latest play, curious, debuted at Soho Theatre in 2021.

Jasmine is currently writing and developing several projects for film and television including an original TV series, an adaptation of a major novel for Potboiler/BBC and a short film that will mark her first foray into directing.

Jasmine is mentored by Terence Nance (writer/director Random Acts of Flyness, An oversimplification of Her Beauty)

Paris Zarcilla (writer/director)

Paris is a writer-director working in film, television and commercials. His short film, Pommel (2018), was funded by the BFI and Creative England, and was nominated for the 2018 BIFA for best British short. His miniseries, The Century Egg (2020), was produced by Refinery Media for Singapore’s StarHub channel. He has directed commercials for companies including NSPCC, Coke Zero, Tesco, Jigsaw, Adidas and Rolex.

Paris is currently developing several projects for television including adaptations of the Inspector Low novels for 108 Media, Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, and The Boy in the Tower for producer Chi Tai, and has recently wrapped production on his debut feature, Raging Grace.

Paris is mentored by Tze Chun (writer/executive producer Gremlins: Secrets of Mogwai, Gotham)

Margaret Perry (writer)

Margaret is a writer for screen, theatre and radio from Cork. Her debut full length play, Porcelain, was staged at The Abbey Theatre in 2018 and subsequently adapted for BBC Radio 4. Her play Collapsible (2019) premiered at the VAULT Festival before transferring to Edinburgh Fringe and Dublin Fringe, where it won the Dublin Fringe award for best new play, and transferred to the Bush Theatre in February 2020. Margaret is currently under commission at The Bush, The Abbey and Soho Theatre. She is developing original television projects with Balloon Entertainment and Number 9 Films, and a feature with Expanded Media.

Margaret is mentored by Sean Durkin (BAFTA-nominated writer/director Martha Marcy May Marlene, The Nest)

Tabby Lamb (writer)

Tabby is a non-binary writer based in east London. Inspired by Carly Rae Jepson and Tennessee Williams, their work explores the intersections between popular culture and politics. Their debut show, Since U Been Gone, premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2019 after previewing at the Gate Theatre, and was described as “bold, honest and swollen with love” by the Guardian. Tabby is an associate writer with Middle Child, on attachment at the Oxford Playhouse via their Playhouse Playmaker programme, and an artistic associate for the Sky Arts Bursary at Stratford East.

A graduate of the Soho Theatre Writers Lab, they are currently developing work for stage with the Unicorn Theatre, The Place, Kilter and Petabus. They are also developing Since U Been Gone for television with support from Sarah Solemani through Oliver Lansley’s Wild Child.

Tabby is mentored by Joey Soloway (BAFTA-nominated writer/director/executive producer Transparent, I Love Dick)

Temi Wilkey (writer)

Temi is an award-winning playwright, screenwriter and actor from north London. She studied English at Cambridge before training with the National Youth Theatre REP company in 2014. Her debut play, The High Table, was developed through the Royal Court’s Young Writers Group and was produced at the Bush Theatre in Lynette Linton’s debut season, earning Temi the Stage Debut award for best writer in 2020.

Temi wrote on season three of Netflix’s Sex Education, has written two episodes of Disney+ upcoming show Wedding Season and is attached to the BBC One adaptation of the Booker Prize-winning novel Girl, Woman, Other. She is also working on her own original projects in the UK and the US.

Temi is mentored by Russell T Davies (BAFTA-winning writer/executive producer It’s a Sin, Queer as Folk)

Alongside their mentoring, this year’s participants have enjoyed a programme of online and in-person masterclasses and discussions with filmmakers including Christine Vachon (Carol, Halston, Far From Heaven), Andrew Haigh (Weekend, Looking), Sebastian Meise (Great Freedom) and Chase Joynt and Amos Mac (No Ordinary Man), plus 1-2-1 coaching on wellbeing and career strategy. They also have access to the wider BFI NETWORK x BAFTA Crew programme of events and networking opportunities for emerging talent to connect with one another and the wider industry.

To date, the programme has supported more than 35 LGBTQIA+ filmmakers who are creating bold and exciting work in the UK and beyond. Alumni include Aleem Khan (After Love), Joy Gharoro-Akpojotor (Blue Story, Boxing Day), Georgi Banks-Davies (I Hate Suzie), Kayleigh Llewellyn (In My Skin, Killing Eve) and Amrou Al Kadhi (Little America, The Watch).

Applications for BFI Flare x BAFTA Mentoring in partnership with BFI NETWORK will open in early 2022. For more information visit www.bafta.org/supporting-talent/bfi-flare-bafta-crew

For more information, images or biographies please contact:

Ruth Elora

Press Assistant at BAFTA

T: +44 (0) 207 957 5863

E: [email protected]

Dingile Kasote

Press Officer at BAFTA

T: +44 (0) 207 957 5863

E: [email protected]

Colette Geraghty

Senior PR Manager, Corporate, Industry and Partnerships at BFI

T: +44 (0)7771 980 231

E: [email protected]

Notes to Editors

BFI Flare x BAFTA Crew is a year-long programme that brings together and supports a group of emerging filmmakers from the UK by providing mentoring from a senior industry figure, alongside a bespoke programme of events designed to strengthen professional networks and support progression, and give access to BAFTA’s year-round events programme.

For more information on the BFI Flare x BAFTA Crew 2021 mentees visit: 

Photography is available from https://bafta.thirdlight.com/link/BAFTAPressImages/@/folder/11

About BFI Flare: London LGBTQIA+ Film Festival

BFI Flare: London LGBTQIA+ Film Festival is the UK’s longest running queer film event. It began in 1986 as Gay’s Own Pictures. By its 3rd edition it was tagged the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival and since then has grown to become the largest LGBTQIA+ film event in the UK, and its most anticipated. The Festival changed its name to BFI Flare in 2014 to reflect the increasing diversity of its films, filmmakers and audience. In 2021, the festival was programmed by Jay Bernard, Michael Blyth, Zorian Clayton, Brian Robinson, Emma Smart and guest programmer Tara Brown, led by Festivals Director, Tricia Tuttle.

About BFI NETWORK

Made possible through National Lottery funding, BFI NETWORK exists to discover and support talented writers, directors and producers at the start of their careers. We collaborate with film organisations and leading cultural venues across the UK to provide funding for short films, support for the development of first features, as well as a range of professional and creative development programmes.

Find out more and watch supported work: https://network.bfi.org.uk | @bfinetwork

About BFI

We are a cultural charity, a National Lottery distributor, and the UK’s lead organisation for film and the moving image.

Our mission is:

To support creativity and actively seek out the next generation of UK storytellers
To grow and care for the BFI National Archive, the world’s largest film and television archive
To offer the widest range of UK and international moving image culture through our programmes and festivals - delivered online and in venue
To use our knowledge to educate and deepen public appreciation and understanding
To work with Government and industry to ensure the continued growth of the UK’s screen industries

Founded in 1933, the BFI is a registered charity governed by Royal Charter.

The BFI Board of Governors is chaired by Tim Richards.

About BAFTA

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) is a world-leading independent arts charity that brings the very best work in film, games and television to public attention and supports the growth of creative talent in the UK and internationally. Through its Awards ceremonies and year-round programme of learning events and initiatives – which includes workshops, masterclasses, scholarships, lectures and mentoring schemes in the UK, USA and Asia – BAFTA identifies and celebrates excellence, discovers, inspires and nurtures new talent, and enables learning and creative collaboration. For advice and inspiration from the best creative minds in working in film, games and television, visit www.bafta.org/guru. For more, visit www.bafta.org.

BAFTA is a UK registered charity number 216726.