Tag: New Writing North

Russell T Davies to headline the 2026 Screenwriting Weekender

Posted on by Curtis Wake
Russell T Davies to headline the 2026 Screenwriting Weekender in Newcastle upon Tyne

The second Screenwriting Weekender takes place at the Live Theatre in Newcastle from Friday 6 – Sunday 8 February 2026. Produced by New Writing North, the writing development agency for the North of England and sponsored by North East Screen, the screen development agency for North East England.

Acclaimed screenwriter Russell T Davies OBE (Queer as Folk, Doctor Who, It’s a Sin, Years and Years) will headline the Screenwriting Weekender, which returns for a second year after a successful sold-out event in early 2025.

Over 20 industry professionals from production companies including Warp Films (Adolescence), See-Saw Films (Slow Horses), and Hat Trick Productions (Smoggie Queens) and writers with credits on hits such as Succession, Killing Eve, The League of Gentlemen and Department Q, will take part in a programme.

Sessions include: writing characters audiences care about; demystifying how original dramas are developed; selling a one-page idea; writing hit crime thrillers; nailing show structure; adapting screenwriting to the vertical storytelling market; understanding the commissioning process; and honing your comedy writing.

Friday 6 February

  • Demystifying Original Drama Development, chaired by Méabh O’Donavan, Head of National Film and Television School North and featuring Siobhan Morgan, Head of Development at Warp Films (Adolescence), Natasha Heliotis, Head of Development at See-Saw Films (Slow Horses, Heartstopper) and Bria Thomas, Head of Development at Hera Pictures (I Fought the Law, Hamnet).
  • In conversation with Russell T Davies, who will be talking to journalist, editor and author Terri White. Davies is one of the biggest names in British TV. His work includes the ground-breaking Queer as Folk, Bob and Rose, Casanova and The Second Coming. In 2004, he revived Doctor Who and created Torchwood. This was followed by the trilogy Cucumber, Banana and Tofu, an adaptation of A Very English Scandal on BBC 1, Years and Years for BBC One/HBO, and Its A Sin for Channel 4/HBO MAX and Nolly for ITV.  He is currently in production for an original 5-part drama for Channel 4 called Tip Toe.

Saturday 7 February

  • The Industrial Ideas Complex with Bradford-based screenwriter Kat Rose-Martin. Rose-Martin is a writer/actor and inaugural winner of the Kay Mellor Fellowship. She was part of BBC Writers Room Northern Voices in 2020 and currently has original TV projects in development with Rollem Productions, Dancing Ledge Productions, Urban Myth Films, Warp Films and APC Studios.
  • Mastering Vertical Storytelling with Nosa Eke, Dan Lowenstein and Anna Costello, chaired by writer Emma Nuttal. Eke was chosen as a future leader by Google Creative Labs, Lowenstein has spent the last year working on 18 vertical drama projects and Costello is the Principal Writer at Scriptic, a BAFTA-nominated studio.
  • Writing a hit crime thriller with Chandni Lakhani writer and co-creator of Netflix hit Department Q.
  • How to break a show. Sarah Morgan will go through the nuts and bolts of TV drama structure. Morgan has created original TV pilot scripts for BBC studios, ITV, Sky, FX and Apple and was recently on the writing team for Netflix’s Geek Girl and Sky’s Romantic Getaway.
  • What’s Up With TV? Former BBC and UKTV commissioner, and founder of Asante Space, Sarah Asante lifts the lid on the commissioning process from pitching and packaging through to navigating relationships and understanding the secret language of commissioners.
  • Three Page Challenge: Comedy Edition. Lisa Laws, Development Director, North East Screen, Chris Jones from Hat Trick Productions and Navi Lamba from BBC Comedy will give feedback on comedy scripts from three North East screenwriters.

Sunday 8 February

  • Writers on Writers. BBC Writers Pilot Scheme alumni Faebian Averies will be in conversation with her mentor screenwriter and playwright Anna Jordan, whose TV credits include Succession (HBO), Killing Eve (Sid Gentle Films), One Day (Netflix) and Sweetpea (See-Saw/Sky).
  • How to Write Characters We Care About with screenwriter Jeremy Dyson. In 1995 Dyson formed the comedy group The League of Gentlemen with Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith and went on to enjoy a highly successful career in the UK, appearing on stage, radio, TV and film – winning among others the Perrier award, the Golden Rose of Montreux, and Royal Television Society and BAFTA awards for best TV comedy.
  • Show Me the Money! Lisa Holdsworth, screenwriter and Northern representative of The Writers’ Guild of Great Britain will chair a panel with screenwriters Karin Young (Emmerdale), Ishy Din (Phoenix Rise, Shakespeare and Hathaway) and Georgia Kanner, literary agent at Independent Talent Group on what it really takes to earn a living as screenwriter

 

Lisa Laws, Development Director at North East Screen:

We’re proud to be backing the Screenwriting Weekender again this year. It’s yet another exceptional line up which will see leading production companies, commissioners and world class writing talent join us in Newcastle.

The event provides opportunities for our talent to build the networks and gain the knowledge they need to begin turning their brilliant ideas into career plans. Events like this are vital for us to continue growing a sustainable screen industry here in the North East.

 

Roxy McKenna, Development Producer (Screen) at New Writing North:

This event creates a vital opportunity for writing talent to connect with industry, develop their craft and be inspired by some of the most experienced screenwriters in the UK today. With the onset of AI and increasingly fragmented audiences it feels more important than ever to bring writers together to not only build a strong understanding of this shifting landscape but to forge new creative relationships and illuminate practical ways writers can build a career in the industry. The North is rich with talent and stories, and the Weekender’s aim is to ensure writers are in the best possible position to exploit that.

 

Leading entertainment company, FilmNation TV, is supporting 10 bursary places to support northern writers who would otherwise be unable to access the event to take part. See more information on how to apply via the booking page.

Tickets: £100 + booking fee and includes access to all sessions across the weekend, lunch on Saturday and refreshments throughout. Book at https://newwritingnorth.com/event/screenwriting-weekender/

New Writing North’s has increased its work to support screenwriters based in the North of England over the last decade.  In early 2025 we announced a renewed partnership with Channel 4’s 4Skills which includes bursaries, bespoke programmes of talent development, screen industry insight and expertise, networking, mentoring and peer-support.

Channel 4 announces support for three northern writers at New Writing North awards co-hosted by North East Screen

Posted on by North East Screen

Three emerging screenwriters from the North of England have been awarded Channel 4 Writing for Television Awards 2023 to support their development.

Each of the writers wins a £3000 bursary and a package of money-can’t-buy opportunities, including nine-month placements with independent production companies where they will develop original scripts, and mentoring with industry professionals.

The Channel 4 Writing for Television Awards were founded in 2014 as part of the Northern Writers’ Awards. They are funded by Channel 4 and produced by New Writing North, the writing development agency for the North of England. The Northern Writers’ Awards are England’s largest and longest-running writer development programme, supported by Northumbria University, Arts Council England and a range of partners.

The 2023 winners were announced on Thursday evening (21 September) at The Biscuit Factory, Newcastle, at a celebration hosted with North East Screen, the North East’s regional screen agency which develops and nurtures homegrown talent including writers, producers and directors. The event was attended by writers and industry professionals from television and audio, and included a showcase of new writing talent from across the North.

Harriet Ghost, an actor-writer from Newcastle, will receive a nine-month programme of mentoring and support from the Leeds-based production company, Rollem Productions (The Syndicate; Fat Friends). Harriet trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and her acting credits include Ken Loach and ITV projects. She has written for the stage and in 2020 was selected for BFI’s Script Lab and received mentoring from Aisling Bea through the BAFTA Connects scheme supporting women in TV and film.

Joe McNally is a writer from Liverpool whose debut play ‘Cosmic’ was staged at Liverpool’s Royal Court theatre in April 2023. Joe holds a Masters in Screenwriting and is a graduate of both Liverpool’s Royal Court Stage Write Development Programme and Liverpool Everyman’s YEP writers’ programme. His award includes a nine-month placement with Bonafide Films (Mood; The Last Post), where he will develop an original script.

Liz Redwood, from Southport, won the Channel 4 Writing for Television Award: Lime Pictures. She will spend her placement on the production of Hollyoaks, where she will work with members of the core writing team and shadow the script development process.Liz has completed the Liverpool Royal Court’s Playwright Programme and the Liverpool Everyman’s Playwrights’ Programme. In 2020 she was shortlisted for the Kenneth Brannagh New Drama Award at the Windsor Fringe Festival and the Sphinx Theatre programme for female playwrights. Her first professional production, ‘A Tipsy Christmas Fairy Tale’, was staged by Liverpool Royal Court in 2022.

Harriet, Joe and Liz join a growing list of television writers supported by Channel 4 and New Writing North. Previous winners include Sharma Walfall, who won the inaugural award in 2015 and has gone on to write for productions including Dreamland, Noughts and Crosses and A Town Called Malice, and Jayshree Patel, whose award led to her becoming a core writer on Hollyoaks before recently moving to EastEnders. The programme has also launched the television writing careers of Taiba Ahmad, Adam Bennett-Lea, Joshua Halm, Kemi-Bo Jacobs and Samantha Neale.  

The Channel 4 Writing for Television Awards form part of Channel 4 and New Writing North’s Talent Development Partnership, which offers year-round support and opportunities for new writers from the North, with a particular focus on supporting writers from backgrounds that are currently underrepresented in the television industry. Alongside the awards and industry placements, it offers script development, writers’ roadshows and workshops, and the formation of the Northern Talent Network. 

Channel 4’s Head of Drama Caroline Hollick said: “Nurturing the next generation of talent is a key priority for Channel 4, particularly in the north, which is why we are so committed to these awards. We want to ensure that anyone who is determined to work in the creative industries has an opportunity to fulfil that ambition, regardless of their background or where they live.”

Will Mackie, Senior Programme Manager (Talent Development) at New Writing North, said: “Our flagship awards programme for screenwriters continues to grow and thrive through Channel 4’s generous ongoing support. The Channel 4 Writing for Television Awards give us the chance to identify and support three immensely gifted and exciting emerging writers. These awards offer genuine career-changing experiences and it’s enormously fulfilling for us to play a part in nurturing and celebrating new talent. So much of the success of this programme is down to the dedication and innovation of our brilliant production company partners — Rollem, Bonafide and Lime – who open doors into the world of TV for writers in the North.”

Lisa Laws, Head of Talent and Development at North East Screen said: “Huge congratulations to Harriet, Joe and Liz on winning these awards. All three are incredibly talented individuals, and in particular, we are very proud to see Harriet, a North East writer, on stage being presented with an award.

“New Writing North do incredible work nurturing writing talent across the north, and we are delighted to be co-hosting this event giving new talent the space to explore and have fun writing for screen.

“We have lots of exciting plans in the pipeline with Channel 4 to offer even more opportunities to develop talent, content and companies in the North East that we can’t wait to share!”