Friends and trustees.
It takes the support of many people to make Dramatic Need a success, and we are very lucky to have some very committed and passionate friends behind us.
Danny Boyle, Oscar winning film director & Dramatic Need Trustee
"In these rural and township parts of southern Africa - where tragedy is the rule, not the exception - the essential, humanitarian relevance of the arts is unequivocal."
Josh Hartnett, actor
"I want to go down there and actually help out. It's fun for an actor to be able to do something that's not for publicity, but actually go down and do something hands-on." Hear Josh
talking about Dramatic Need.
Helena Christensen, model and photographer
"I think it's a very worthy cause. I followed it from the beginning. I think it's a beautiful thought and a beautiful thing to do for children in Africa."
Dr. Lindiwe Mabuza, Dramatic Need Patron and Former South African High Commissioner to the UK
"It is through Dramatic Need volunteers that these children, who endure hardship, may learn creative skills that allow them to express the challenges they face on a daily basis"
Board of Trustees
Danny Boyle
Danny Boyle was born Manchester in 1956 and is one of the United Kingdom's foremost theatre and film directors. He made his feature directorial debut with the film Shallow Grave. It was an instant success and was widely praised by film critics. Next came the film Trainspotting, based on the novel by Irvine Welsh. Critically and financially successful, it is considered among the most influential and iconic British films of the 1990s. Boyle has since gone on to direct many successful films including A Life Less Ordinary, 28 Days Later, Sunshine and The Beach staring Leonardo Di Caprio. Boyle's latest film, Slumdog Millionaire, has won over 60 international film festival prizes including 8 Oscars and 7 BAFTAs, taking home best picture and best director at both awards. In 2010 it was confirmed that Danny will be directing the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics in London. See Danny's
interview on Slumdog Millionaire, and read his
article in the Times about the movie and Dramatic Need.
Sir Antony Sher
Born in Cape Town, South Africa, in 1949, Sir Antony Sher KBE has more than forty major theatre productions and thirty films to his name. One of the world's most respected actors of stage and screen, His long-running collaboration with the Royal Shakespeare Company has seen him play such roles as Macbeth, Tamburlaine, Shylock, Malvolio, Richard III, Stanley Spencer and Primo Levi; his prolific film work includes Shakespeare in Love and Mrs. Brown. Antony is the recipient of numerous critical accolades including various Lawrence Olivier Awards for Best Actor and London Critics' Circle Theatre Awards. He is also an accomplished director, writer and artist, and was knighted for his services to the arts in November 2000.
Madeleine Morris
Born in Australia, Madeleine Morris is a presenter for BBC World Service Radio and BBC World Television based in London. Since joining the BBC in 2001 she has reported and produced news from South Africa, Lesotho, Uganda, Zambia, Botswana, Rwanda, Israel, the West Bank, Thailand, Pakistan and India as well as across Europe. In 2010 she was the BBC's Washington reporter, covering US politics and North American news. In 2005 Madeleine was awarded the Alexander Onassis Bursary and travelled throughout Uganda and Zambia for two months, researching how sub-Saharan Africa is fighting AIDS.
Toby Fisher
Born in New Zealand, and educated at Cambridge and the London School of Economics, Toby Fisher is a barrister specialising in public and human rights law. He regularly represents asylum seekers and mental health detainees in the UK courts, and has acted for prisoners on death row in Sierra Leone. Toby is also the associate producer of two radio programmes on legal issues: "Unreliable Evidence" on BBC Radio 4, and "The Legal World" on the World Service. Before becoming a barrister, he was a professional actor in film, television and theatre.
Clemency Burton-Hill
Clemency Burton-Hill was born in London and has worked extensively as a professional journalist, actress and musician. She has written for the Telegraph, the Guardian, Observer and Vogue amongst others. She has played leading roles in many US and UK films and television series, and performed as a violinist in concert halls all over the world. Shortly after Yasser Arafat's death she travelled to the West Bank to help set up a similar music project in Ramallah, and now travels regularly to the region as a performer for the Choir of London. In early 2006 Clemency worked for the United Nations World Food Programme, assisting on a new initiative to better engage the private sector in humanitarian disaster relief. Later that year she was a part of a Palestinian/Israeli peace project with the Geneva Initiative. In 2009 and 2010 Clemency was co-presenter of the BBC Proms. She is a regular presenter on the BBC’s ‘The Culture Show’ and Radio 3. She is the author of two novels. Clemency currently lives in New York.
Kobna Holdbrook-Smith
Kobna was born in Accra, Ghana and grew up in Surrey, England. As an actor he has featured in more than 30 different television productions, mainly but not exclusively in BBC Comedies, including Little Britain, Saxondale, Harry & Paul, Pulling and Star Stories. He has also worked extensively in theatre, receiving critical acclaim for his work at the National Theatre, Tricycle, Young Vic, Royal Exchange and Shakespeare's Globe theatres. He sits on the board of Mayhem Theatre Company, on the Tricycle Theatre Development Committee and works with the C.A.P., a US/UK think-tank that focuses on the issues concerning the African Diaspora. He also writes and produces.
James Mullighan
Born in Australia and resident in London since 1998, James Mullighan has since 2007 been Creative Director of Shooting People, the global networking community for independent filmmakers. James has Bachelor degrees in Law and Arts from the University of Adelaide. For over two decades, he has been an arts journalist, specialising in theatre and classical music; his work has been published in the Times, GQ, the Scotsman, Vogue, Rolling Stone and The Age. For four years he worked at Sony Music (Entertainment) Australia, running first the Sony Classical then the Columbia labels. Prior to working at Shooting People, he was associate producer RESFEST UK & Ireland, four times producing the annual UK tour of the Festival which comprised of short film, music, art and design. He sits on the Advisory Boards of the Sheffield Doc Fest, Bristol Encounters, London Short Film, Abandon Normal Devices and Branchage Jersey International Film Festivals. In 2011 James was appointed Artistic Director of the Edinburgh International Film Festival.
Vanessa Garwood
Vanessa Garwood is a British artist, born in Israel 1982, who studied in Florence for three years at the Charles Cecil Studios. Her work has been exhibited in the National Portrait Galleries BP Award where her painting won the Visitors Choice. She also exhibited at the London Costa Gallery, the London Art Fair and has featured in private collections. In the past few years her work has focused on travelling and landscape painting and this change resulted in an three month apprenticeship with the South African sculptor Dylan Lewis, in Cape Town. Since her return she has focused on sculpture in bronze in partnership with the Talisman Gallery in London.
Whilst sculpting in South Africa’s Western Cape in 2009, Vanessa worked with a charitable organisation called Imibala, and taught art lessons to children from local schools. Vanessa has family in Kenya and South Africa, and travelled extensively in Africa throughout her life.
Simon Oakes
Simon Oakes is Vice-Chairman of Exclusive Media and President & CEO of Hammer Films. Prior to his role at Hammer, Simon Oakes held the posts of Managing Director UPCTV and latterly Head of Content Chellomedia, Europe’s largest cable company. Simon Oakes’ early career highlights were founding producer of “The Comic Strip”, Managing Director of Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel’s production company Cucumber Productions (producers of “Max Headroom”) and founder of Crossbow Films. He is also the Chairman of The Big Sleep Hotel Group and Chairman of B@TV.
Virginia Eastman
Virginia Eastman is a member of the global media practice Heidrick and Struggles the executive search firm. Prior to that she was Business Presenter/Correspondent with the BBC for fifteen years and reported or presented on nearly every daily or weekly programme produced by the Economics and Business Unit. In 2003 she won the Workplace Media Award for “Programme of the Year” for her Money Programme, “Sexism in the City”. Before joining the BBC in 1991, Virginia worked at Bain and Company. She sits on the Board of the London Press Club and the Wyvern Partners Advisory Board.
Phil Drew
Born in Stoke-on-Trent, Phil drew is an award wining senior manager at Unity PR. Cambridge grad, he has worked on a dozen award-winning campaigns, including Friends of the Earth, on a campaign that gave Britain the world’s first climate change law; eco blockbuster The Age of Stupid, and Wasted Youth, a high profile initiative that aimed to curb rising rates of young male suicide
In 2008 Phil worked with Dramatic Need on a campaign to fundraise for the charity’s ongoing work in South Africa and was determined to become more involved. In the same year, he was named Frontline Communicator of the Year by the Public Relations Consultants Association, and listed in PR Week’s top 24 under 24. Phil has worked with personalities ranging from Lady GaGa to Paul Weller, US rapper Busta Rhymes to London Mayor Boris Johnson.
He is a former British Universities Boxing Champion and Boxing Cambridge Blue.
Debbie Wosskow
Debbie Wosskow is a serial entrepreneur and business strategist. A former management consultant, she built the communications consultancy Mantra over almost a decade, from first hire to successful exit. Debbie began her career in strategy consulting, advising companies in the financial services sector. In 1998 she moved into communications and joined the leading firm, Brunswick. In 2000, Debbie founded Mantra, and grew the business into one of the most successful agencies in London. Debbie sold Mantra to The Loewy Group and left the business in late 2008 to co-create Maidthorn Partners, the advisory firm focused on the creative industries. Her clients include some of the UK’s brightest and best creative businesses - both the established players and the next big things. Debbie is an active angel investor and sits on a number of advisory boards. She graduated with an MA in Philosophy and Theology from New College, Oxford.
Amber Sainsbury
Amber Sainsbury trained as an actress at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic
Arts in London. She has taught drama extensively across Africa, particularly in South Africa and Rwanda. She was a Keynote Speaker at the British Arts Council’s Creative Partnerships Conference 2009 on the role of the arts in Development and was a contributing author on the 2009 Commonwealth Minister’s Reference Book on the subject. She founded Dramatic Need in 2007, producing all of the charity’s major events to date, including The Children’s Monologues in 2010, and continues to run the charity on a day to day basis.