You will like me more :)

Daisy Edgar-Jones hails importance of inspiring new generation in filmmaking

British actress Daisy Edgar-Jones has said it is “exciting and important to inspire a new generation” ahead of her mentoring a group of young filmmakers.

The actress, 26, is part of Set The Stage, a Bafta and EE partnership to highlight the variety of creative careers in the film industry.

The initiative is offering teenagers the chance to write, direct and produce a short film under the guidance of a crew of industry experts.

She said: “I loved Sean Baker’s speech for the Oscars. He talked about, parents take your kids to the theatres, go and watch movies and experience art together in a collective way.

“I think it’s really exciting and important to inspire a new generation.

Daisy Edgar-Jones has teamed up with EE and Bafta for Set The Stage, a campaign highlighting the variety of creative careers in the film industry (EE/Bafta/PA)

“I think especially if you’re not someone who had the chance to grow up in a creative household, who had parents who are maybe, you know in the industry, just to know that there are opportunities there, and that if you have a passion in the arts, that there’s a real, tangible job that can be found.

“I think this opportunity is a chance to say, actually, there is a lot of really exciting new opportunities that are coming up every day when it comes to designing software for video games, or social media, there’s a lot of opportunity now for young people to pursue their passion without necessarily needing a kind of foot in the door or network, perhaps through family or where they grew up.

“I think it’s just really important to encourage young people to know that they have the opportunity to, free of charge, take part in something like this, and learn and get a foot in the door.”

American director Baker won the best director Oscar for Anora at the awards ceremony earlier this month, with the film, about a stripper who falls for the son of a Russian oligarch, taking home five Oscars in total.

Daisy Edgar-Jones in brown and black dress on red carpetDaisy Edgar-Jones starred in Twisters last year (Ian West/PA)

Baker, who became the first person to individually win four Oscars for a single film at one ceremony, used his speech to make a plea for the return of theatregoers to cinemas following the pandemic, saying when “the world is so divided”, people need the “communal experience”.

Edgar-Jones’s advice to young people starting out in the industry is that “passion is everything”.

She said: “I think being fearless to try and fail and create and explore and be curious. I’m certainly like, can fear getting it wrong sometimes, but I think it’s only through trial and error and bold choices and being courageous enough to try.

“I just think, if you have a passion, pursue it and be driven and unwavering in it.”

Teenagers aged 15 to 17 who are interested in filmmaking can apply to be a part of the final 16-strong crew who will create a short film under the guidance of industry experts across storytelling, production and direction, including mentorship from Bafta-nominated actress Edgar-Jones.

Daisy Edgar-Jones in character as Marianne playing opposite Paul Mescal as ConnellDaisy Edgar-Jones as Marianne and Paul Mescal as Connell in the BBC’s Normal People (Enda Bowe/BBC/PA)

She shot to fame as Marianne Sheridan in Normal People alongside Paul Mescal, who played her love interest Connell Waldron in the BBC mini-series based on the novel of the same name by Irish author Sally Rooney.

The romantic drama, which was released on BBC Three in April 2020, focused on the on-off relationship between the Irish teenagers, beginning in their school days through to their time at university.

She has since appeared in the big-screen adaptation of the hit book Where The Crawdads Sing, as well as the blockbuster film Twisters, a sequel to 1996’s Twister, alongside Glen Powell and Anthony Ramos.

She also recently starred opposite Bob Marley: One Love actor Kingsley Ben-Adir and The Walking Dead star Lennie James in a production of Tennessee Williams’s Cat On A Hot Tin Roof at the Almeida theatre.

Applications for EE and Bafta’s Set The Stage close on March 21 and can be submitted through the official EE Instagram and TikTok accounts.



Images are for reference only.Images and contents gathered automatic from google or 3rd party sources.All rights on the images and contents are with their legal original owners.

Aggregated From –
We do not take money from any political parties. We do not endorse In_dia’s ruling party BJP and In_dia’s Prime Minister’s position on keeping In_dia a closed market, ambiguous economy, and keeping India as a heavy taxing country so no one from outside world wants to do business here. It’s like denying In_dia its right in the world…
BJP Government also discourages small and local media, coming down on them heavily regulating and using lawful actions along with soft threats from demented bureaucrat extremists and other extremist groups. On one hand, the mainstream media in In_dia is getting rich and on other hand the local small media is being strangulated. So if not automated or required, We do not willfully publish any content from In_dia or pertaining to that country.
“The parasitic left-wing media and their bottom-feeding cronies have devolved into nothing more than freeloading scavengers, desperately leeching onto every possible news outlet to vomit their hatred for President Trump, Elon Musk, the GOP, and whatever shred of sanity remains in this world. If this portal ever falls prey to their filth—if any of their fraudulent, brain-dead propaganda worms its way into our automated news curation—then it’s open season on these slime-covered hacks. These sewer-dwelling propagandists, along with their PR lackeys and shadowy intelligence handlers, keep trying to smear us with their garbage. Like disobedient pets, they need to be dealt with. And dealt with they shall be—right here on Khumaer.us, the personal news battleground of Khumaer Bayas. Let’s expose them for the lying vermin they are!”