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Proposals for TV and film training centre at Littlewoods Building
Proposals for TV and film training centre at Littlewoods Building

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Proposals for TV and film training centre at Littlewoods Building

A Liverpool-born TV producer responsible for the likes of Have I Got News for You and Derry Girls has said he wants to bring a film and TV production school to the city's Littlewoods Building studios Trick Productions co-founder Jimmy Mulville is now part of a group working with Liverpool City Region Mayor Steve Rotheram and industry experts to provide an education hub inside the building on Edge said conversations about how to fund it were taking place behind the scenes with government and private sector opposition politicians in Liverpool have been sceptical that the mammoth regeneration project will ever come to fruition, due to the costs involved. 'Big opportunity' While remediation work on the landmark site has been completed, the conversion of the building into a film studio will require millions of pounds in Liverpool City Region Combined Authority has so far committed up to £ said he was working with the London Screen Academy, a free school in the capital which provides16-18 year olds with vocational training in aspects of film and television said adding a school in Liverpool would be "the jewel in the crown" of the film studio project and would be part of the same academy trust as its southern said conversations with government had been positive. He said: "They see it as a big opportunity in one fell swoop to not just bring the creative industries to the North West, but also to level up and to increase the skills uptake in an area where it's needed."The Treasury has been asked to comment on the plans. 'I owe the city' There has always been the intention for an education provider to be part of the Littlewoods studio John Moores University had been signed up as an anchor tenant, but pulled out in and raised in the Walton area of Liverpool, Mulville said he felt he "owed the city" for his education and council grant which saw him graduate from Cambridge co-founded Hat Trick Productions in 1986. His other credits include Drop the Dead Donkey and Room said he would love students to learn "inside a thriving production centre, opposite two state-of-the-art studios" and that they would be "rubbing shoulders with the people who are actually doing what they want to do" in film and added: "I'm very happy to sell this idea. Someone once said to me, what's the secret of pitching? "I said find something brilliant to pitch, and I think this IS something brilliant to pitch." Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

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