We Are Parable Sets 2026 Momentum Cohort


We Are Parable has set the 2026 cohort for its talent development programme, Momentum. 

This year, the programme, which is backed by Channel 4 and Sony Pictures Television, received over 700 applications. 30 UK-based Black filmmakers made the final cut. Of the selected group, 55% are based outside London, with filmmakers hailing from Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Leicester, Manchester, Milton Keynes, Southampton, Telford, and Wolverhampton. Additionally, women make up 52% of the cohort. 

The cohort includes Emmy-nominated animation director Alex Zepherin-Pinnock and Ryan Walker-Edwards, the filmmaker behind the BFI Flare short MAN>CODE. 

Since launching in 2021, Momentum has supported 140 Black filmmakers. The programme is funded by Channel 4’s development programme 4Skills and run in association with Channel 4’s Creative Equity team and Sony Pictures Television, with financial support from the Sony Pictures Television Creative Diversity Fund.

Mentors for the 2026 edition include Greenacre Films’ Nadine Marsh-Edwards (Riches), BAFTA-nominated producer Danielle Goff (Lunar Pictures), HETV and independent film producer Stella Nwimo (Top Boy), BAFTA-nominated producer Victoria Thomas, producer/writer Tolu Stedford (Story Compound), BIFA-nominated writer-director Warda Mohamed, and filmmaker Rashida Seriki.

Founded by Anthony and Teanne Andrews, We Are Parable is one of the UK’s leading indie distributors. The company has brought titles such as Savanah Leaf’s Earth Mama and Ramata-Toulaye Sy’s Banel and Adama to UK cinemas. 

“What has always made Momentum important to us is that it responds to the full reality of building a career in this industry. Talent is not the issue,” Anthony Andrews, co-founder and creative director of We Are Parable, said in a statement. 

“The question is whether filmmakers have the access, support, confidence, and relationships needed to keep moving forward, particularly at a time when emerging filmmakers are navigating rising production costs, shrinking commissioning opportunities, and increasingly competitive access to development funding.” 

Andrews added: “We’ve seen previous cohorts use the programme to develop new work, raise finance, screen at festivals, and build lasting creative networks. This new cohort represents the next stage of that journey.”

Check out the 2026 Momentum cohort below: 

Adeyinka Akinrinade

Adeyinka is an actor and creative producer working across British TV, theatre and film. Her credits include the British Urban Film Festival, BFI-funded The Lost Land Girl, and screen roles in Riches (ITV/Amazon Prime), Champion (BBC/Netflix), Top Boy and Silent Witness. She has several short films under her belt and is about to launch her production company, with ambitions to move into features and TV series.

Leesha Williams

Leesha (she/her) is a queer Black photographer and filmmaker whose work explores identity, memory, motherhood and representation through honest, documentary-led storytelling. With over 10 years of experience, her practice blends digital footage, archival materials and Super 8 film. Currently a professional wedding filmmaker now shifting toward personal artistic projects focused on Black motherhood, queerness and reclaiming space through storytelling.

Alex Zepherin-Pinnock

Alex is the founder of Don Dada Studio and an animation director with over a decade of experience, collaborating with the BBC, Tate Britain, Disney and more. Don Dada Studio’s animations for The Guardian’s Give Me Shelter received an Emmy nomination. Alex is now running an animation service studio and now transitioning to creating original IP.

Alicia Quayson

Alicia is a London-based writer and director crafting bold stories rooted in the British diaspora experience. Her award-winning short Motherland established her voice; her debut narrative short Bless You is in post-production. Alicia is currently in post-production on her debut narrative short.

Aminah Alhamdu

Aminah is a writer, curator and filmmaker of Ghanaian origin and British-American nationality. She has created short films backed by Rural Media and BFI Network, and written four pilots and a feature script.

Andrew Boateng

Andrew is a writer, director and creator working in sci-fi, comedy and social realism. An Edinburgh TV Festival New Voice Award winner, he has worked with Archery Pictures, Firebird and Bullion Productions, with short films recognised at BAFTA/BIFA-qualifying festivals.

Bukola Bakinson

Bukola is a London-based documentary filmmaker whose RTS award-winning No Comprendo examined access to justice. Her current project From Detention to Despair explores authority, care and justice in contemporary education.

Cherish Anyanwu

Cherish is a multi-disciplinary creative, DJ, producer and emerging filmmaker whose work explores music, identity, healing and ancestral themes, centring female-led narratives.

Elisha Ricketts

Elisha is a South London–based writer, presenter and filmmaker. She wrote, directed, narrated and starred in her debut short Survival Mode, exploring trauma, resilience and reclaiming narrative.

Hayden McLean

Hayden is a British-Jamaican actor, writer and filmmaker. His debut short The Last Dance premiered in 2025 and screened at over 40 festivals worldwide, winning multiple awards and qualifying for BAFTA and BIFA. Hayden is about to world premiere his second short film, and in development with his debut feature, a second feature, and a limited series adaptation of his directorial debut.

Imoje Aikhoje

Imoje is a London-based documentary filmmaker and development producer, Netflix Documentary Talent Fund alumnus, and founder of Strayborn Ltd, with over ten years of experience across documentary film and factual television.

Janet Nagudi

Janet is a Ugandan British filmmaker, writer and artist whose work imagines bold, Afrofuturistic visions for the Black Diaspora and Pan-African community. Her first film was made in Birmingham featuring local cast, crew, musicians and businesses.

Jason C. Nwachukwu

Jason is a filmmaker based between Bristol and London whose work explores family, identity and human connection through an observational lens, searching for beauty in the ordinary.

Where they are now  Making short films recognised at UK festivals, and looking to keep developing while working toward his first feature.

John Kamara

John Kamara is a London-based filmmaker, writer and content creator. He independently produces, directs and distributes his own web series on YouTube, including DEBT, a three-part comedy about a bailiff drowning in his own debt.

Josiane Kameni

JOSY K. is a UK-based writer and emerging storyteller creating emotionally powerful narratives rooted in identity, resilience, womanhood, migration and healing. She is developing The SEL Collection, a body of literary and screen adaptation projects.

Justin Uzomba

Justin Smith Uzomba is a Hackney-born writer-director who spent a decade in music as Mikill Pane, touring with Ed Sheeran and Mac Miller. His short F.I.T.D. received high praise from Barry Jenkins. He is represented by Imagine Talent. Having written and directed two short films, co-written a C4 YouTube comedy series and directed Nike SNKRS content — building his screen career.

Kodjo Tsakpo

Kodjo is a television drama director with credits across most UK continuing dramas. His directing career launched in 2018 via the BBC New Directors Scheme at BBC Doctors.

Korrie Powell

Korrie is a London-based film director and writer whose work draws from the nuanced textures of everyday Black life. He has five years of experience across advertising and commercial filmmaking.

Martin Blackburn

Martin is a documentary, commercial and branded filmmaker currently independently co-producing his debut feature documentary about Raphael, a music curator who built a global audience through his mixes. Now  Directing his debut feature documentary alongside freelance projects.

Mevis Birungi

Mevis is a Ugandan-born British actor, writer, director and editor. Her credits include His House (Netflix), Nakato (BBC Arts, BFI Network), and editing work on BBC and Sky Kids animation.

Michael Akuagwu

Michael is a London-born multimedia artist who started with surrealist composite photography and has expanded into film and mixed media, exploring stories within Black British art and design.

Nana-Kofi Kufuor

Nana-Kofi is a British Ghanaian playwright and TV writer from Stockport. He won the Channel 4/New Writing North award for his series Dana, has worked in Sky writers’ rooms, and contributed to Hollyoaks and Waterloo Road.

Omari Swanston-Jeffers

Omari is an artist, educator and director whose practice spans dance, screen, stage and poetry. He holds a First Class BA in Creative Writing and a Master’s in Education, and founded Ol’ Man Swanny in 2023.

Ryan Walker-Edwards

Ryan is a Birmingham-born writer, actor and director with Jamaican heritage whose work explores class, sexuality and race in Afro-Caribbean communities. His short MAN>CODE screened at BFI Flare, Chicago IIFF and over thirty festivals, earning an RTS nomination. His work is gaining visibility and he has secured new commissions.

Shauna Paul

Shauna is a director and video editor from North London specialising in documentary and campaign work, with a raw and emotive visual style.

Simone Stewart

Simone is a Wolverhampton-born video journalist, producer and filmmaker. She has worked at BBC News and ITV Sport, and is currently supporting the UK’s first independent Windrush Commissioner. Simone has just finished filming short films for World Afro Day, and is transitioning from broadcast journalism into personal filmmaking.

Tayo Ibikunle

Ibitayo ‘Tsaint’ Ibikunle is a Nigerian-born filmmaker, cinematographer and creative producer, UK Endorsed Global Talent. His credits include BBC Africa Eye’s award-winning Disciples: The Cult of TB Joshua, and his feature 60 Days is in production.

Tkay Boateng

Tkay Sophia Boateng is an emerging producer with four years of experience at

Whisper and IMG across the UEFA Champions League and Wimbledon. Her short Boys & Girls was nominated at Cannes; Castle in the Dark reached the semi-finals at Rhode Island IIFF.

Winnie Imara

Winnie is a producer-writer from North London and a recent NFTS graduate. Her work has been selected for BIFA-qualifying festivals, and she has produced projects for BBC, Somesuch, Black Girl Fest Studios and Spotify.


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