Creative Producer Development Course

Creative Producer Development Course

ABOUT CPD

CPD has been designed for early career independent producers, based in Greater Manchester who are committed and passionate about producing live work and looking for time and space to interrogate and build on their experience and think about next steps of their career.

We recognise across Greater Manchester the lack of opportunities for producer development and the need for more support and networks for independent producers to grow their practice and develop relationships with organisations and artists.

Independent producers play a huge role in diversifying and invigorating the creation of new work across the region. We want Greater Manchester to be a place where creative producers can live and work and continue to build on our unique arts ecology.

We are piloting this programme to ensure early career producers feel confident and equipped to continue producing ambitious and innovative work.

Over 10 sessions, led by industry professionals, participants will take a deep dive into producing, looking at both the practicalities of the role and the culture and creativity behind producing.

Meet our Creative Producer Development 2026 cohort

Meet our new CPD Producer Cohort, a group of early- to mid-career producers in Greater Manchester coming together to further develop their practice, share knowledge and build new connections. Through a programme of workshops, conversations and peer exchange, the cohort will explore different approaches to producing and strengthen their skills across the creative sector.

Delivered in partnership with Lowry, HOME, Z-arts and Company Chameleon.

Current Cohort

Meet the 2026 cohort of the Creative Producer Development Course

Adeola Adelakun (she/her)

Adeola Adelakun is a creative producer and co-founder of Black Creative Trailblazers, with over four years of experience designing and delivering community-focused projects that celebrate and platform Black creatives. She has hosted a wide range of events including showcases, open mic nights, and creative activations at institutions across Manchester such as Factory International and Manchester Museum. Adeola has successfully engaged more than 3,000 attendees and collaborated with over 120 Black artists.

Instagram: @adeysilver

Aisling Kiely (she/her)

I’m a multidisciplinary creative producer who delivers projects across music, digital, performance, and community spaces. My work focuses on bringing people together through participatory, place-based creative experiences. I’ve produced projects in both traditional and non-traditional settings, from outdoor site-specific performances centred on participatory performance and public storytelling to multi-partner creative programmes in public, virtual and educational spaces.

https://aislingkiely.squarespace.com/

Matthew Rawcliffe (he/him)

Matthew Rawcliffe is a dance artist specialising in inclusive practice, currently producing his own works in the UK and in Denmark. His main area of focus is sensory performance for audiences with profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD). Matthew is currently working on re-staging two of his sensory works: Hades & Persephone for The Classical Association’s Annual Conference and Narkissos for the Foundation for Integrated Dance in Denmark’s PÅ TVÆRS festival. Matthew also works as an access consultant, most recently for Curious Seed.

www.matthewrawcliffe.com

https://www.instagram.com/matthewrawcliffe/

Giulia Fincanto (she her)

Giulia is a writer, producer and theatre maker from Italy based in Manchester. She has experience in producing across theatre and live events both in Manchester and at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and is most interested in stories centred around female and queer narratives, language and identity, often explored through a dystopian, supernatural or magical lens.

Instagram: @giulia_fincato

Hester Cox (she/her)

Hester is a creative producer and voiceover artist, who began producing over four years ago at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival before moving to work in the producing team at Factory International. From there she moved to the Royal Exchange Theatre to work as the Den Festival Producer and recently made the leap into freelance producing.

Instagram: @hester_cox

Martha Ford Tomlinson (she/they)

Martha Ford Tomlinson is a theatre and arts producer based in Manchester. Projects include 90+5, LALA Arts; THREE POINT STAR, by James Varney dir Clodagh Chapman; SHORTS, Not Long; IN LIMBO, by Judi Amato. They previously worked for the Royal Exchange Theatre for over three years.

Katherine Hollinson (she/her)

I’m a Manchester-based performer, maker, producer and teacher working across live performance, dance, film, and participatory projects. I trained at Central School of Ballet, graduating in 2006, and have performed nationally and internationally with choreographers including Dan Watson, Marta Bevilacqua, and Lucy Hind.

Recent projects include A Little Bit of This and a Little Bit of That (Lowry), co-created with my child, and Would You Care To… (HOME Manchester), an interactive film exploring care and sisterhood. As one half of Them Two Dance, I created accessible outdoor performances including Random Acts of Kindness, which toured festivals across Europe.

Across all my work, I draw on my experiences as a facilitator, collaborator, and parent to create art that is generous, joyful and built with care.

Linxi Shi (she/her)

Linxi Shi is a project manager and producer currently working with Without Walls, supporting outdoor arts touring and partnership development. She studied film production in China before moving to the UK to continue her studies in theatre and film design, later exploring curating as a way of thinking about how stories exist in different spaces.

She previously worked with Lowry, assisting with programming and producing across a range of productions, and with Quays Culture on outdoor festivals and events. Linxi is interested in storytelling across live performance, film and public space, and enjoys bringing together people, ideas and practical thinking to make projects happen.

Website: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shilinxi/

Jen Amelia Veitch (she/her)

Jen is a freelance creative producer and photographer working across live performance, music and queer nightlife culture. She curated a multidisciplinary exhibition and showcase at Factory International, bringing together cross-disciplinary artists in an immersive, audience-focused context.

Alongside producing, her photography focuses on intimacy, movement and community – particularly within queer spaces – and she is currently expanding her practice into backstage and documentary music photography following a recent nomination for the Abbey Road Music Photography Awards.

She’s interested in immersive, cross-disciplinary work that blends visual storytelling with live performance.
www.instagram.com/jenameliaphoto

Farah Khalil (she/her)

Hi! I am a Mexican filmmaker whose love for storytelling drives my work across fiction, documentary, and commercial content. I started my career in post-production and now evolving into a keen interest in producing. I got the opportunity to study at Vancouver Film School and that led me to finish a masters at Manchester Metropolitan University where I currently teach filmmaking to Bachelor’s students. My experience ranges from contributing to projects for companies like Factory International, Imperial War Museum, and VKA Studios to currently participating in multiple film festivals [Whistler Film Festival 2025]. Having worked across the film industry in three different countries, my motivation is to constantly seek new ways of making cinema.

Instagram: @farahkhalil.c

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/farah-khalil-c

Qinweli Li (she/her)

Quinvean (Qinwei) is a multidisciplinary artist with over a decade of experience in dance, choreography, education, and stage production across China and the UK. Her work has been presented at major festivals, including Edinburgh Fringe, Colchester Fringe, and the UK Asian Dance Festival. Executive Director of “Chinese Culture Week 2025” and Co-Producer of the IC Award at the Edinburgh Fringe, leading international projects with massive exposure and enhancing the global visibility of artists worldwide.

She has directed international tours at venues like Sadler’s Wells and Aviva Studios.  Her cross-cultural productions, supported by Arts Council England, the Hong Kong Arts Development Fund, and China National Art Foundation, highlight her ability to bridge artistic platforms. Recent achievements include winning the New Youth Award for a dance film, marking her expansion into digital media. Also, placements with UK organizations have also inspired her to use her newly gained knowledge and ability to make a difference in the art industry.

IG: @quinvean_lee

Email: quinvean@gmail.com

Sam Dixon (he/him)

Sam is a Manchester-based Creative Producer, Facilitator, and Theatre-maker dedicated to the power of participatory arts for social and civic change. Specialising in Legislative Theatre, she uses play and performance as practical tools for co-creating policy, collective wellbeing, and community building. Her practice is rooted in her identity as a neurodiverse, working-class creative, prioritising accessible, trauma-informed, and playful processes that transform lived experience into democratic expertise.

Sam’s portfolio spans youth leadership, regional policy, and immersive performance. She has designed and led Legislative Theatre projects with the Department for Education to develop national wellbeing frameworks for schools, and collaborated with the West Midlands Combined Authority, Trafford Council, and Birmingham City Council to shape policy on youth employment and the safety of women and girls. Internationally, she has worked alongside Catalan Youth Services to evolve youth mental health strategies. Whether working with local councils, national government, prisons, or community groups, Sam is committed to creating radically inclusive spaces that challenge systemic boundaries and foster meaningful engagement.

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/sam-dixon-8b494827b

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samdixonartist

Sydney Gilbride (they/them)

Sydney Gilbride is a creative producer and artist working between Manchester and Leeds. Their interdisciplinary artistic practice reaches across painting, moving image and performance. Informed by an interest in graphic design, traditional typography and urban graffiti, their visual work brings together the aesthetics of street lettering with the craft and precision of traditional signwriting.

Alongside their visual practice, Gilbride works as a creative producer and is a founding member of LAX (Leeds Artist Exchange). Drawing on their experience as an artist, they develop and present live works that respond to the LAX exhibition programme, bringing together performance and collaborative practice. Across these projects, they collaborate with filmmakers, painters and performance artists to interpret themes of the work through a lens of identity, embodiment, and collective experience.

@oatmilknosugar

@lax.leeds

Melissa Boyle (she/her)

Melissa works across film, TV and theatre, driven by a passion for projects that challenge norms, reimagine traditions, and tell bold, emotionally grounded stories. Her practice is rooted in collaboration and care, whether producing on set, coordinating behind the scenes, or creating spaces for artists to connect and thrive.

Drawn to grounded storytelling narratives that explore the truths of lived experience with empathy, complexity, and emotional intensity she champions female, queer and working-class-led narratives.

Melissa co-foundesd Alora’s Productions, an independent film company dedicated to ambitious storytelling and opportunities for emerging and diverse creatives, and HellCat Creative Collective, a platform fostering safer, joyful spaces for women, trans, and non-binary artists to collaborate and showcase their work.

She is currently developing new projects on screen, on stage, and within the wider creative community. Her practice is guided by a few key questions:

Who gets to tell stories?

How do we hold space for each other?

And how can we build more inclusive, imaginative creative environments?

https://www.melissaboyle.co.uk/

https://www.instagram.com/melissa_producer/

Courtney Hayles (he/him)

Courtney ‘CourtsWrites’ Hayles is a Manchester-based writer, director, spoken-word artist and facilitation practitioner exploring masculinity, music and community through immersive, narrative-driven storytelling. Working across theatre, film, audio art and installation, he creates projects that invite audiences into dialogue around identity, vulnerability and belonging.

Since establishing his independent practice in 2014, Hayles has developed a multidisciplinary body of projects that merge poetic language with visual storytelling. His short film Rage With Words (2020), a poetic response to the murder of George Floyd, was shortlisted at the Aesthetica Short Film Festival and demonstrates his ability to distil complex social themes into emotionally resonant narratives.

Alongside his independent practice, Hayles served as Associate Artistic Director at Young Identity, where he led the development of new theatre productions and helped shape international creative exchange programmes. His practice frequently bridges the cultural and commercial sectors, collaborating with organisations and brands to craft human-centred stories across multiple platforms.

His projects include Imprint (PUSH Festival), Blink for Manchester Collective, SICK! Cars! for SICK! Festival, an installation exploring masculinity and mental health created with illustrator Woodrow Phoenix, and Voice. Sealed. Shut. (2024). He has also directed narrative campaigns such as the Sound Mind, Sound Body series for ASICS.

Through this multidisciplinary practice, Hayles contributes to wider cultural conversations around masculinity, vulnerability and the evolving language men use to understand themselves and each other.
Hayles’ practice interrogates themes of Black identity, love, trauma and the complexities of modern masculinity, often blending spoken word, music and physical theatre to create layered sensory experiences. Alongside his creative practice, he delivers facilitation, mentorship and creative consultancy for arts organisations, communities and brands, using storytelling as a catalyst for dialogue, reflection and cultural change.

Previous projects include: Asics: SMSB (2019), Rage With Words (2020), Blink commissioned by Northern Voices as part of Manchester Collective (2021), Imprint as part of PUSH ARTS Festival (2019-21), Jannis GRM Daily (2021), Sick!Cars for Sick! Festival (2022) Voice. Sealed. Shut. (2024), and REFRAME: Inspire Schools Factory International x Southbank Centre (2025).

Website: www.courtswrites.com
Email: courtney@courtswrites.com
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/courtswriteslimited
Instagram: @courtswrites