TAMCC students participate in film casting and lighting workshop

A groundbreaking cross-border film collaboration between creative teams from Grenada and New York is bringing transformative, on-the-job film industry training to emerging local creatives and students at Grenada’s T.A. Marryshow Community College (TAMCC), marking a major step forward for skills development and cultural exchange in the Caribbean island’s growing creative sector.

Hosted on the TAMCC campus on April 27, the inaugural combined casting call and production lighting workshop drew roughly 25 participants, spanning TAMCC arts students and early-career film production practitioners based in Grenada. Unlike traditional classroom-based training sessions, this event was structured as a fully functional working production set, merging hands-on technical instruction with live, real-time casting activity to give participants an immersive look at actual industry workflows.

Throughout the workshop, attendees got direct access to professional-grade camera and lighting equipment, working side-by-side with experienced filmmakers to set up gear for acting auditions. This practical approach allowed participants to build skills that go far beyond textbook learning, giving them tangible experience that many emerging creatives in small creative ecosystems rarely get access to early in their careers. One participant, J. Mitchell, shared enthusiastic feedback after the session, noting, “I would definitely recommend this to my friends, and if there is an opportunity in the future to come back and showcase my skills, I would absolutely return.”

The workshop was far more than a standalone training event: it served as an integrated introduction to end-to-end filmmaking. Participants got the chance to light auditioning talent, observe on-set direction from industry professionals, and learn how different production roles collaborate to bring a project to life. By the end of the session, attendees walked away with a holistic working overview of the entire filmmaking process, from performance direction to technical execution.

Leading the workshop was Karl Bigby, a New York-based cinematographer and filmmaker with Faceless Studios, who brought years of international industry experience to guide local participants. The full initiative is organized through a partnership between multiple regional and international groups: MProjekts Creative Group, helmed by Grenadian creative leader Meschida Philip, took point on coordinating the program and building the partnership with TAMCC’s Department of Arts, Humanities, and General Studies, while the Forrester Creative Renaissance Fund provided coordination and community engagement support. All core producing partners share deep personal and cultural ties to Grenada, a choice that anchors the entire project in authenticity and a commitment to long-term growth for the island’s creative community, rather than a one-off extractive production.

The workshop is just the first phase of a broader co-production collaboration between the Forrester Creative Renaissance Fund, Faceless Studios, MProjekts Creative Group, and the Grenada Film Company. The partnership is currently supporting two original short films, *Cutting Dead Ends* and *Sunday*, which are now in active pre-production. Both projects center Grenadian actors and creatives, with a mixed local and international crew bringing the stories to life.

The collaboration will run through April to July 2026, spanning pre-production, principal photography, and structured on-set shadowing and paid internship opportunities exclusively for TAMCC students. This extended engagement ensures that local emerging creatives get ongoing learning opportunities across every stage of the production process, building a pipeline of skilled talent for Grenada’s future film sector.