Finding the right talent can be the difference between a good show and a great one. Together we’ll make your production shine.
Lisa Douglas is a BAFTA award winning talent executive and celebrity producer with over 20 years’ experience in television and events. She’s secured and managed relations with Hollywood A-Listers, the best of British acting talent, music acts, sports stars, authors and comedians - always ensuring she has the right person for the job.
TV credits include ‘Kilimanjaro: The Bigger Red Nose Day Climb’; ‘This Morning’, ‘Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway’, ‘Parkinson’, ‘The Paul O’Grady Show’ and Sport Relief 2020.
Lisa has cast and managed talent for red carpet events and high-profile campaigns for British Airways, Boots, Sainsburys and The National Lottery Awards.
Projects
Work history
S
S
Talent Producer - 'Alan Titchmarsh - Spring Into Summer' (ITV)Spun Gold TV
London, United KingdomFreelance
9 x 30 minute ITV prime-time series airing including celebrity interviews
+ Show more
Skills
- TV Production
- Event Organisation
- Edit
- Script Writer
- Budget Manage
- Entertainment Content
- Editoral Experience
- Producing
- Management
- Negotiation
Education
G
G
BA(Hons) Mass Media and CommunicationsGlasgow Caledonian University
- Glasgow, United Kingdom
2.1 Degree in Mass Media and Communications.
Awards
N
N
Best Daytime Show for 'This Morning'National Television Award
Part of the team that saw us collect the National Television Award for 'Best Daytime' ShowB
B
Best DocumentaryBAFTA Scotland
Researcher on the 'Best Documentary' at the Scottish BAFTA's.
The documentary followed the consequences for a small community when the white fish industry collapses. Fishing is one of Britain's oldest industries, and Fraserburgh is a community significantly dependent on it. This documentary charts the community's reaction to swingeing quota cuts and consequent drastic reduction in the industry. Filming at sea is extensive, and includes a trip to a breakers yard in Denmark and to the EC in Brussels.
This film was screened on BBC Scotland in June 2004, and won BAFTA Scotland Best Documentary in 2004 and Celtic Film Festival Best Documentary in 2005. It was repeated on BBC4 in September 2005, and screened across PBS network in the US as part of WNET's Wide Angle series, showcasing the best documentaries from around the world.