Everyman in the mid90s

The mid 90s you say? Jonah Hill you say? A film you say? Launch events you say? Well that’s four of our favourite things right there… throw Everyman and some skateboards into the mix and that’s a cocktail team Sundae will drink all day long.

When our good friends over at the amazing Everyman came to us and asked us to look after their launch events for the UK release of, Jonah Hill’s directorial debut, mid90s at their venues in Birmingham, Leeds and Liverpool we were massively hyped – mainly because we love Everyman and we love Jonah Hill… everything else was a bonus.

Everyman isn’t every cinema – they do things differently. We wanted these events to be fully experiential and to convey exactly what Jonah Hill was trying to communicate through mid90s and partner it with Everyman’s relaxed and welcoming approach to cinema.

We took to the OST to garner some knowledge on the writer’s perspective; the OST is hip-hop heavy and within it are snippets of an interview with Jonah in which he describes both hip-hop and skateboarding as emotive, empathetic, accepting, family based and judgement free scenes that gave him an identity and a home throughout his formative years.

Hill disagrees with how both scenes are represented in films generally – intimidating and aggressive cliques that don’t allow outsiders in – and wanted to flip the script, show them in their true light and let people know that everybody was, and still is, welcome.

This became our inspiration.

We wanted to use our friends in the skate and music industries to continue that family feeling in the events – our mission was to recreate the film’s atmosphere outside of the cinema and make the guests feel at home and welcomed by the hip-hop and skate worlds respectively to put them in the correct mindset for the film that they were about to watch.

First we tapped up our mate Tez at Black Sheep Skateboard Store, home of the best skate team in Europe, for some advice – he gave us better than that; they became our skate partners for the entire project. Result.

Next we had a chat with our pals Poppy and Nik over at the Marcus Intalex Music Foundation (MIMF) about coming on board as a music partner and their answer was simple: we got you. Ideal.

Sundae’s friend Lei-Mai LeMaow is known for her incredible skateboard art (amongst many other talents) so she came on board as a live art partner. More than safe hands!

Down in Birmingham we hooked up with the B-SIDE Hip-Hop Festival which is organised by the Hippodrome and they joined us as an event curation partner; they wanted to supply breakdancers, skaters and DJs and cross promote their upcoming Festival. Works for us – the more the merrier.

After much planning and negotiation with the various shopping centres that the Everyman cinemas operate out of, we were good to go.

In Birmingham, upon arrival, guests walked through a live skateboard and b-boy display outside the cinema with the mid90s OST booming in the background. Once inside, they were greeted by DJ Silence tha Nomad on the 1s and 2s spinning beats pre screening…. after the film, the party started in the bar.

The event was also well attended by members of the city’s hip-hop and skate scenes and with the display being outdoors, a crowd formed and there was plenty of cheers and applause for the performances on show resulting in maximum authenticity.

Next up was Leeds. The guys at MIMF arranged for, local hip-hop heavyweight, DJ Weston to supply the soundtrack while Lei-Mai LeMaow did some awesome bespoke live skateboard art in the bar (later given away on Insta) as the guests arrived and, once again, after the film… the party continued.

And now, here we are in Liverpool at the final event of the trilogy, we’ve moved the skate display inside the shopping centre and with the soundtrack blasting, this is the edgiest of the three events.

As the guests move through the display and into the cinema, Liverpool legends No Fakin’ are on the turntables (again courtesy of MIMF) and are taking zero prisoners. Liverpool’s leading skate store, Lost Art, were out in force and after the screening….. well, you know the rest.

Three cities, three venues, three awesome events, insane skateboard displays, breakdancing,  great music, an amazing film, family, friendship, acceptance, authenticity, lots of happy faces… and thanks to our videographer, RCLC, we’ve got evidence.

Until next time.

Tom x

(Images: mid90s / Everyman / RCLC / publicity shots)

London Short Film Festival 2019

After generating successful campaigns in 2017 and 2018, Sundae returned to lead the press and publicity for the 16th annual London Short Film Festival in 2019.

We absolutely LOVE this Festival so we were giddy kippers when we got the call to get involved for the third year on the bounce!

LSFF is a vital moment in the UK film calendar, a beacon of inclusive and ground-breaking film-making from a diverse range of backgrounds. The Festival shows a huge selection of UK and international short films across music, culture, and politics.

As we have done each year, for the 2019 edition we cooked up bespoke campaign for each strand of the festival – Music, LGBTQ, Fashion & Culture, international and we achieved coverage across national, London specific, film, events, music, comedy, LGBTQ, fashion & culture and international media outlets.

We used a variety of announcements and strategies including LSFF spokesperson interviews, filmmaker interviews, programme launch news stories, event listings, previews, reviews, event attendance coverage in order to push the festival to the fore within each sector.

National coverage ran in national newspapers The Telegraph and i Newspaper and blanket coverage ran across all film titles including The Fan Carpet, The Cine Eye, Film Daily, Horror Hothouse, Back to the Pictures, Take One Cinema and Jump Cut Online to name a few.

LGBTQ coverage appeared in DIVA Magazine, Gay Star News and Qweerist and culture based coverage ran in Frieze, ASFF, The British Blacklist, Asian Image, GQ and NOWNESS amongst others. We also locked down interviews on BBC Radio London, LBC and BBC Radio 2.

As ever, the LSFF team were an absolute dream to work with; their programming skills and level of organisation and enthusiasm never fails to make our jaws hit the floors.

For us, they are the perfect client; they mirror our energy and we bounce off each other. Combined, the forces never fail to deliver and we can’t wait to get started on 2020’s instalment.

Much love to all films no matter how short – the content at LSFF always lives long in the memories of all in attendance.

Tom x

(Images: London Short film Festival / Time Away / GIRL /  Constellation of Cosmic Queens / No Woman is an Island / Rohan Ayinde / publicity shots)

 

Sundae + Animation? You do the MAF!

What a day for Manchester Animation Festival, Barry Purves and Sundae Communications!

This morning, ahead of the festival launch, we took renowned director and animator Barry Purves along with his RTS award winning Twirlywoo puppets to MediaCity to take their place on the BBC Breakfast sofa and talk about his 40 years in the industry and his events at MAF 2018.

Barry’s visit to the BBC Breakfast studio was made all the more special as we, alongside the festival team, arranged for him to find out about his MAF annual Fellowship Award live on air; it was a complete surprise and a really lovely moment – you can see a clip of his appearance on their Twitter here!

Fresh off the back of finding out about his award live on television, Barry swung over to BBC Radio Manchester where we had arranged for him to be interviewed by the wonderful Chelsea Norris, airing tomorrow morning, and even found time to record a video for their social team about how to get children into animation… all in all, an amazing morning’s work.

Barry is an Oscar and BAFTA nominated director usually, but not exclusively, working with animation, especially puppet animation. He has been involved, mainly through Cosgrove Hall, with many series and programmes for television such as Rainbow, Chorlton and the Wheelies, The Pied Piper of Hamelin, The Wind in the Willows, Rupert Bear, Postman Pat, and Bob the Builder, either as animator or director.

There are few animators like Barry Purves. Working in feature, television and short films where he has won acclaim for his works internationally making an incredible contribution to British animation globally. After 40 years in the animation industry MAF will not only be awarding Barry for his achievements but will be hosting ’40 Years of Barry Purves’ tomorrow, Wednesday 14 November at 5:30pm, to take a look back on Barry’s career and talk through it with the man himself.

The MAF 2018 communications campaign has been an incredibly successful one so far with key previews, features, listings, local interest stories and interviews in i Newspaper, I Love Manchester, Manchester Evening News, MEN Online, Screen Daily, Animation Magazine, Animation World Network, TheHotCorn.com, Prolific North and Family Traveller to name a few.

Right, we’re all off to the launch event of the festival… see you on the other side!

x

Sundae does the Bees-ness…. one last time!

Providing a beautifully fitting end to an incredible Bee based summer for Sundae Communications was the Bee in the City auction. The extra special night saw 77 (and a secret 78th) of the Bee in the City sculptures which featured on this summer’s art trail auctioned off to raise an unbelievable £1,128,250 for The Lord Mayor of Manchester’s We Love MCR Charity.

Celebrity auctioneer and TV personality Charles Hanson (Bargain Hunt, Flog It!) and Briony Harford hosted the charity auction, which took place at the HSBC UK National Cycling Centre. The Bees went under the hammer in front of guests digging deep to bid, as well as online and telephone bidders.

The most popular Bee on the night was Bee United painted by Joseph Venning, sponsored by Manchester United Football Club and adorned with Manchester United footballing legends, which raised £31,000 at auction plus an extra £5,000 donated by the club, totalling £36,000 raised. Other highlights included A Worker Bee’s Work is Never Done by Laura-Kate Chapman, which raised £25,000, and Dazzle Bee by Liz Faram which also raised £25,200.  A surprise 78th lot was added to the end of the auction on the night; a blank Bee to be painted by the winners’ choice of a Bee in the City artist, which raised £22,000.

This rousing finale to the Bee in the City initiative was the most rewarding part of the campaign for us, as we saw the fruits of our labour, alongside the Wild in Art team, come to life in the form of a huge amount of cash raised for an amazing cause so close to our hearts.

As the results came rolling in, we got to work and proceeded to spread the word about the money raised to key media, live, direct, as it happened. Prior to the event we lined up Granada Reports to head along and cover the auction alongside the MEN who were live blogging about each and every lot straight to their website.

In addition we gained key regional and national coverage in outlets such as BBC North West Tonight, i Newspaper, MSN.com, BT.com, Mail Online, ITV.com, MEN, Design Week, Hits Radio, Manchester Confidential and I Love Manchester taking the overall reach of the campaign to over 1.2 billion.

We are so, so proud to have been a part of Bee in the City and to have delivered one of our finest campaigns to date; it has been an absolute rollercoaster and one that we would ride every single year if we could! We shall miss it dearly and it will forever Bee the cherry on top of our Sundae.

x

(Images: Bee in the City / David Oates)

The Hexagon Experiment

Earlier this year Manchester-based music charity Brighter Sound announced their latest venture, The Hexagon Experiment – a mind-altering series of six free ‘Friday night experiments’ featuring live music, conversations and original commissions from pioneering women at the forefront of music, art and science.

Inspired by the creativity that led to the discovery of the Nobel-Prize winning ‘wonder material’ graphene, The Hexagon Experiment took place over six weeks during the summer as part of The Great Exhibition of the North in Newcastle and brought together some of the North’s most exciting musicians and scientists for six free events every Friday.

From music made by robots with Haiku Salut, to a spectacular tribute for unsung heroine, Delia Derbyshire by Liverpool pop trio Stealing Sheep, each event consisted of a live performance and an in-conversation between women at the cutting edge of science and the creative arts.

The Hexagon Experiment also formed part of Brighter Sound’s ‘Both Sides Now’ initiative, a three-year programme to support, inspire and showcase women in music across the North of England, and featured a five day ‘Both Sides Now’ residency with Anna Meredith to showcase nine upcoming female and non-binary musicians from the North East at the final event, entitled Works In Progress, which saw the musicians create new pieces of music and visual art inspired by the idea of Micro/Macro.

Here at Sundae we are extremely passionate about working on content that breaks the mould and strives for diversity and gender parity in the media industry. Over the last 12 months we have actively followed and supported Brighter Sound’s work and when we were approached by the team to help publicise The Hexagon Experiment in the final lead up, we were absolutely delighted to help!

With a truly amazing cluster of musical talent on board such as Anna Meredith, Jane Weaver, Haiku Salut, Stealing Sheep, Sara Lowes and Afrodeutsche, and championing such a strong message for more diversity in the music industry, this was definitely a project we wanted to shine a light upon for Brighter Sound and the amazing artists they were showcasing.

As part of our strategy, we created a bespoke short lead publicity campaign based around the project’s individual events with an emphasis on the talent behind them and the ‘Both Sides Now’ campaign.

This resulted in impactful and meaningful coverage that engaged with the project and explored the wider issues and messages for Brighter Sound. We also collaborated successfully with the talent behind the project to land some amazing features including a music experiment spectacular with Drowned In Sound, a blog with Jane Weaver on Big Issue in the North and two fabulous opinion pieces with Stealing Sheep on CLASH magazine and Oh Comely.

Overall, The Hexagon Experiment was an amazing and thought provoking project to work on and Sundae delivered a great selection of online, print and broadcast coverage with a total overall reach of nearly 20 million people.

Further highlights include interviews with Jane Weaver and Anna Meredith on BBC Radio 6 Music and listings within i-D magazine, The Pool, Grazia, Metro, NARC and the i newspaper.

For further updates on The Hexagon Experiment and Brighter Sound, please visit their website here.

Sundae gets Manchester buzzing for Bee In The City art trail

After a whirlwind Bee In The City VIP launch at the Manchester Town Hall in November last year, we were absolutely delighted to be taken on by global art producer, Wild In Art to deliver the full press and publicity campaign for this summer’s major Bee In The City art trail in Manchester.

As our friends and clients will know, we are an agency that LOVES art and LOVES celebrating our wonderful city so when we came on board, we were so excited and brimming with ideas.

The bees have all been designed by different artists and include the likes of Hilda Bugden, I Wanna Bee Adored and Hac Bee Enda. One achievement we are incredibly proud of is our collaboration with legendary Oasis singer Liam Gallagher. In the lead up to the trail, we developed a partnership with Liam to create a Rock ‘n’ Roll Bee alongside artist Julie Dodd.  In June, Sundae took a special trip to Parklife festival so Liam could meet and sign his finished bee for the first time which ultimately received global coverage. Press titles include NME, ITV News, Hits Radio, Radio X, Manchester Evening News, Hollywood.com, Female First, plus much more.

From Liam Gallagher to Bez, The Rolling Stones to Sting, celebrities and press from far and wide have been gravitating to towards Bee In The City campaign in more ways than one.

Fast forward to July and here we are having just delivered a huge VIP press launch with the likes of Press Association, The Guardian, BBC News, Manchester Evening News, Granada Reports, Gaydio and BBC Radio all in attendance with some incredible results. To say we are BUZZING with the result would be an understatement and its only just the beginning.

Make sure you catch the bees around the city from 23 July to 23 September, after which they will be auctioned off to raise money for the Lord Mayor of Manchester’s We Love MCR charity.

We are expecting thousands of visitors to be writing, sharing, snapchatting, tweeting and posting about these wonderful creations so make sure you check them out!

MC x

(Images: Charlie Lightening / David Oates)

Hear Her, the Donmar Shakespeare Trilogy comes to the BBC

We were very proud to work with the Donmar Warehouse again this summer when the films of its trail-blazing all-female Shakespeare Trilogy came to the BBC.

The TX was part of the BBC’s Hear Her season, beginning with the broadcast of Julius Caesar on BBC Four in June, and the world premiere of Henry IV and The Tempest on the BBC iPlayer, where all three films will remain for a brilliant six months, watch it here.

Described by Susannah Clapp (Observer) as ‘one of the most important theatrical events of the past 20 years’, the Trilogy features an all-female cast led by Dame Harriet Walter, one of the greatest living Shakespearean actors, and is directed by Phyllida Lloyd (The Iron Lady, ROH: Macbeth), for both stage and screen.

In Julius Caesar, Phyllida Lloyd has taken her striking production of Shakespeare’s famous discourse on power, loyalty, and tragic idealism, and used her considerable directorial vision to shape it into a gripping on-screen version which was welcomed into the Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2017, and nominated for a number of awards as a film in its own right.

The incredible cast continues to reach new heights and the broadcast was supported by a brilliant set of interview features, pitched by our Donmar account manager Tom, including Phyllida Lloyd in the Observer New Review and Olivier Award winner Sheila Atim in the Daily Telegraph. Watch this space for an upcoming Financial Times podcast from the wonderful Dame Harriet Walter. There was also an insightful piece in the Guardian from the Donmar’s outgoing artistic director and executive producer Josie Rourke and Kate Pakenham, which you can read here.

The television broadcast and iPlayer premiere campaign delivered on a dream strategy, hitting every mark, and wide range of audiences, with key coverage across an extensive list of national titles with Critics Choices, Highlights and Picks of the Day in The Sun TV Mag, TV Times, TV & Satellite Week, Radio Times, What’s On TV, Daily Mail Weekend, Mail on Sunday, The Guardian, The Telegraph, The Times Culture, Daily Star, DIVA Magazine and i-D Magazine, even garnering an impressive five stars in the Financial Times.

Unbelievably there is still more to come from the Donmar Trilogy, as it is now available for free to schools via the National Theatre’s On Demand platform, supported by an incredible array of bespoke content here, and an education programme is due to start in September, which we can’t wait to be part of.

Sundae x

 

Images: Donmar Trilogy / Publicity shots / Helen Maybanks / Nadav Kander

 

 

 

 

Shining a light on Pilot Light Festival

2018 started amazingly for us; there was a huge amount of excitement in the office as Sundae Communications was invited to look after the publicity campaign for Pilot Light TV Festival Season 3 at HOME, Mcr.

Anyone who knows the Sundae team well knows that telly is one of our favourite subjects and we even watch the same things at the same times so that we can discuss them in detail over lunch…. so PLTVF3 is was well and truly up our straße.

With talks and panels featuring Julie Hesmondhalgh, Christopher Eccleston, Walter Iuzzolino, Sue Johnston, Kevin Eldon, Michael Cumming alongside leading industry specialists and content from Walter Presents, Sky Atlantic/HBO, Blue Peter, CBeebies, Arrow TV and shortFLIX it really was a hugely diverse and relevant festival. Julie Hesmondhalgh also received the inaugural Pilot Light Excellence in Television Award.

As part of our strategy we created a bespoke publicity campaign based around the festival’s individual strands including Talks, Panels, Web Series, International, Culture, LGBTQ, Pilot Light Awards, Industry and, the inspired, In-Memorium and Anniversary Celebrations strands. We pitched screenings and events to titles within the media sector appropriate to each strand, as well as targeting traditional film, events and Manchester based press.

Sundae delivered a huge spread of quality, targeted coverage with key highlights including i-D Magazine, i Newspaper, BBC Radio Manchester, Manchester Evening News, Northern Soul, Emerald Street, Custard TV, Dr Who Magazine, The Skinny, Aesthetica, Prolific North, I Love Manchester and Manchester’s Finest.

The spread of coverage was phenomenal with previews, listings, reviews featuring heavily alongside interviews with Festival Producer Greg Walker and talent such as Sue Johnston and Julie Hesmondhalgh.

We were proud to achieve an op ed in i-D Magazine from Grace Barber-Plentie, the brains behind the innovative Sex and the City: The World according to Woke Charlotte, an event in collaboration with London’s Reel Good Film Club that examined the impact the show had on women of colour, and the progress in on screen representation made during the last twenty years, through a live script writing of the pilot recast entirely with people of colour.

We even hosted our own panel, New Voices in TV & Film, hosted by our MD Fiona McGarva, looking at the steps being taken to improve on screen representation, in particular shortFLIX, a short film initiative led by Creative England in partnership with National Youth Theatre and Sky Arts, featuring young filmmakers and champions of new voices in television and film.

One of our favourite projects ever here at Sundae and we can’t wait to get on board with Greg and his team next year for Season 4.

 

 

 

Making Contact

One of Sundae’s first missions for Contact, Manchester’s critically acclaimed, trail-blazing theatre and arts venue, led and programmed by young people, was to help launch the final phase of its Capital Redevelopment fundraising campaign, with a target of 500k, after raising over £6m of its £6.65m target. 

The rousing campaign was launched with Making Contact, an event at Manchester Art Gallery introduced by Contact advocate Julie Hesmondhalgh, Contact’s Chief Executive & Artistic Director Matt Fenton, and an inspiring performance from Contact Young Company’s radical 5* show She Bangs The Drums.

Front and centre of the campaign was Con:Struct, the dedicated team of young people aged 13-30 leading the project to transform the building for the next generation of audiences, artists and young people. They revealed the plans for the building, which is looking to reopen in Summer 2019, along with a new film to introduce Contact to a wider audience.

A new arts and health space has been funded by a Wellcome Trust grant of £500,000. This will provide a dedicated space to develop new partnerships and relationships with NHS, patient groups, young people, local communities and artists. Additional funding will support a three-year post of Health Producer to lead on projects and produce new theatre shows that explore health inequalities and other current issues.

Support from trusts and foundations follows initial grants from Arts Council England and Manchester City Council.  In addition, Contact has received in kind support and with Contact’s own funds and individual donations this brought the total secured to date to £6,161,133.

They had already achieved an incredible and inspiring amount, so our job was to shine a light on their work, whilst helping put Contact in front of new people, to grow their audience and fanbase, as well as introducing the company new possible sources of funds.

We shared Contact’s news with broad spread of press from the regional Manchester media, national arts press, theatre, architectural and business press. We achieved key coverage including news and features, plus interviews with Contact ambassador Julie Hesmondhalgh, in Architects Journal, Northern Soul, Manchester Confidential, Manchester Theatre Awards, Manchester’s Finest, Manchester Evening News, VIVA Magazine and British Theatre Guide.

We also delved into our own little black book and invited our favourite creatives, influencers and business owners along to the event. The turnout was amazing and despite a very sunny day, the event was packed to the rafters with new and existing fans  of Contact.

The Contact team are well and truly on their way to achieving their fundraising target and this event was the first step on a very exciting road and a journey that we are honoured to travel with them.

 

 

Be//Longing at the PR Moment Awards

Tonight team Sundae are off to the PR Moment Awards at the Hilton Hotel with our clients, collaborators and friends from Be//Longing; a project that we are so very proud of and a campaign that has been nominated for the Best Use of Creativity Award.

As well as Caroline Boyd and Dr Tanja Müller from the University’s of Manchester’s Migration Lab we will be joined at the table by the inspirational Take Back Theatre collective; actor Julie Hesmondhalgh, writer Becx Harrison and visual artist Grant Archer.

Manchester Migration Lab was formed in January 2017 and brings together more than 70 researchers across the University’s Schools and Research Institutes that focus on migration issues as part of the University’s research expertise in addressing global inequalities.

The Lab came up with the amazing idea of using writing, theatre, and live events to ignite and inform debate in local, national and global communities to support and communicate its work. After a lot of work and planning from ourselves, Take Back and UoM, Be//Longing came to life.

Be//Longing was an immersive production at Hope Mill Theatre with proceeds going to migration charities, it used installations, an exhibition, music and video alongside scripted theatre, to create an experience that boldly addressed perceptions of migration and expose myths.

So as we get dolled up for the evening’s events in the office, we are nervous, excited yet hopeful that we will bring the award home for a project and a subject matter that is so close to all of our hearts.

Fingers crossed x

(Images: Sebastian Matthes)