Yorkshire Post

A helping hand for a life on stage

Daughter of famed theatrical family sets up foundation to give others the opportunit­ies that she enjoyed

- ALEXANDRAW­OOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: alex. wood@ ypn. co. uk ■ Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

GROWING UP in a theatrical family, Martha Godber is acutely aware of the opportunit­ies it has given her in her career.

The 23- year- old actress is the youngest daughter of multi- Bafta winning husband and wife duo John Godber and Jane Thornton.

Rather than beating a path to London, she came home to East Yorkshire after graduating from the Liverpool Institute for Performing Art. She is now on a mission to help local young people break into an industry, which is notoriousl­y hard to get into at the best of times, but harder still due to the pandemic.

Today she is launching a new foundation that offers young people from East Yorkshire mentorship, exclusive masterclas­ses, workshops – and a unique credit on their profession­al CV.

“Coming from a theatrical background, I have been very lucky with opportunit­ies,” she said. “I’ve had my dad, mum and sister, who runs a theatre company, and when

I was growing up, I was able to go to rehearsals and speak to profession­al actors and directors. It made me realise how much of an advantage those opportunit­ies gave me for stepping into a profession­al industry myself.

“The arts are a difficult industry to break into at the best of times, and are now even harder post- Covid.”

Each year, The Godber Foundation will award up to 10 students the opportunit­y to take part in the foundation’s programme alongside their degree- level training in the Arts.

Martha says it will mainly be about offering the kind of experience­s she had, but there will also be a small amount of funding for students faced with unseen costs – anything from the purchase of an all- black uniform to actors’ headshot photograph­s. She said: “When you are studying a drama subject, you can’t always get a job because you are in rehearsals or class all the time and it’s hard to fund that if you don’t come from a middle- class background. It’s even harder for working class people to get to drama school, never mind all the costs when they get there. But this is primarily about experience­s and unique opportunit­ies.”

She admits that Hull is an “off the map place”, but she has now put her own roots firmly down in the area – just as her father did 25 years ago. She says doing a production with her mum at Archbishop Sentamu Academy in Hull called Ocho in 2017 about men from the city who fought in the Spanish Civil War was an inspiratio­n. “That planted a seed of getting to know those students and seeing their talent and potential,” she said. “The creative industry in general is extremely elitist.

We see Eddie Redmayne who’s gone to Eton who is now a film star. That’s not always the right message to send to people who are not from those background­s.

“This is saying everybody and anybody can do this. The point of this is to get students who may not know anyone in the industry and put them in contact with those who do.”

Online applicatio­ns open today for drama students originally from Hull or East Yorkshire. Full informatio­n and guidelines are available on the John Godber Company website and social media.

The arts are a difficult industry to break into at the best of times, Martha Godber, 23, daughter of award winners John Godber and Jane Thornton.

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 ?? MAIN PICTURE: ANTHONY ROBLING ?? STAGE FAMILY: Left, a scene from Angels of the North at Theatre Royal, Wakefield; above, John Godber with wife Jane and daughters Elizabeth, 21, left, and Martha, 18, in 2016; inset below, Martha Godber.
MAIN PICTURE: ANTHONY ROBLING STAGE FAMILY: Left, a scene from Angels of the North at Theatre Royal, Wakefield; above, John Godber with wife Jane and daughters Elizabeth, 21, left, and Martha, 18, in 2016; inset below, Martha Godber.

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