Richard Johnston, Chair of ScreenSkills, the skills body for the UK screen industries, is to step down at the end of April.
Vice Chair Lisa Opie will assume the role of Interim Chair of ScreenSkills, and Kate Lyndon will be Interim Vice Chair.
Johnston joined the Board of Creative Skillset in June 2016, and as Chair from March 2017, he led the transition to ScreenSkills, including the move from public to industry funding, the following year.
As Chair, he was integral to the creation of the Unscripted TV Skills Fund in 2021. To date, the Fund has received income of £5.67 million, and 367 production companies have contributed. He was also instrumental in ScreenSkills’ pivot to digital at the start of the pandemic and the subsequent Covid awareness training e-learning, completed by almost 90,000 people across the industry. Additionally, he was key to securing BFI-awarded National Lottery funding for the Future Film Skills Programme that has supported more than 120,000 beneficiaries including 90,544 new entrants to the sector.
“It’s been an absolute privilege to chair ScreenSkills over the past seven years, during which time we’ve completely reinvented the organisation and helped thousands of people across the industry. With Laura now in place and doing an amazing job, it feels like the right time for me to hand the baton on and continue supporting from the sidelines,” said Johnston. “I’d like to thank the Board, the five Skills Councils and all the employees and partners of ScreenSkills for their incredible support and hard work over the last few years.”
“On behalf of ScreenSkills, the Board and the team, I would like to thank Richard for his leadership over the past seven years,” commented Opie. “He has made a huge contribution to the organisation, sharing his expertise, his deep knowledge of the market and his time, whilst providing sound advice. He has been a passionate advocate for ScreenSkills and the work that it does across the sector.”
Laura Mansfield, CEO of ScreenSkills, added: “Richard’s focus on the provision of high quality training and career opportunities for colleagues across the industry is inspiring. In no small way, the work and positive impact of ScreenSkills on supporting the careers of our beneficiaries right across the UK is due to his dedication.”
You are not signed in
Only registered users can comment on this article.
Netflix launches first daily live show The Breakfast Club
Netflix will stream US morning radio show The Breakfast Club daily on its platform from 1 June 2026, marking the streamer’s first daily live programme.
ITV launches Live Addressable+ with Omnicom
ITV, the UK’s largest commercial broadcaster, has officially launched its live broadcast addressable advertising product, Live Addressable+, with an exclusive beta trial in partnership with Omnicom Media Group.
Enghouse Networks partners with INVIDI
Telecoms and media specialist Enghouse Networks and addressable TV advertising provider INVIDI Technologies have announced a new integration that reportedly expands advanced advertising capabilities across IP video environments.
Sports content races ahead in SVOD – Gracenote
Analysis by Gracenote, the content intelligence business unit of Nielsen, has shown that sports have quickly become a foundational part of the subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) content mix and now make up 5% of overall programming on leading services.
Bitmovin wins MUBI deal
Video streaming software specialist Bitmovin has been selected by film company MUBI as its cloud VOD encoding partner for its streaming platform.



