Mortal Fools has won a prestigious Northern PoWEr Women Award for the impact of its innovative primary school mental health programme, MELVA. The charity
took home the Inclusive Innovation: Tech for Good award for its children’s wellbeing digital platform, which is currently being used in around 100 primary schools across the North East. The Northern PoWEr Women Awards, supported by Barclays and Bank of America, took place in Manchester on 12 March. The event shone a spotlight on individuals and organisations driving equity, inclusion and social impact across the North. The awards – celebrating their tenth year – received 1,800 nominations, with 90 independent judges choosing the winners. The award coincides with an important milestone for Mortal Fools and the MELVA programme, which has now reached 10,000 children across the North and will be presented to the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Createch at the Houses of Parliament in April. The Tech for Good award recognises organisations using digital innovation to create meaningful social impact, celebrating technology that improves lives, communities and opportunities. Mortal Fools’ MELVA platform stood out to judges for its creative and preventative approach to supporting children’s mental health in primary schools – focused on storytelling and participatory learning, through films, animation, literature, games and classroom exercises. This national recognition of the impact of the MELVA programme comes at a critical time, as children’s mental health needs continue to escalate nationwide and schools seek effective and engaging ways to support them. In the 2025/26 academic year, around100 primary schools are currently using the MELVA programme, benefiting upward of 10,000 children. Kiz Crosbie, Artistic Director and CEO of Mortal Fools, celebrated the news, saying: “I am delighted and proud that the impact of our Melva Digital programme has been recognised at the 2026 Northern PoWEr Women Awards. This award acknowledges the success of our digital platform and participatory storytelling as an early intervention and prevention approach to children’s mental health and wellbeing. In receiving this award, we share it with all of the teachers who use the programme in their classrooms, the talented creatives who have been part of making it , and the belief in this work demonstrated by our key funding partners – especially the North East Combined Authority and the Kavli Trust – who have been fundamental to the programme’s development and growth in the last few years..” Alongside this award and a growing number of schools adopting the MELVA programme, Mortal Fools is proudly advocating for creative learning as a leading approach in mental health education nationally – supporting the wellbeing of young people across the North East and beyond. If you’re interested in using MELVA in your school, click here to register your interest with us.
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YOUNG PEOPLE FROM THE NORTH EAST TO TOUR THEIR ORIGINAL THEATRE SHOW ABOUT GROWING UP ONLINE3/2/2026
A brand new stage show, set to tour the North East this spring, is putting the online experiences of local young people centre stage. Mortal Fools Ensemble Young Company will present WIRED, devised and performed by its cast of young people from Ashington and the Tyne Valley. The show will highlight their talents and dig into what it really means to grow up in a digital world – amid all the tension, pressure, drama, and connection that comes with it. Audiences can expect an original soundtrack, bold set design and a powerful story
that we can all relate to. This isn’t just a theatre show, it’s real talk about how social media, AI, and being constantly online shape who we are and how we feel in 2026. The production will come to Newbiggin Sports and Community Hub on Saturday 21 March, Gosforth Civic Theatre on Sunday 12 and Monday 13 April, before a final show at Arts Centre Washington on Thursday 16 April. Touring the region at a time when the government is consulting on and considering a possible under-16s social media ban as part of broader online safety measures, WIRED is a relatable must-see for teenagers, young people and anyone interested in understanding the impact of life online. Mortal Fools Lead Practitioner and WIRED Director Scott Wilson said: “It has been such a pleasure to work with our Ensemble Young Company to produce WIRED. “For every passing generation, the presence of social media and the online world in our everyday lives – particularly through our phones – becomes more immediate and significant. WIRED explores both the connections and the challenges that young people find online, in a way that’s witty, emotional and unfiltered.” “I'm hugely proud of the work that the Ensemble group have put into developing the show. This is a completely original story, where everyone has brought their own experiences – the good, the bad and the ridiculous – to the table, and what they’ve created together is remarkable.” Zoe Lamming, Mortal Fools Practitioner and Dramaturg, said: “You can expect to be entertained, to have lots of fun, and to really enjoy hearing young people’s perspectives about what life is like online for them. It’ll make you think and it’s so heartfelt too; we hope you’ll find that it’ll connect closely to your lives and experiences.” Mortal Fools will work with Newcastle-based Meerkat Films to bring the production to the screen, ensuring it reaches more audiences across the UK. The filmed version will act as a resource for schools, youth and community groups, helping to foster vital conversations about life online and will be released later in 2026. For updates, audiences can subscribe to the Mortal Fools newsletter. Click here to find out more about WIRED and book tickets. |
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