The Owen Cooper effect: How the BAFTA starâs drama school has turned into the Rada of the North
The Owen Cooper effect: How the BAFTA starâs drama school has turned into the Rada of the North
Katie RosseinskyMon, May 11, 2026 at 10:45 AM UTC
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Itâs a January chilly evening in a community centre in Gatley, a quiet suburb of Stockport. But underneath the glow of the hallâs overhead strip lights, a group of teenagers are also preparing for a moon landing. Or in the royal court of an imperious queen. Trekking in the Arctic. Screaming at a Taylor Swift concert.
All entirely imaginary scenarios, of course. Especially the one where I have to briefly stand in for Taylor Swift. But the performers are so full of energy and conviction that itâs hard not to be transported along with them. âAs soon as we step through the doors, put our phones down, I feel like time just stops here, do you know what I mean?â one of the girls tells me. âItâs like a break from reality.â
This weeknight session is just one of the classes run by the Drama MOB, the Manchester drama school and talent agency founded by Esther Morgan and longtime Coronation Street actor Tina OâBrien. Theyâve been in business since 2013, but over the past year, the whirlwind ascent of one of their star pupils has brought their work into the spotlight, too.
When Netflixâs Adolescence was released last March, the single-shot drama exploring the pernicious influence of the manosphere on teenage boys soon became 2025âs most talked-about television show. Much of that conversation centred around the truly extraordinary performance of Warrington-born teenager Owen Cooper, who plays Jamie, a 13-year-old boy accused of murdering his classmate.
The show marked Cooperâs first ever professional role; as the Adolescence cultural juggernaut gathered pace, breathless headlines seemed to suggest that Cooper had simply been plucked from nowhere for his television debut. But this wasnât the full story. In the two years leading up to his casting, heâd attended lessons with Drama MOB â the same class that Iâm visiting, in fact. Morgan describes him as a âvery focusedâ pupil who âwas up for a laugh as wellâ, while OâBrien notes that he âhad his parentsâ support behind him, which is obviously massiveâ for a young actor.
Back in January, the now 16-year-old became the youngest ever winner of the Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role on Television award at the Golden Globes, beating nominees with decades more experience. In his acceptance speech, Cooper spoke of how he âtook a riskâ on the classes, unsure if his interest in acting would ever amount to much. âI was the only boy there, it was embarrassing,â he said. âBut I got through it.â
He has gone on to break yet more industry records, the youngest ever individual winner at acting union SAG-AFTRAâs Actor Awards after being crowned Best Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series in March. And in May, he became the youngest ever winner in the Best Supporting Actor category at the Bafta TV Awards. âWe didnât think weâd end up with a Golden Globe Award or an Emmy winner,â Morgan says. âWe were laughing because he won the National Television Award first [last September] and it was the first time anybodyâs ever won one of those [from the classes], and we were really pleased then.â
The 16-year-old became the youngest ever winner of the Best Supporting Actor trophy at the Bafta TV Awards (PA)
Morgan and OâBrien have been friends for more than three decades, since meeting at the age of 11. âWe started high school together,â OâBrien explains. When her daughter Scarlett was about three or four, she started looking around for local drama groups, but âreally struggled to find anywhere that was good enough qualityâ, as Morgan puts it. So they decided, she says, âletâs just set up our ownâ.
Given their joint experience, it made sense. OâBrien has played Sarah Louise Platt â daughter of Corrie icon Gail â since 1999; Morgan had previously taught drama to primary school pupils. They held their first class in January 2013 down the road in Didsbury, another leafy Manchester suburb, and âwe had seven children come alongâ, Morgan says. These days, they run 29 classes across the region, and have just under 600 children attending each week.
Cooper as Jamie Miller, on the set of âAdolescenceâ. In the two years leading up to his casting, heâd attended lessons with Drama MOB (Netflix)
Theircasting agency, which Morgan oversees, launched in 2015, âbecause we were getting lots of requests from people wanting really good northern kids, because they were struggling to find them. Obviously, we have them coming to classâ. They now have about 300 performers on the books, with ages ranging from newborns to grown-ups.
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Over the years, theyâve built up their reputation with casting directors, who are ânow coming to us directly for different jobsâ. Pupils have âdone feature films, weâve got a number of regulars on the soapsâ, Morgan says, and in 2018, one of their students played a young Elton John in the John Lewis Christmas advert.
We didnât think weâd end up with a Golden Globe Award or an Emmy winner
Esther Morgan
For the teens in Gatley, the session eases in with everyone sharing a bit of news in a circle, from mock exam results to working up the courage to join a new club at school to excitement about the Champions League. Then itâs onto warm-up games and improv exercises, designed to get them thinking about how to use their physicality and be creative with the space on stage. Some of them have been coming along for years, and have their sights set on professional work; some are just here for the fun of it, or for the confidence boost it provides.
Accessibility has always been important to Morgan and OâBrien. Acting is an increasingly elitist profession, and the âclass ceilingâ can force talented young performers to give up early on. âIn each of our classes, weâve got a number of places that are free,â Morgan explains. âWeâve both said it was something really important to us â we donât want there to be a barrier.â
Drama MOB founders Tina OâBrien and Esther Morgan (Drama MOB)
OâBrien agrees. âAs a child myself, I know that I was very fortunate to be able to go to drama classes, but we didnât have any money,â she says. âI remember my mum and dad saying, âWell, you can choose between going to drama or gymnastics.ââ She was âso fortunateâ that she did choose the former â sheâd go on to start working as an actor in her teens â âbut for some children thereâs not even the possibility of thatâ. Through their funded places, âweâre trying to really target those kids that really want to do it, but maybe they wouldnât [otherwise] be able toâ, Morgan adds.
And although they work with plenty of great casting directors in the North, the industry can still feel very London-centric â which can add another layer of expense for parents. âWe would still like to see more things being cast here,â Morgan says. âOften, recalls are still happening in London, so youâve got to factor in train fares for a child and an adult, maybe a hotel.â
Call it the Owen Cooper effect if you will, but since Adolescence aired, theyâve noticed a leap in the number of boys signing up for classes. As Cooper put it in his Golden Globes speech, there is still a lingering preconception that drama is somehow âembarrassingâ or not something for boys.
Cooper with his Golden Globe trophy (Getty)
But in Gatley, in the session for 12- and 13-year-olds, the gender split is almost 50/50; it skews more female in the adjacent session, for older teens, though the boys still make up a good third or so of the numbers. âIt does leave you feeling positive afterwards, and like you can take on anything else, I guess,â one of them tells me.
The classes, Morgan says, are âsomewhere they can express themselves and feel safe to do so with other boys. Weâve seen a bigger uptake since Owen â other boys going, âOh actually, itâs alright to do drama.ââ Sometimes, she adds, âsport might not be their thing, so theyâre looking for something where they feel like they fit and they can meet other like-minded kidsâ. OâBrien is hopeful that they will see more of themkeep acting for longer, rather than dropping out when they start high school. âYou find when theyâre younger, theyâre not embarrassed or bothered. But they get to a certain age, and theyâre like, âUgh,ââ she says.
Sheâs seen plenty of discussions online and in the media focusing on how boys are being brought up, asking, âAre we setting up young men to be all âI am a provider, I am strong, I donât feelâ?â But in the classes, the emphasis is on getting attuned to the emotions. âHere, itâs all about expressing â how does your character feel? How would you say that? And I think thatâs really healthy. Weâre both parents of boys, and I think for us personally, we would say that to be able to have those conversations and skills is incredible.â
Going forward, there are âother northern areas that weâd like to tap intoâ to launch more classes, Morgan says, but ârather than just opening up all over the place, we want to make sure that itâs [still] good qualityâ. The goal is to keep âpushing our northern talentâ, finding the Owen Coopers of the future â and making sure they have fun too. âI remember, years ago, we used to take all the classes, and whatever mood you were in, by the end of the evening you were just so happy because they were so happy,â OâBrien says. âItâs such a lovely thing to be part of.â
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ