UK Indie Horror Takes Centre Stage at British Horror Studio Awards
The British Horror Studio has announced the winners of its inaugural awards season, a milestone moment that underlines the organisation’s rapid expansion and its growing influence within the UK’s independent horror sector. The new awards initiative recognises creative achievement across film direction, performance and wider artistic contribution, while also signalling the studio’s ambitions beyond production alone.

Spanning public-voted categories and jury-selected honours, the awards attracted more than 5,000 votes from film professionals and genre fans worldwide. The public vote delivered a rare result in the Best Director category, with Sean Cronin for Bogieville and Warren Dudley for Fright sharing the prize. Best Actor went to Stephen Corrall for Shiver Me Timbers, following a category that drew more than 1,000 individual votes.
The most competitive public category proved to be Best Actress, where Megan Tremethick claimed the award for The Reign of Queen Ginnarra after a second-round surge. The category generated more than 2,500 votes and significant online engagement, reflecting the growing profile of female-led performances within British independent horror.

Alongside the public ballot, an independent jury led by Prof Peter F Mahoney CBE PhD MBA FRCA focused on artistic ambition and creative risk. The jury Best Director award went to Simon Rumley for Crushed, while the Best Actor prize was jointly awarded to Chris Black for The Slave and the Sorcerer and Jonathan Hansler for Bogieville. Nicolette McKeown received the jury Best Actress award for her work in Mercy Falls.
A new accolade, British Indie Horror Artist of the Year, was introduced to recognise sustained contribution to the sector. The first recipients were Ayvianna Snow, cited for advocacy and artist support, Dorian Todd for his rising impact as a performer and filmmaker, and Andrew Gourlay, whose recent performances followed recovery from serious illness.

The awards announcement coincides with a period of sharp growth for the British Horror Studio, which reports more than 1,200 signed members. Originally founded as a production label, the organisation has broadened into a multi-faceted genre institution, now encompassing the revived Amicus Productions, Hex Studios, The B-Team and the charity Fife Creative Studios. Together, these arms place increasing emphasis on training, grassroots participation and regional development, particularly in Scotland, which the studio identifies as an emerging centre for British horror filmmaking.
With multiple feature projects currently in production or post-production and plans for long-term infrastructure development, the inaugural awards season positions the British Horror Studio as a growing cultural force within UK independent cinema.
