Accra, June 4, GNA The 15th edition of the Ghana Movie Awards (GMA) is making history by introducing a new competitive category to celebrate the works of Casting Directors, a move that mirrors the Academy Awards’ recent inclusion of the discipline.
Often described as the “Human Resource Managers” of the creative economy, Casting Directors are responsible for discovering and matching talent to roles, yet they have been historically overlooked in major awards schemes.
This omission has puzzled industry watchers, given that a single casting decision can determine the commercial fate of a multi-million dollar production.
Globally, the tide is turning. The Casting Society of America (CSA) has been the premier organization championing these professionals for the past 40 years.
A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency in Accra on Thursday said in a landmark achievement for the continent, a Ghanaian casting director won the prestigious ARTIOS Award in the United States in 2025 and successfully repeated the feat in 2026, the first time in four decades that an African has claimed the honour, firmly placing the country on the international casting map.
It said hot on the heels of that victory, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars) added the Casting Director category for the first time in its history.
“Now, the Ghana Movie Awards has followed suit, creating a platform to recognize local excellence in the field. The Nominees for Best Casting Director (GMA 15th Edition) includes: Naomi Osei Mensah – King of Tema, Frank Rajah – Virgin of the Throne, Mawuko Kuadzi – The Fisherman and Rawdrick Lartey Junior & Omar Krupp – Ghana Map.”
It said the inclusion of the category is not merely ceremonial, as industry analysts viewed it as a strategic lever to revive Ghana’s struggling film economy.
According to industry experts the inclusion professionalizes talent discovery.
“By awarding casting directors, the GMA incentivizes formal audition processes and database management, moving away from nepotism and towards meritocracy. This lowers the risk for investors, who can now trust that actors are selected based on bankable skill rather than social connections”.
“Secondly, it stimulates the entire creative supply chain. A skilled casting director doesn’t just find actors; they activate the fashion designers (for costume fittings), musicians (for soundtrack integration), and visual artists (for set design). When casting is done right, an entire village of creative entrepreneurs gets paid.”
The statement said, it also builds a talent pipeline for global exports.
“Following the ARTIOS wins, international producers are looking at Ghana. A recognized awards category signals to Netflix, Amazon, and Disney that Ghana takes talent management seriously. This is the path to co-productions that bring foreign currency into the local economy, much like the discovery of Abraham Attah, who rose from a community in Ghana to star in Netflix’s Beasts of No Nation, a success story that was the direct result of a casting director’s vision.
Reacting to the announcement, the leadership of the African Chamber of Content Producers (ACCP) praised the organizers of the Ghana Movie Awards for their forward-looking approach.
“The Ghana Movie Awards is holding the fort for the creative economy,” a spokesperson for the Chamber stated. “Film is the mother industry, it employs all the creative players, from fashion and music to art and writing. Any initiative that sustains the film sector multiplies jobs across the entire economy.”
“We urge the government to support the creative economy strategically, particularly by funding casting workshops and talent databases. As we have seen with the recent ARTIOS wins and the rise of stars like Abraham Attah, our Casting Directors are the gateways to global stardom. If we support them, they will unearth the next generation of African stars.”
The 15th Ghana Movie Awards ceremony is scheduled to take place on Sunday, the 7th of June 2026, where the winner of the inaugural Casting Director category will be crowned, setting a new standard for what Ghanaian cinema values.
GNA
Edited by George-Ramsey Benamba