Wednesday, August 13, 2025
77.6 F
Beckley
More

    W.Va. film office, filmmaker's guild to host locations workshop

    MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Ideal locations are key to creating good film and television content, say the organizers of a two-day workshop for location scouts and managers in the Mountain State.

    Advertisement

    West Virginia is increasingly becoming a location for television and movie making, according to the W.Va. Film Office and W.Va. Filmmakers Guild, which is teaming up for a June 24-25 workshop to be taught by television and film industry veteran Curt Wilmot.

    Wilmot has worked for more than two decades at 20th Century Fox, managing locations for LA Law, Cop Rock, Civil Wars, and NYPD Blue, and has worked on feature films and the reality shows Fear Factor and The Apprentice.

    Wilmot says finding ideal locations is vital to the success of shows and films. “I quickly learned that this job as a locations scout was crucial to creating the look of the show," Wilmot says.

    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement

    "Depending on what the script called for, I was the person taking pictures of various houses, restaurants, and schools that would ultimately be what millions of people saw on television."

    Wilmot will be teaching the skills and techniques needed to be a location scout as well as a  location manager. Both are needed occupations in West Virginia, thanks in part to the institution of a new state film office and film tax credit.

    The tax credit is worth 27 percent of the number of expenditures incurred in the state, and there is an additional four percent allowance for hiring 10 full-time West Virginia residents for a possible total tax credit of 31 percent of expenditures.

    The tax credit has helped attraction of a steady stream of in-state productions and has created the need for more location scouts and managers, according to film office spokesman Dave Lavender.

    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement

    “As we scale up and build out more film and creative industry work here in West Virginia, we want to make sure that the film office is actively supporting more workforce training to give more West Virginians a chance to work right here and be a part of this exciting industry that is poised for growth within our state,” Lavender said.

    The workshop is one in a series of film industry training workshops being sponsored by the new film office. In the past year, the office has sponsored workshops for cinematography, grip and electric, and special effects hair and makeup. A screenwriting workshop is planned for August 20 at the Appalachian Film Festival.

    Wilmot says the responsibilities managed by locations scouts and managers are far more involved than many people are aware.

    “Locations manager is a job that entails city permits, hiring security, police, negotiating all contracts, procuring parking lots for parking trucks, crew, and managing what can sometimes feel like a circus,” Wilmot says.

    Advertisement

    "While I am employed by the production, I worked for the location as well. You have to follow through and make everyone happy and know what restrictions and boundaries are established. If the writers decide three episodes later they want to go back to the same location, you will want to film there again."

    The two-day workshop will run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, June 24-25, at the Holiday Inn at 1188 Pineview Drive, Morgantown. The workshop is $75 and includes lunch, beverages, snacks, and coffee for both days. Space is limited, so applicants should register in advance online at

    Rooms may be reserved at the Holiday Inn-Morgantown, 1188 Pineview Drive, Morgantown, WV 26505, by calling 304-241-6649. Mention the workshop to receive a room discount.

    For more information, contact the West Virginia Filmmakers Guild at wvfilmguild@gmail.com or message them on .

    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement

    Sign up to receive a FREE copy of West Virginia Explorer Magazine in your email weekly. 

    Clyde Craig
    Clyde Craighttp://wvexplorer.com
    Clyde Craig is a writer for West Virginia Explorer. Born in Parkersburg, West Virginia, he traveled with his family across the globe with the U.S. Army before returning to the Mountain State in 2011.

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Hot this week

    The Bustle Flag: How Martinsburg’s Unionist women defied the Confederacy

    MARTINSBURG, W.Va — The prosperous manufacturing town of Martinsburg...

    National Hunting and Fishing Day returns to Stonewall resort Sept. 6

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. — National Hunting and Fishing Day 2025,...

    Monument to coal baron in W.Va. hidden deep within New River Gorge

    QUNNIMONT, W.Va. — The New River Gorge National Park...

    Embracing the rich bounty of the West Virginia fall harvest

    CHARLES TOWN, W.Va. — The West Virginia fall harvest...

    The captivating West Virginia legend of Kanawha Falls and her daughters

    GAULEY BRIDGE, W.Va. — Though beautiful, the following tale...

    Topics

    The Bustle Flag: How Martinsburg’s Unionist women defied the Confederacy

    MARTINSBURG, W.Va — The prosperous manufacturing town of Martinsburg...

    National Hunting and Fishing Day returns to Stonewall resort Sept. 6

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. — National Hunting and Fishing Day 2025,...

    Monument to coal baron in W.Va. hidden deep within New River Gorge

    QUNNIMONT, W.Va. — The New River Gorge National Park...

    Embracing the rich bounty of the West Virginia fall harvest

    CHARLES TOWN, W.Va. — The West Virginia fall harvest...

    The captivating West Virginia legend of Kanawha Falls and her daughters

    GAULEY BRIDGE, W.Va. — Though beautiful, the following tale...

    The Pickens Leper: a tragic journey into isolation in the W.Va. mountains

    PICKENS, W.Va. — In the remote Allegheny Mountains of...

    West Virginia Waterfall Trail surpasses an unexpected 125,000 check-ins

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The West Virginia Waterfall Trail has...

    Related Articles

    Popular Categories