Boarders
British TV series (2024–)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boarders is a British teen comedy-drama television series created by Daniel Lawrence Taylor, centred around the lives of five young black teens who earn scholarships into the prestigious boarding school of St. Gilbert's. The series is developed by Studio Lambert in association with All3Media International for BBC Three. The first series premiered on 20 February 2024. The second series was released on 3 February 2025.
| Boarders | |
|---|---|
| Genre | |
| Created by | Daniel Lawrence Taylor |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Original language | English |
| No. of series | 3 |
| No. of episodes | 18 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers |
|
| Production companies | |
| Original release | |
| Network | BBC Three |
| Release | 20 February 2024 – present |
Cast and characters
Main
- Josh Tedeku as Jaheim Marsham
- Jodie Campbell as Leah Dulverton
- Myles Kamwendo as Omar Palmer-Grace
- Aruna Jalloh as Femi Adebayo
- Sekou Diaby as Toby Staithes
Supporting
- Daniel Lawrence Taylor as Gus
- Derek Riddell as Bernard
- Harry Gilby as Rupert
- Tallulah Greive as Beatrix
- Rosie Graham as Florence
- Georgina Sadler as Mabel
- Assa Kanoute as Abby
- Archie Fisher as Cheddar
- Zheng Xi Yong as Xiang
- Kendra Brown as Devon'ye (series 2)
Recurring
- Niky Wardley as Carol Watlington-Geese
- Nimisha Odedra as Preeya
- Sarah Daykin as Chelsea
- Ruxandra Porojnicu as Yelena
- Yuriri Naka as Ms Kaneko
- Maxim Ays as Felix
- Dillon Mitra as Dilton
- Wunmi Mosaku as Grace (series 2)
- Louis Thresher as Masked Raisinette (series 2-3)
Guest
- Natalie Cassidy as Sharon Hail
- Alan Cumming as Alan
- Unknown T as himself
Production
Development
In August 2022, it was announced BBC Three had commissioned a six-part series titled Boarders from Daniel Lawrence Taylor and Studio Lambert. In addition to Lawrence Taylor, the series would be executive produced by Susan Hogg and Maddie Sinclair for Studio Lambert, and Ayela Butt and Gaynor Holmes for the BBC. Joining him in the writers room were Emma Dennis-Edwards, Yemi Oyefuwa, and Ryan Calais Cameron.[1] Lawrence Taylor has said that,[2] while fictional, the series was inspired by a real-life article about underprivileged black teens on a scholarship scheme, and influenced by his own experience at a "predominately white and middle class" university.
A second series was announced on 4 June 2024 via the BBC's official media channels. It was confirmed the main cast would reprise their roles.[3] In July 2024, Tubi officially boarded the project as a co-producer for its second series due to the "incredible response" to series 1.[4]
In February 2025, Lawrence Taylor confirmed writing for series 3 was underway.[5]
Casting
In July 2023, it was announced Josh Tedeku, Jodie Campbell, and Myles Kamwendo would star in the series alongside Sekou Diaby and Aruna Jalloh. Creator Daniel Lawrence Taylor would appear in the series as a mentor. Also joining the cast were Derek Riddell, Niky Wardley, Harry Gilby, Tallulah Greive, Rosie Graham, Georgina Sadler, and Assa Kanoute.[6]
In October 2024, the BBC and Tubi announced Wunmi Mosaku had joined the cast of Boarders for its second series, as well as Cara Theobold, Michael Salami, and Kendra Brown.[7][8] In January 2025, it was revealed Alan Cumming and Natalie Cassidy would make guest appearances in the forthcoming series.[9]
Filming

Principal photography took place in Bristol. Clifton College served as the fictional St Gilbert's in the series. Other filming locations included Ashton Court and Redcliffe.[10]
Episodes
Season 1 (2024)
| No. | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ethosheia Hylton | Daniel Lawrence Taylor | 20 February 2024[11] | |
|
It’s move-in day and the 5 new black students are there. As they’re gettin to know everyone, it is clear there will be a bit of racism and classing coming of age school antics. Femi joins in with the Rah’scals and they run through campus naked to the bell tower. | ||||
| 2 | Ethosheia Hylton | Daniel Lawrence Taylor | 27 February 2024 | |
|
Toby joins in a Japanese class. The students go to a party held in the school crypt, Toby is the DJ. Rupert tries to fight Jaheim, but Jaheim’s friends almost light him on fire, jokingly with water instead of petrol. Leah snogs Koku and vomits on him because she drank too much. | ||||
| 3 | Ethosheia Hylton | Emma Dennis-Edwards | 5 March 2024 | |
|
It’s diversity Day at St. Gilbert’s school. Omar gets a sealed envelope while in the bathroom. Femi’s roommate, Xiang, is convinced his friends have stolen his laptop that he needs back for the BotBattle happening later that day. The bot battle takes place and the rival school, Caldwell College, likely cheats during the tournament when a power outage occurs. | ||||
| 4 | Sarmad Masud | Ryan Calais Cameron | 12 March 2024 | |
|
It’s exeat weekend, so many of the students leave school. Omar gets his next initiation letter. Toby has to pay back Yelena for the fake drugs by Monday. Jaheim hates his friends now. Abby struggles with whether to have sex with Koku or not. | ||||
| 5 | Sarmad Masud | Yemi Oyefuwa | 19 March 2024 | |
| 6 | Sarmad Masud | Daniel Lawrence Taylor | 19 March 2024 | |
Season 2 (2025)
| No. | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Joelle Mae David | Daniel Lawrence Taylor | 3 February 2025 |
| 2 | Joelle Mae David | Yemi Oyefuwa | 3 February 2025 |
| 3 | Joelle Mae David | Daniel Lawrence Taylor, Jeffrey Aidoo | 10 February 2025 |
| 4 | Sarmad Masud | Daniel Lawrence Taylor, Racheal Ofori | 10 February 2025 |
| 5 | Sarmad Masud | Daniel Lawrence Taylor, Yemi Oyefuwa | 17 February 2025 |
| 6 | Sarmad Masud | Daniel Lawrence Taylor | 17 February 2025 |
Season 3 (2026)
| No. | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
|---|---|---|---|
Reception
The first series of Boarders received positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 100% based on 8 reviews.[12] Leila Latif of The Guardian gave Boarders four out of five stars and called it "packed with future megastars" in line with the Skins ensemble, singling out Campbell, Diaby, Tedeku, and Kanoute's performances in particular.[13] Louisa Mellor for Den of Geek recommended the series to Sex Education fans.[14] The Daily Telegraph's Poppie Platt also gave the series four stars, calling it "razor-sharp".[15] Morgan Cormack of Radio Times commended how Boarders balances serious, heavy topics and moments of learning with comedy and fun.[16]