

Miranda May fresh off a Best Director 2025 Creative Circle award, blends fashion, music and sport sensibilities with a sharp understanding of brand strategy. Repped by GREATERGOOD (USA), Darling Films (UK) for commercials, she’s as obsessed with the log line and emotional brief as she is with the styling on set.
Her work focuses on a premium feel, with stylistic movement and always a sense of luxury. Standout films include brands such as Batiste, Nike, Sky, adidas and Vaseline in addition to beauty, choreography focused music videos for some of the biggest female artists in the world. From sophisticated, statement visuals to tightly crafted storytelling, she gravitates toward scripts that are highly creative, and have a real visual purpose.
Miranda’s mission is clear: to create highly creative, editorial-feeling films that still sit perfectly within a brand’s long-term Journey. Not just as pretty one-offs.
Miranda sat down with LBB to talk about her latest virtual production projects, why research and context are non-negotiable for any treatment, and how strong communication – not ego – is the real superpower on set.
Name: Miranda May
Location: London
Repped by/in: GREATERGOOD (USA) / Darling Films (UK) / Rep Media - music videos (UK) / Radiance Pictures - music videos (USA)
Awards: Best Director 2025 Creative Circle
Miranda> I have two new projects both shot in virtual production studios, a new beauty campaign and a music video with choreography.
Miranda> The ability to shoot and travel anywhere is amazing. I love going to all parts of the world to work. I also love how the ad industry is really embracing a stylised approach, naturally I am a very creative Director with a specific style even in commercials so that’s exciting too.
Miranda> A script with a really 'out there' story and visual concept is what I love. Something where the creative is sophisticated and not afraid of being a statement piece. I come from a fashion, editorial, music world so the more the visual has to say creatively the more excited I am.
Miranda> The brief is everything so I would outline what it’s really asking me and refine it into a log line. Define the themes, the mood, the emotion, who it’s supposed to be for. This is the core building blocks for creating a really strong, relevant concept for that brand.
Research and context on the brand are essential. An ad to a Director is just one film, but an ad to a brand is a small piece in years’ worth of strategy, I’m very aware of that and make sure my concept fits in that journey, not just as an amazing standalone piece.
Then, visuals are everything, extremely strong visual references, being really clear about what it is, nothing weak or vague, my treatments are specific, detailed and in-depth, you’ll know exactly what you’re getting, and you’ll see the visual as clearly as I do.
Miranda> Regardless of how well you know the brand, understanding its legacy and its future is the first step every treatment process should take to create meaningful work and a strong idea that responds to the brief with purpose.
Miranda> The difference between a director and a creative person is social skills. Anyone can write a treatment or think of a good idea, being a director is about communication and decision making. With that in mind, the most important relationship is all of them, there is no one 'more or less important', a director should be able to communicate with everyone, but the most important thing a director needs in any of their relationships is the ability to know what they want and communicate that effectively.
Miranda> Fashion beauty sport luxury. Anything creative, stylised and editorial. Anything with great story telling or a striking visual or both. I am a writer and a visualiser. I can do the stuff that looks good, I can also do the stuff that tells a story. And I love both.
Miranda> No one thinks I’m the director when I walk on set. I’m told the models are supposed to go to the other room, or the makeup team aren’t supposed to be here yet. I was told: 'Don’t sit there, that’s the director’s chair' once. But I happily prove them wrong every time – it’s fun.
Miranda> No problem is crazy, things happen and you need to deal with it and move forward.
Miranda> It depends on the client, the relationship they have with you and the agency. Again it’s about communication. At the end of the day, it’s your job to communicate why something is the right decision for their concept, if you don’t communicate it well enough, they won’t get it and that’s on you. It’s also at the end of the day their job to make decisions, and you need to honour that. As long as you create an idea that’s right for the project, you shouldn’t have a conflict between what you and the client wants.
Miranda> I already mentor a lot on set, I do a lot of workshops, panel talks etc.
Miranda> Knowledge of deliverables across platforms is essential but it shouldn’t affect the idea. Create the core idea, execute it in all the formats next.
Miranda> My last two shoots were virtual production, I use visual ai in all my treatments. Times are changing and you need to move with them, in a way that benefits your ability to communicate an idea.
Miranda> Batiste
Sky
Adidas Huni