Screen Scotland congratulates all nominees, and everyone working across the sector who has brought Scotland’s stories to life in 2024
Partner of the BAFTA Scotland Awards 2024 screen.scot | @screenscots Since Yesterday: The Untold Story of Scotland’s Girl Bands Directors: Blair Young, Carla J Easton / Producers: Beth Allan,
Sinéad Kirwan
Photo credit: Euan Robertson
WELCOME
Welcome to the BAFTA Scotland Awards, celebrating the outstanding storytellers of our time and the craft that goes into making creative work that enriches our culture. As this year’s nominations illustrate, Scotland has much to be proud of in this regard, with the impact of our exceptional artists and productions stretching far beyond our borders. BAFTA has been doing everything in our power to remove barriers to opportunity so that all talented people have the chance for their work to be seen and recognised for its artistic merit. We encourage those from underrepresented groups to join BAFTA, vote in our Awards and become leaders in our industry.
Our year-round activities play a vital role in this. This past year, we’ve had Young BAFTA visit the Isle of Bute, supporting creativity in children and young people and demonstrating what working in the creative industries entails. Scotlandbased practitioners have also benefited from our bursaries, providing everything from driving lessons to outdoor clothing. And we’ve held various networking events, to build a vibrant, inclusive and collaborative community here in Scotland. Help us to make a difference by joining us on this crucial journey.
Thank you to everyone who makes these Awards possible.
DANI CARLAW Chair of BAFTA Scotland
SARA PUTT Chair of BAFTA
THE 2023 AWARDS IN PICTURES
Official portraiture from the BAFTA Scotland Awards 2023 by photographer Simon Murphy.
Above: Outstanding Contribution to Craft recipient, Stuart Wilson
: Citation reader Morven Christie
: Lauren Lyle, winner of Actress Television and the Audience Award
Opposite, clockwise from top left: citation reader Hamza Yassin; Outstanding Contribution to Film & Television recipient, Shirley Henderson; citation reader Amy Manson
This page, clockwise from top left: Charlotte Wells (left), winner of Director Fiction and Writer Film / Television, and Frankie Corio, Actress Film nominee; Chinaza Uche, Actor Film nominee; Tony Curran, Actor Television nominee; ceremony host Edith Bowman
LAST YEAR’S WINNERS
Celebrating the winners at last year’s Awards...
ACTOR FILM
PAUL MESCAL
Aftersun
ACTOR TELEVISION
LEWIS GRIBBEN
Somewhere Boy
ACTRESS FILM
LUCY HALLIDAY
Blue Jean
ACTRESS TELEVISION
LAUREN LYLE
Karen Pirie
DIRECTOR FACTUAL
JONO MCLEOD
My Old School
DIRECTOR FICTION
CHARLOTTE WELLS
Aftersun
ENTERTAINMENT
FRANKIE BOYLE’S FAREWELL TO THE MONARCHY
Production Team
Two Rivers Media / Channel 4
FACTUAL SERIES THREE MOTHERS, TWO BABIES AND A SCANDAL
Alice McMahon-Major, Nicole Kleeman, Vari Innes, Naomi Buchanan
Firecrest Films / Amazon Prime Video
FEATURE FILM
WINNERS
Hassan Nazer, Nadira Murray, Paul Welsh, Arash Seifie Jamadi
FEATURES
DESIGNING THE HEBRIDES
Production Team
DSP / BBC Scotland
SHORT FILM & ANIMATION
A LONG WINTER
Eilidh Munro, Finlay Pretsell
SINGLE DOCUMENTARY
THE MYSTERIOUS MR LAGERFELD
Michael Waldman, Lorraine McKechnie,
David G Hill, Calum Leslie
Finestripe Productions / BBC Two
SPECIALIST FACTUAL IMAGINE... DOUGLAS
STUART: LOVE, HOPE AND GRIT
Linda Sands, Tanya Hudson, Alan Yentob, Ed Horne
BBC Studios / BBC One
TELEVISION SCRIPTED MAYFLIES
Claire Mundell, Brian Kaczynski, Andrea Gibb, Peter Mackie Burns
Synchronicity Films / BBC One
WRITER FILM / TELEVISION
(in partnership with Screen Scotland)
CHARLOTTE WELLS
Aftersun
AUDIENCE AWARD
(in partnership with Screen Scotland)
LAUREN LYLE
Karen Pirie
OUTSTANDING
CONTRIBUTION TO FILM & TELEVISION
SHIRLEY HENDERSON
OUTSTANDING
CONTRIBUTION TO CRAFT
STUART WILSON
EE TV is here
THE 2024 NOMINATIONS
ACTOR FILM
KIT YOUNG
Out of Darkness
The Lesson
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
STEPHEN MCMILLAN
LORN MACDONALD
ACTOR TELEVISION
Loch Henry (Black Mirror)
DANIEL PORTMAN
DAVID TENNANT There She Goes
KHALID ABDALLA The Crown
RICHARD GADD Baby Reindeer
ACTRESS FILM
SAFIA OAKLEY-GREEN
Out of Darkness
TILDA SWINTON
The Eternal Daughter
The Trouble with Jessica
SHIRLEY HENDERSON
ACTRESS TELEVISION
ELAINE C SMITH
Two Doors Down
NICOLA WALKER
Annika
ASHLEY STORRIE
Dinosaur
DOON MACKICHAN
Two Doors Down
DIRECTOR FACTUAL
ELLA
GLENDINING
Is There Anybody Out There?
MATT PINDER
Murder Trial: The Disappearance of Renee and Andrew MacRae
High & Low – John Galliano
KEVIN MACDONALD
DOUBLE GOLD WINNER AT THE WORLD BEER AWARDS 2024
DIRECTOR FICTION
HOPE DICKSON LEACH
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
NIAMH MCKEOWN
Dinosaur
SAUL METZSTEIN
Slow Horses
ADURA ONASHILE
Girl
ENTERTAINMENT
THE AGENCY: UNFILTERED
Laura Capaldi, Selena Mackay, Mark Downie, Connie Sneddon, Andrew Ferguson, Stu Gray
IWC Media / BBC Scotland
RICHARD OSMAN’S HOUSE OF GAMES
Production Team
Remarkable TV / BBC Two
BURNS NIGHT 2024
Production Team
BBC Scotland Productions / BBC Scotland
SUSAN CALMAN’S GRAND DAY OUT
Production Team
IWC Media, Motion Content Group / Channel 5
FACTUAL SERIES
ICONS OF FOOTBALL
Production Team
BBC Scotland Productions /
BBC Scotland NOT YOUR AVERAGE FAMILY
Hannah Currie, Jordan Laird, Tim Currie, Andy Maas, Kathryn Burnett, Laura Jamieson
Studio Something / BBC Scotland
SCOTLAND –THE NEW WILD
Production Team
Maramedia / BBC Scotland
FEATURE FILM
GIRL
Adura Onashile, Ciara Barry, Rosie Crerar
IS THERE ANYBODY OUT THERE?
Nikki Parrott, Ella Glendining, Janine Marmot, Erland Cooper, Rachel Roberts
OUT OF DARKNESS
Andrew Cumming, Ruth Greenberg, Oliver Kassman,Wendy Griffin
FEATURES
EXTRAORDINARY
ESCAPES WITH SANDI TOKSVIG
Production Team Tuesday’s Child Scotland / Channel 4
SECRETS OF THE SUPERMARKET OWN-BRANDS
Tim Robinson, Emma Burns, Philip Goldie, Nicole Kleeman, Fiona Blair Firecrest Films / Channel 4
LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION
Production Team
IWC Media / Channel 4
NEWS & CURRENT AFFAIRS
CATCHING A KILLER: THE MURDER OF EMMA CALDWELL (DISCLOSURE)
Samantha Poling, Eamon T O Connor, Shelley Jofre, Anton Ferrie
BBC Scotland
LESS FOR MORE: THE TRUTH ABOUT FOOD PRICES (DISPATCHES)
WORDS Toby Weidmann | IMAGES BAFTA/Doug McKenzie; BAFTA/Carlo Paloni
It’s not hard to see why the story of The Commitments (1991) would appeal to its producer Lynda Myles. Its vibrant celebration of the arts – centred around a wannabe band’s passion for soul music – is tempered by a sobering finale that highlights the tragedy of wasted talent. Celebrating artistic endeavour and advocating for creative talent to receive recognition has played a huge part in Myles’ professional life.
It’s clearly evident during her eight-year tenure as director of the Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) during the 1970s, where she transformed it into a celebrated showcase for boundary-breaking films, industry-leading conversations and dynamic retrospectives.
It’s there, too, in her successive career choices, including: director and curator of film at the Pacific Film Archive at Berkeley; producing the acclaimed films Defence
of the Realm (1985); The Snapper (1993), The Van (1996), When Brendan Met Trudy (2000) and Killing Me Softly (2002); senior vice-president at Columbia Pictures; commissioning editor for drama at the BBC; co-executive director of the East-West Producers’
This page and overleaf: Collecting a BAFTA as producer of The Commitments, with Roger Randall-Cutler and Alan Parker, from Jeremy Irons at the 1992 Awards; Opposite: The BAFTA Scotland presentation and Q&A event at this year's EIFF
Seminar (the first training programme for young producers in Eastern Europe); and head of fiction at the National Film and Television School, where she mentored the likes of director Rose Glass.
Originally hailing from Arbroath, Myles’ career began at the EIFF in 1968, fresh out of a University of Edinburgh degree. Ironically, she was invited to help organise the Festival after co-writing a scathing critique of it in The Scotsman, and soon set about introducing discussions that passionately debated the aesthetics of cinema alongside the technical aspects of the film industry. She also added retrospectives of the likes of Sam Fuller, Roger Corman, Douglas Sirk, Frank Tashlin and Raoul Walsh to its gala programme of mainstream Hollywood and experimental world cinema premieres.
As further proof of her originality, a year before she became the first woman to be appointed as director of a film festival anywhere in the world in 1973, Myles teamed up with feminist filmmakers and theorists Claire Johnston and Laura Mulvey to programme the first-ever event devoted to women and filmmaking, entitled The Women’s Event. She would go on to prominently feature the work of many talented women filmmakers at the Festival.
No wonder then that such an inspirational trailblazer should become the subject of a film herself. The Lynda Myles Project is currently ongoing with filmmaker and university lecturer Susan Kemp and filmmaker and former EIFF director Mark Cousins, each creating sideby-side documentaries that explore the various aspects of Myles’ outstanding career. A rough cut of Kemp’s film was shown at both the EIFF and Dublin Film Festival, while Cousins’ Cinema has been My True Love premiered at the Telluride Film Festival in 2023.
Fittingly, Myles was presented with the BAFTA Scotland Outstanding Contribution to Film award at a special event at this year’s EIFF. She says:
“I’m deeply touched. I was fortunate enough to be given the opportunity to run the EIFF in the 70s and that experience shaped all my future involvement with different aspects of the industry. I’ve enjoyed so many collaborative relationships on which the film industry thrives and am so grateful for the fantastic support I’ve received.”
Outstanding Contribution to Craft DES HAMILTON
WORDS Toby Weidmann | IMAGES BAFTA/Charlie Clift (portraits); BAFTA/Lia Toby/Getty Images for BAFTA, BAFTA/ Kate Green/Getty Images for BAFTA, BAFTA/Jamie Simonds
If there’s one thing you know for sure about Des Hamilton it’s that he’d make an excellent dinner guest, regaling others with high tales from the casting room experienced across an exceptional career that’s spanned hundreds of films, television series, shorts, music promos and commercials. Many of these eventful auditions are well-documented –there’s the time grime artist Kano hit him or when Jasmine Jobson flung a chair across the room, both riled up by Hamilton and his blunt request for greater authenticity during their successful auditions for Top Boy.
Such Hamilton anecdotes, almost certainly enlivened with a colourful array of choice native Glaswegian brogue, are not just for entertaining dinner guests. This is how the casting director plies his trade, drawing out the best in people who perhaps don’t know they can or even want to act, along the way spotting some of the UK’s brightest new talents.
It’s the reason why his company, Des Hamilton Casting, is in high demand from some of the world’s best, including the likes of Lynne Ramsay (Morvern Callar), Shane Meadows (This is England), Taika Waititi (JoJo Rabbit), Claire Denis (High Life), Andrea Arnold (Red Road), Gaspar Noé (Enter the Void), Chris Morris (Four Lions)... the list goes on. He’s also helped launch the careers of Thomas Turgoose, Kathleen McDermott, Letitia Wright, Luke Fraser, Tom Sweet and much of the Top Boy cast.
This page and overleaf left: BAFTA portraiture in 2020. Overleaf right (clockwise from left): Attending the BAFTA Television Craft Awards 2023, with Des Hamilton Casting director colleague Elan Jones, and guest; BAFTA Guru panel on Casting with Aisha Walters, Shaheen Baig, Amy Hubbard and host Hannah Paterson in 2018
Des Hamilton Casting’s talent for, well, spotting talent was recognised by BAFTA in 2020 and 2023. Hamilton won and was nominated respectively for Top Boy, although with the Casting categories only introduced in 2019 it’s not beyond the realms of possibility he may have earned considerably more since discovering his choice career in his late 30s.
Hamilton’s journey to becoming one of the UK’s most solicited casting directors is one of serendipity. A chance encounter with fellow Scot and filmmaker Lynne Ramsay led to him being asked to lean on his own experiences as an actor to scour the streets of Glasgow, looking for unknowns who would fit her film Morvern Callar (2002). One such find was McDermott, who was working as a hairdresser and karaoke singer at the time, and would go on to win a BAFTA Scotland New Talent award for her stellar performance.
Hamilton has since become renowned for his expertise in street casting – finding talent by approaching likely people on the street and asking them to come in for an audition. Hamilton and his team also cast through more traditional means, including casting calls and drama schools – the final season of Top Boy, for instance, saw 3,000 submissions entered for just one part. And, just as Ramsay took a chance on Hamilton 20 years ago, so too has he returned the favour ever since, providing many others with their breakthrough moment and setting them on a new path.
About receiving this BAFTA Scotland Outstanding Contribution to Craft award, Hamilton says:
“Ultimately, I’m flattered. It’s not natural for me to think about stuff like this. I’m proud that the work myself and my team do is being recognised by BAFTA and BAFTA Scotland, and that the work I’ve done has made my mum very happy.”
This page: Attending the 2014 BAFTA Scotland Awards; Opposite: Citation reading in 2016 with Sanjeev Kohli; Overleaf: The winning production team behind Glasgow 1967: The Lisbon Lions, with John MacLaverty, Alex Gale, David Martin, Jim Craig, Bertie Auld, Noel Nelis and Kevin Walker
Outstanding Contribution to Television HAZEL IRVINE MBE
WORDS Toby Weidmann | IMAGES Andy Buchanan (portrait); BAFTA/Carlo Paloni; Rex/Shutterstock/ Pete Summers
Today, it’s hard to imagine any sports programme not including female representation, whether hosting in the studio, punditry, commentating or reporting from the sidelines, but when Hazel Irvine first appeared on Scottish Television (STV) in the mid-1980s it was a rarity. She may not have been the first – Irvine has
cited the likes of fellow Scot and STV presenter Sally McNair as an early inspiration – but she was a trailblazer in her own right, becoming the first woman to fully anchor a dedicated football programme on British television and the youngest ever presenter of the BBC’s main sports programme, Grandstand, in 1992.
And if visibility is one potent way of inspiring others, Irvine has thankfully hardly been off our screens since making her debut back in 1987, first as a reporter for STV and then as presenter of BBC Scotland’s Friday night sports preview programme, Sportscene, in 1990.
Her affable, almost informal onscreen manner – accented with that deep, silky twang from her St Andrews heritage –matches well with her great knowledge, deep understanding and real passion for sport, solidified by representing the University of St Andrews in golf, netball and athletics.
She has been an integral part of the BBC’s coverage of all major sporting events for more than three decades. Multiple World Cups (both Men’s and Women’s), the British and Scottish Opens, the US Masters, Wimbledon, the Snooker World Championships, the London Marathon, the Boat Race, the Commonwealth Games and many more have all been and gone under Irvine’s expert watch.
She’s co-fronted every Olympics, both summer and winter, for the past 18 years for the BBC – although her first was actually Seoul 1988 for ITV – including the most recent Paris Olympics held earlier this year. She was also the face of Ski Sunday for a decade (1996-2007) and fronted the BBC’s BAFTA-winning 2009 coverage of the World Athletics Championships.
Other non-sporting programmes she’s helmed include Children in Need, Hogmanay Live, the VE Day commemorations, the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landings, the Edinburgh Military Tattoo and health and wellbeing series Feeling Good and Outside Now, among others. She also chaired the BAFTA albert Sports Consortium (now the Sports Working Group) for 18 months from 2000, helping guide the sports broadcasting community to tackle its environmental impact.
Irvine has been nominated twice for a BAFTA Scotland award, both in the Audience Award category, in 2008 and 2020, and as an executive producer she won for the documentary Glasgow 1967: The Lisbon Lions in 2017. She also won Regional TV Presenter or Commentator at the 1998 Royal Television Society Awards, adding a further RTS win in 2006 for Sports Presenter and nominations in the same category in 2005 and 2015. Earlier this year, she was awarded an MBE for her services to sport and charity.
Now, she can add a BAFTA Scotland Outstanding Contribution to Television award to her deserved list of honours. She says:
“I feel overwhelmed and honoured to join the list of Scottish actors, presenters, writers, directors, producers and Doctor Whos who have received this award over the last two decades. I have admired and looked up to these individuals for much of my life. Thank you to BAFTA Scotland for such an amazing and unexpected honour.”
THE JURIES
ACTOR FILM
Dawn Hill (Chair)
Alan de Pellette
David Carlyle
Harmony Rose-Bremner
Marli Siu
Maryam Hamidi
Robin Wilson
Shauna Macdonald
ACTOR TELEVISION
Raisah Ahmed (Chair)
Cora Bissett
Freya Mavor
Lydia Hampson
Micky MacPherson
Siri Rødnes
Tim Courtney
ACTRESS FILM
Craig Hunter (Chair)
Ben Sharrock
David Elliot
Hassan Nazer
Jenny Williams
Lorn Macdonald
Reuben Joseph
Seonaid Daly
ACTRESS TELEVISION
Paul Sng (Chair)
Adam Kashmiry
Chris Reilly
Colin McCredie
Ewan Angus
Kelly Valentine Hendry
Simon Hynd
Uzma Mir
DIRECTOR FACTUAL
Raisah Ahmed (Chair)
Duncan Cowles
Felipe Bustos Sierra
Halla Mohieddeen
Jono McLeod
Lucy Hazzard
Noor Abdel-Razik
San San F Young
DIRECTOR FICTION
Neil McPhillips (Chair)
Claire Mundell
David Arthur
Donald Mowat
Jamie Magnus Stone
Lucia Haynes
Paul Welsh
Shona Mackenzie
Suzanne Reid
ENTERTAINMENT
Dani Carlaw (Chair)
Amna Saleem
Daniel Nettleton
Danny Rawling
Jon Rolph
Nicole Kleeman
Nigel Pope
Sarah Walmsley
FACTUAL SERIES
Linda Fraser (Chair)
Alasdair MacCuish
Angela Slaven
Banjo Beale
Chris Buckland
Colette Magee
Natalie Humphreys
Paul Sen
FEATURE FILM
Ryan Pasi (Chair)
James Price
Lorne MacFadyen
Matt Pinder
Nadira Murray
Reece Cargan
FEATURES
Kirstin Stevenson (Chair)
Andrew Snowball
Andy Sockanathan
Dave Donald
David Smith
Kate Stannard
Vanessa Kanbi
NEWS & CURRENT AFFAIRS
Jeannot Hutcheson (Chair)
Jamie Lochhead
Karen Brown
Katie Lander
Maurice Smith
May Miller
Parisa Urquhart
Susan Kemp
SHORT FILM & ANIMATION
Angela Murray (Chair)
Jack Goessens
Josephine Lohoar Self
Lois Chimimba
Niamh McKeown
Samantha Bennett
Sean Lìonadh
Stewart Svaasand
SINGLE DOCUMENTARY
Neil McPhillips (Chair)
Afua Hagan
Anthony Baxter
Dave Martin
Emma Fentiman
Graeme McAulay
Lisa Hazlehurst
Soleta Rogan
TELEVISION SCRIPTED
Toby Stevens (Chair)
Brian Kelly
Carolynne Sinclair Kidd
Deanne Cunningham
Isis Hainsworth
John Strickland
Kirstie Swain
Sara Harkins
WRITER FILM / TELEVISION
Toby Stevens (Chair)
Andrea Gibb
Dan Winch
Gillian Roger Park
Kim Allan
Laura Carreira
Tessa Buchanan
Zam Salim
AUDIENCE AWARD
Dani Carlaw (Chair)
Arusa Qureshi
Chris Boyd
Gill Petrie
Jenni Steele
Jennifer Reoch
Jodie McCallum
Murray Robertson
Sambrooke Scott
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BAFTA Scotland honours the esteemed contribution to the screen industries by those individuals who have sadly died in the last 12 months.
To learn more about their many achievements, visit: bafta.org/heritage/in-memory-of
BRIAN MARJORIBANKS
Footballer, Sports Broadcaster,
Actor
BRIAN MCCARDIE
Actor BRIGIT FORSYTH
Actor
CELIA STEVENSON
Presenter, Executive
CHRIS MCCLURE
Entertainer
GUDRUN URE
Actor
ISHBEL NICILLINNEIN
Producer
JANEY GODLEY
Comedian, Actor
JIM MCCOLL
Presenter
JOHN ANDERSON
TV Personality
JOHN BYRNE
Artist, Playwright, Writer
LIAM MCARDLE
Director, Producer
MYRA MCFADYEN
Actor
NICK SHERIDAN
Broadcaster, Writer
OLIVER EMMANUEL
Playwright, Writer
PAT HEYWARD
Actor
RON BAIN
Actor
RUTH MCCANCE
Executive Producer, Writer
SHEILA DUFFY
Broadcaster, Journalist, Actor
SIMON CARLYLE
Writer
STU HENDERSON
Comedian
TORQUIL
FLEMING-BOYD
Camera Operator, Cinematographer
VINCENT FRIELL
Actor
BAFTA SCOTLAND CORE FUNDERS
OFFICIAL AWARDS PARTNERS
Whisky
Network
Wine
Water
Champagne
Beauty
Beer
Scrutineers
Award
ADDITIONAL EVENT SUPPORTERS
BBC Scotland
Blue Parrot Events Group
DoubleTree by Hilton Glasgow Central
Edit 123
GM Live Events
Little’s Chauffeur Drive
Material
Progressive Broadcast Hire
Rainbow Room International
WITH THANKS
BAFTA SCOTLAND COMMITTEE
Dani Carlaw (Chair)
Angela Murray
Craig Hunter
Dawn Hill
Heather Campbell
Jeannot Hutcheson
Kirstin Stevenson
Linda Fraser
THE AWARDS SHOW
Edith Bowman
Host
Sanjeev Kohli
Red Carpet Presenter
Karen Rosie
Awards Producer
John Smith
Awards Show Director
Gordon MacKinnon
Technical Director
Mark Leese, Ayden Millar
Production Designers
Michelle Shields
Floor Manager
John Martin
Assistant Floor Manager
Mark Leese
Paul Sng
Neil McPhillips
Raisah Ahmed
Ryan Pasi
Terri Langan
Toby Stevens
Sandy Grierson Voiceover
Carlo Paloni
Official Photographer
Gillian McCormack
Press/PR
Andy Brown, Lynn McBean, Paul McCluskey at Material
Graphics & Design
Dan Johnson Editor
Edit 123
Edit Facilities
WITH THANKS
With enduring thanks to all our supporters and partners, advertisers, jury members, guest presenters and event runners.
Trophy design by Oliver Conway
Based on the original BAFTA design by Mitzi Cunliffe
SPECIAL THANKS
Graham Russell and Donald MacInnes, BBC Scotland
Jennifer Wilson, BBC Scotland Archive
Ron Chakraborty and Emma Powell, BBC Sport
All of the team at Johnnie Walker Princes Street
Terry McBeth, Stephanie Baxter and all at DoubleTree by Hilton
AT BAFTA SCOTLAND
Jude MacLaverty Director
Jenna Cunningham Awards Manager
Arlen Barke
Learning, Inclusion & Talent Producer
AT BAFTA
Sadie Penson Awards Coordinator
Sarah Hendry Events & Communications Coordinator
Nicola Williamson Travel Coordinator
Emma Baehr, Cassandra Hybel, Chloe Fraser, Claire Rees, David Dougherty, Ellie Elliott, Emma Tarcy, Harry Balmforth, Imogen Nolan, Kathryn Thomas, Kelly Smith, Lucy Waller, Luka Kenyon, Rebecca Gray, Sarah Hammond and all staff at BAFTA
SHOW NOTES CREDITS
Toby Weidmann
Editor
Jude MacLaverty
Advertising
Claire Rees
Photography Director
Ellie Elliott
Photography Assistant
Supported by Getty Images
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