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1 CONTENTS 2 WELCOME MESSAGES 6 MEET THE HOSTS 10 THE FELLOWSHIP 14 THE SPECIAL AWARD 18 INSIDE THE AWARDS 26 BAFTA’ S NEW CEO 30 BEYOND THE AWARDS 39 THE NOMINATIONS IN FULL 80 THE JURIES 86 BAFTA TELEVISION CRAFT AWARDS 2023 – THE WINNERS 90 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS & THANKS #BAFTATVAwards | Follow BAFTA BAFTA.ORG
As President of BAFTA, I’d like to welcome you to this evening’s Awards, celebrating the best in creative and technical excellence in the screen arts over the past year.
As well as celebrating today’s success, BAFTA is uniquely placed to inspire creativity and provide opportunities for the next generation to tell their own stories, and
I am proud that supporting talented people from all backgrounds to unlock their potential remains central to the organisation’s mission. Whether through its career development initiatives such as BAFTA Elevate, which is currently focussed on discovering and supporting aspiring producers from under-represented backgrounds, or through its ongoing bursary and scholarship programmes, which provide financial support to those starting out on their creative journey.
I share BAFTA’s belief that great storytelling can be lifechanging and I fully support its ongoing commitment to secure a more representative, inclusive and innovative future for the film, games and television industries.
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HRH The Prince of Wales, kg kt President of BAFTA
WELCOME
Welcome to BAFTA’ s...
...celebration of an incredible year in television craft, performance and storytelling. This year we received a record number of entries across the BAFTA Television Craft Awards and BAFTA Television Awards with P&O Cruises, demonstrating the tremendous strength and depth of this industry.
The extraordinary breadth of nominated work is evidence of a screen industry in rude health. And our Awards recognise exceptional achievements that we hope will inspire the next generation. Look no further than the BAFTA Elevate and Breakthrough cohorts, some of whom are among the many first-time nominees recognised this evening. We urge you to seek out and enjoy their outstanding work.
Recognising excellence in television is central to BAFTA’s mission as an arts charity. We seek to inspire current and future creatives and ensure they are given every opportunity to thrive in the film, games and television industries, regardless of their background and life experience. In all activity, from the Awards to our year-round talent development programme, and with the support of our members and committees, we strive to level the playing field.
We all believe in the power of film, games and television to entertain, inform, engage and transform. Whether celebrating those at the top of their form or nurturing the talent of the future, BAFTA’s support can make a difference.
Huge congratulations to our brilliant nominees. We hope you all enjoy this night of celebration.
Jane Millichip Krishnendu Majumdar Chief Executive Chair of BAFTA
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Here’s to a night of memorable moments
From our ships’ stages to the TV screen, we’re passionate about amazing entertainment. Good luck to all the nominees and here’s to crowning the winner of the P&O Cruises Memorable Moment Award.
POCRUISES.COM
I am so pleased to welcome you...
...here today as we celebrate P&O Cruises’ new partnership with the BAFTA Television Awards and also honour the very best talent. We could not be more delighted to be working with BAFTA as we bring together two iconic British brands, both steeped in heritage and with huge synergies in entertainment and experience.
Just like television, a P&O Cruises holiday provides escapism from the everyday. They both provide memorable moments of adventure, relaxation and entertainment.
This evening’s P&O Cruises Memorable Moment Award is the only category to be voted for by members of the viewing public. This award pays tribute to the impact of television in the UK and its power to delight, inform and bring the nation together. I am sure it will be a very special reminder of an exceptional moment.
The Television Awards’ categories and nominees represent a huge variety of programming, which truly showcase the best of the best, both in front of and behind the camera.
On behalf of P&O Cruises, thank you to all our very worthy nominees, to everyone who voted for the Memorable Moment Award, to those who create the incredible programmes, series, dramas and so much more that entertain us all year round and get the nation talking. Our thanks, of course, to BAFTA’s Television Committee and to our wonderful jury of experts who selected the Memorable Moment Award shortlist.
Here’s to a long and successful partnership.
Paul Ludlow President, P&O Cruises
5 WELCOME
DOUBL DOUBL
comedy duo rob beckett and romesh ranganathan are bringing their good humour and natural bon ami to this year’s ceremony as joint hosts.
While Rob Beckett and Romesh Ranganathan are not a traditional television doubleact, in the same way that the legendary Morecambe and Wise, French and Saunders or Vic and Bob are, they nevertheless make quite the comedy duo.
As demonstrated in five seasons of the BAFTA-nominated Rob & Romesh Vs (2019-), Ranganathan’s dry humour and acerbic realism complements Beckett’s more joyful exuberance and quick-witted optimism, making for entertaining television.
ING UP ING UP
Together, the challenges they have faced include training with the England football team, taking on various Olympic sports with Team GB, fashion modelling, drag performing, creating art and learning ballet, to name a few. Despite the nonstop ribbing, their friendship clearly shines through.
It’s an onscreen chemistry born out of their off-screen friendship that developed on the standup comedy circuit. They have known each other for more than a decade, coming through the comedy club system at the same time, often meeting at various open mic gigs when starting out. That must seem like
WORDS: Toby Weidmann |
PORTRAIT: BAFTA/Rachell Smith
PHOTOS: BAFTA/Charlie Clift
a lifetime ago now, given how the British public has embraced their comedy and their ever broadening output. Their obvious talent saw them break into television around the same time too, becoming regular guests on such panel shows as 8 Out of 10 Cats..., Have I Got News for You and A League of Their Own – the latter hosted by Ranganathan since 2020. As two of the UK’s top comics, both have also naturally featured on Taskmaster, albeit in different seasons – Ranganathan competed in season one (2015), with Beckett going on to win its third season (2016).
More recently, Ranganathan has been host of The Weakest Link (2021-) and has co-written sitcom Romantic Getaway (2023) with comic Katherine Ryan, which they also both star in. Ranganathan has steadily been
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Romesh Ranganathan (top), with his BAFTA, and Rob Beckett (above) captured at the 2021 Television Awards
building up his acting credentials, including supporting roles in comedy series King Gary (2020-2021) and feature film Cinderella (2021). His stand-up special, The Cynic, filmed in his hometown of Crawley, was recently released on Netflix. It’s supported by a 30-minute making of... documentary, too.
Beckett, meanwhile, hosted celebrity couples challenge series Unbreakable (2022), served as a judge on celebrity drag competition Queens for the Night (2022) and has a weekly slot on BBC Radio Two (2022-). His touring podcast with fellow comic Josh Widdicombe, Parenting Hell, is one of the biggest in the UK, with 3.5 million downloads a month. A bestselling book based on the podcast was released at the end of 2022.
This evening, the dynamic duo are taking on BAFTA’s Television Awards – they already have form with live shows, having successfully co-hosted the Royal Variety Performance in 2019. They also both have experience of attending BAFTA’s Awards: Beckett has been a citation reader at the Games Awards in 2014, 2015 and 2018 as well as the Television Awards in 2021; while Ranganathan has won twice, for The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan in 2020 and The Ranganation in 2021. Hosting an Awards show is clearly well within their skillset. Let’s just cross our fingers they’re not helping with the dinner service after the show –we all remember the comedy of errors that was Rob & Romesh Vs Restaurants.
OMQ C EDYueen
comedian, actor and writer meera syal’s exceptional work entertaining the nation – including as hm the queen’s favourite, granny kumar – earns her bafta’s highest recognition.
If television is escapism, then the 1970s’ view of the world that a young Meera Syal saw was not the most nurturing, with such provocative shows as The Black and White Minstrel Show, Til Death Us Do Part and Love Thy Neighbour. “Oh my god, it was such a car crash. You would be shocked at what passed as entertainment,” gasps the 61-year-old writer, comedian and actor. “This was my childhood.”
Growing up in an Indian Punjabi family, Syal moved from Essington in Staffordshire, a mining town in the Midlands, to nearby Bloxwich. “Of course you become a performer. You’re changing masks all the time just to fit into whatever environment you’re in,” she laughs. Her emotional journey under-
pins her illustrious career. Whether it was writing the script for Bhaji on the Beach (1993) or appearing in the recent Roar (2022), Syal’s power lies in her crucial decision to reject being the butt of the jokes or be rendered voiceless when she has such a unique and vibrant sense of perspective. Now she boasts an MBE, a CBE and BAFTA’s highest honour, the Fellowship.
“The way that the world makes sense to me, and how to claim
Attending the joint BAFTA Film and Television Awards in 1995, held at the London Palladium
THE FELLOWSHIP: MEERA SYAL cbe
WORDS: Kemi Alemoru | PORTRAIT: BAFTA/Rachell Smith
IMAGES: BAFTA/Doug McKenzie; BAFTA/Jamie Simonds; BAFTA/Sarah Dunn
“The way that the world makes sense to me, and how to claim my place in it, is to tell my stories.”
Read the full interview: bafta.org/about/awards-brochures
In conversation with Nikki Bedi before a special screening of When Harry Met Sally... (1989), chosen by Syal as part of BAFTA's Female Firsts celebrations in 2018
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my place in it, is to tell my stories,” she notes. “It changes the way people see you. They don’t see you as ‘other’ if they can stand in your shoes.”
Syal became inspired by the likes of Victoria Wood who used the power of observation to shine a light on the ludicrous experiences of northern workingclass women. Imbued with a hunger to do the same, she joined the ensemble cast for BBC’s The Real McCoy (1991-1996) and then, through one of that show’s writers, Anil Gupta, the BAFTA-nominated Goodness Gracious Me (1998-2000).
“I found a tribe, I found my people,” she explains. “It was so joyous because we had this shorthand for a dual cultural heritage that no one really had explored.”
Goodness Gracious Me’s Sanjeev Bhaskar joined Syal on her next venture, The Kumars at No. 42 (2001-2006), where he played the grandson of Syal’s blunt grandmother, ‘Ummi’ Sushila. The comedy was a runaway hit, becoming one of HM The Queen’s favourite shows. “She was really lovely about the show and she clearly had watched it because she could quote bits of it,” Syal explains. “I think she was drawn to an older woman being the naughtiest person in the room.”
The show won an International Emmy in 2003 and earned five BAFTA nominations, including one each for Syal and Bhaskar for Entertainment Performance. It was during this period that the pair fell in love and married. “Actors say don’t marry another actor but it’s such a weird, unpredictable, insecure and complex job that it’s nice to have someone who absolutely gets it and supports you,” she says.
Syal’s thankful for her journey so far and that she has so many projects she’s proud of on her impressive curriculum vitae. With the advent of streaming, and with projects that have proven the success of autonomy for creators from workingclass and underrepresented ethnic groups, she’s also hopeful for the future. “We’re getting there but there’s still a lot of work to do,” she says. “We can build pressure together and change things.”
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With husband Sanjeev Bhaskar at the Television Awards in 2013
THE SPECIAL AWARD : DAVID OLUSOGA obe
the broadcaster, writer and historian receives one of bafta’s highest honours in recognition of his groundbreaking career.
“It feels very moving to be recognised by the industry in which I’ve spent most of my adult life,” says Professor David Olusoga, reflecting on his BAFTA Special Award. That a boy born in Lagos and raised on a Gateshead council estate has become one of the UK’s leading television historians, broadcasters and filmmakers is testament to Olusoga’s brilliance. Television, though, took a back seat to education early on. By the age of 25, Olusoga had collected a history degree from the University of Liverpool and a master’s from Leicester. A career in academia beckoned. Fortunately for millions of sofa
historians, Olusoga decided to take a postgraduate broadcast journalism course in Leeds and then worked in BBC radio for a few years.
“I didn’t come from a background with ambitions of working in elitist areas like TV,” he says. “I had no contacts, friends or family in television, but the one thing I did have was lots and lots of ideas.”
Collecting the BAFTA for Specialist Factual with the rest of the Britain's Forgotten Slave Owners production team in 2016
WORDS: Matthew Bell | PORTRAIT: Robert Wilson/The Times | IMAGES: BAFTA/Stephen Butler; BAFTA/Iona Wolff; BAFTA; BAFTA/James Gourley
“I had no contacts, friends or family in television, but the one thing I did have was lots and lots of ideas.”
Eventually, a BBC commissioner gave one of them the green light, Ebony Towers: The Black Intelligentsia (2003), followed by Namibia: Genocide & the Second Reich (2005), which Olusoga produced and directed. The story of a forgotten genocide in the then German South West African colony, it was, he says, “the most inspiring moment of the first half of my career”.
Television has truly embraced history over the past few decades, which Olusoga describes as “one of the great passions of the British people”. This includes such popular viewing as Who Do You Think You Are?, Olusoga’s own A House Through Time (20182021) and his hard-hitting BAFTA-winning film Britain’s Forgotten Slave Owners (2015).
In the latter, Olusoga turned complex, forensic academic history into two hours of gripping television. “You can write
Right: Taking part in an online BAFTA Q&A for Our NHS: A Hidden History in 2021; Opposite page, top: Preparing for a portrait for The Times, in the run up to the 2021 Television Awards; Bottom: With Sir Trevor McDonald at the Television Awards in 2016
an academic paper, and I’ve written many, but you won’t reach millions of people,” he explains.
Unremembered – Britain’s Forgotten War Heroes (2019) equally left its own indelible mark. Olusoga executive produced this documentary about African soldiers who served and died for Britain in World War I but were denied the honour of an individual grave. “It led to a formal apology by the British Government for one of the biggest historical scandals that I, as a historian, had ever encountered – that’s the power of television,” argues Olusoga.
Looking back over two decades on the box, he says: “I became a historian, not because of my history classes at school but because of seeing it on television... It never occurred to me that I might be able to do for others what television did for me, which was life changing. It’s a humbling thought.
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“Whenever people stop me in the street and say how much my programmes have meant to them, I think about myself on a council estate in the 80s. I feel blessed to have been able to play a part in a medium that has that power.” The professor is far from finished with television either.
“I can’t imagine sitting on the sidelines and watching television and not being involved in it,” Olusoga concludes. “I’m afraid I will be bothering commissioners for quite a long time.”
Read the full interview: bafta.org/about/awards-brochures
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“I can’t imagine sitting on the sidelines and watching television and not being involved in it.”
COVER STORY: EVERY ONE IS
Unique
this awards programme is a one of a kind. here’s why...
You may not have realised it but this programme is unique. No two covers are the same. Created by an innovative new software called HP Spark, it features elements randomly selected from our Awards key artwork to create something new. The artwork (above) captures the array of crafts recognised at these Awards, as well as the iconic architecture of the ceremony venue, London’s Royal Festival Hall.
The singular elements of the cover combine to form the full artwork, which represents the originality and creativity of individuals combining to invigorate the wider industry. With a more diverse pool of talent, the more varied, provocative and engaging that creativity will be, cultivating greater representation and inspiring more unheard voices to make great works.
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Art by Abigail Bills
Improving inclusivity and diversity is a priority for BAFTA and we can help level the playing field for talented people to succeed in the screen industries, regardless of their background. As an arts academy representing film, games and television, we are also in a unique position to share resources and learnings across sectors and positively impact the future of our industries. As our Awards illustrate each year, the landscape is ever-evolving, and
BAFTA’s work must be too, taking stock of the progress we’ve made and where we need to do more.
Film, games and television expand our understanding of the world, while sharing stories, making connections and learning from others is a fundamental part of the human equation.
Tonight is about recognising the great storytellers of our time and inspiring the voices of the future. Let’s celebrate them all.
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FOR
CLIMATE Change
when it comes to the environment, we all have a part to play, bafta included.
We are in the midst of an environmental crisis, and we all have a responsibility to act fast to prevent the worst impacts of climate change.
The innovators and creative pathfinders BAFTA celebrates tonight are on the cutting edge of creating a new and better way of making and distributing big and small screen content. Sustainability isn’t just about change, it’s about improvement – it’s about excellence.
BAFTA’s Awards ceremonies are also striving to match this standard of excellence. From food to branding materials, we want to ensure all our ceremonies are as sustainable as possible. Not only does the new venue, The Royal Festival Hall,
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Sustainability isn’t just about change, it’s about improvementit’s about excellence.
PHOTOS: BAFTA/Carlo Paloni; BAFTA/Scott Garfitt
allow us to hold both ceremony and dinner in one place, it also means we can reuse a lot of the unseen (but essential) materials that support the stage, sets and other event areas.
We have also committed to: reusing the set at future Awards; using greener Stage V generators to reduce air pollution; investing in local suppliers and crew to limit emissions from travel; switching to LED lighting; and crafting the dinner from seasonal and locally-sourced produce, with any food waste re-used in agriculture.
There’s a long way to go, but standing still isn’t an option.
The BAFTA albert consortium was created to help the film and TV industry lead the way in tackling the most important issue of our time. Launched as a carbon calculator in 2011, albert has become a hub for the screen industries worldwide to make their content pipelines sustainable and to inspire and educate audiences. Together, with albert, we can create a better industry and build a brighter future.
Find out how to play your part at: wearealbert.org
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who ’ s albert ? we are
Light IN A NEW
these little seen portraits from the bafta photographic archive were beautifully captured by oliver mayhall, in the run up to last year’s television awards, and by elisabeth hoff, at the ceremony itself. from the serious to the more playful, these distinct images offer new perspectives on some of the uk’s brightest television stars.
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Lydia West – Leading Actress nominee for It's A Sin
IMAGES | BAFTA/Oliver Mayhall; BAFTA/Elisabeth Hoff
Chris McCausland – Citation reader for Female Performance in a Comedy Programme
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Jodie Comer – winner of Leading Actress for Help
Ncuti Gatwa – Male Performance in a Comedy Programme nominee for Sex Education
Sopé Dìrísù – star of the BAFTAnominated Gangs of London and EE Rising Star Award nominee
. . .
From Left: Marcus Luther, Lee Riley and Mica Ven – from Gogglebox, winner of Reality & Constructed Factual
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Olly Alexander – Leading Actor nominee for It's A Sin
Holly Walsh and Tanya Moodie – writer and star of Motherland, which won Walsh a BAFTA for Scripted Comedy
Jamie Demetriou – Male Performance in a Comedy Programme winner for Stath Lets Flats
Clara Amfo – Part of the team that won Live Event for The Earthshot Prize 2021
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Suranne Jones – Single Drama nominee for I Am Victoria
Katie Piper – Citation reader for Current Affairs
Rose Ayling-Ellis – audience award winner for her silent dance with Giovanni Pernice on Strictly Come Dancing
Tom Daley – Citation reader for Entertainment Performance
Role LEADING l
in october 2022, bafta welcomed its first new ceo in more than 20 years. jane millichip reflects on the past, the present and the promise for the uk’s world-renowned academy and arts charity.
PORTRAITS: BAFTA/Sophia Spring; IMAGES: BAFTA/Carlo Paloni; Kate Green/BAFTA/Getty Images for BAFTA; BAFTA/Scott Garfitt; Lia Toby/BAFTA/Getty Images for BAFTA
“If we can use the oxygen of awards publicity to encourage the public to go to the cinema, engage in gaming or watch TV, that’s a job well done.”
Over its 76 year history, BAFTA has grown from a bespoke arts organisation to a world-leading academy and awards body, a charity with a remit to support, develop and promote the screen arts, and a membership organisation for practitioners in film, games and television. It also has sustainability, technology and hospitality businesses under its roof.
This is a legacy that new CEO, Jane Millichip, holds in high regard: “I am keenly aware that I stand on the shoulders of the brilliant staff and non-exec advisers, past and present, who have poured their hearts and souls into BAFTA. And it’s a real honour to lead BAFTA on this next stage of the journey.”
Millichip started her career in magazine journalism, and, after writing about everything from
cars to football to media, she transitioned into television in the late 90s. Since then she has worked in production, distribution and commissioning, in the UK and New Zealand, and last year exited Sky after nine years, during which she built Sky’s production company portfolio and distribution business, later becoming chief content officer for Sky Studios. “Ultimately, storytelling is the thread that weaves through my career, as a journalist, producer and here at BAFTA,” says Millichip. “We all hope to eke out the truth about the human condition whether through news or narrative form.”
Acknowledging great storytellers through the peer recognition of the BAFTA awards system is key to its mission. “Acknowledgment of excellence
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Enjoying the BAFTA Scotland Awards 2022
is a significant part of our purpose, and our awards also serve to inspire future filmmakers, game designers and TV creators,” says Millichip. “And if we can also use the oxygen of publicity from our awards to encourage the public to go to the cinema, engage in a progressive gaming community or watch watercooler, game-changing TV, that’s a job well done.”
Connecting the Awards to BAFTA’s charitable remit is vital for Millichip. “Core to our work as a charity is that we create programmes that provide access, development, connections, mentoring and funding for those in society who might otherwise face barriers to entry and progression, either through systemic biases or socioeconomic challenges.”
She continues: “It’s important that this work feeds into our awards system, which, following a significant review in 2020, aims to level the playing
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“It’s essential we remain relevant and representative for all.”
field for all films and creators, regardless of marketing budget, background or life experience. It’s essential we remain relevant and representative for all.”
As for the future of BAFTA, can Millichip offer any thoughts on what awaits on the horizon?
“Where to begin? There’s so much to do. We will continue to rally, advocate and cheerlead for our creative community in film, games and television, both within the industry and with the wider public. We will continue to provide opportunity for the underrepresented, to provide guidance on best practice in our industries and to acknowledge great work through our Awards. We will push for carbon reduction through our sustainability arm, albert, with a progressive carbon calculation and certification programme. Oh yes, and we are working on our editorial greening initiative, Planet Placement, to encourage storytellers to adopt environmentally positive narratives.
“As I said, there’s a lot to do.”
Opposite from top: With Baz
Luhrmann for his A Life In Pictures; Introducing the BAFTA Academy Circle with Joanna Scanlan; With BAFTA Young
Presenter Maryam Drammeh at the BAFTA Children & Young People Awards
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Over the past few years, BAFTA has been re-evaluating and rationalising its children’s activity. We know from their participation in our existing programme – which includes Young Game Designers (YGD), Young Presenters and our UK-wide schools and festival roadshows – that there is an incredible appetite for the screen arts among children and young people. Learning about the crafts that go into making their favourite films, games and TV can be inspiring, and we hope will eventually translate into future industry careers.
Helping young people develop the life skills they might need for any career is crucial for their
own personal growth, which will also benefit society.
“We want to open their eyes to opportunity and potential,” says Lisa Prime, BAFTA’s head of children and young people. “Although we can’t expect every child to want to work in the screen industries, those who do will be at a significant disadvantage without a strong foundation in creativity. It’s an important skill: it’s good for developing transferable skills and thought processes, mental wellbeing and self-expression. Inspiring future career opportunities in the screen industries is at the heart of what we do, but we’d be failing a lot of children if it wasn’t about more than that.”
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bafta’s children & young people programme is about more than inspiring the talent of the future...
IMAGES: BAFTA/Scott Garfitt; BAFTA/Amy Muir; BAFTA/Trevaughn Omari; BAFTA/Quetzal Maucci
BAFTA has now split its YGD and Young Presenters competitions into two age groups, allowing older teens a better opportunity to ask the experts for advice. We’ve introduced a full weekend of activities around YGD and the Children & Young People’s Awards, providing unique opportunities to interact with BAFTAnominated talent. Our regional school visits have involved local screen talent, demonstrating that you don’t have to live in London
to work in film, games or television. We’re also developing a new initiative for the 10-18 age group called Young Creators. “There was a gap in our programme for teens,” states Prime, “so we’ve tried to be better at joining up the dots... Being imaginative, telling our own stories, that’s all part of being human, isn’t it? Giving children and young people the tools to do that is a big part of what we do now.”
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out more: bafta.org/children-and-young-people
Clockwise from top left: Young Presenter Samaira Iqbal with Ben Shires at the Young Creators Day; Forth Valley College students take part in a BAFTA Scotland Key Skills Session; The YGD Showcase; The Children & Young People Festival; Opposite: Young Presenters 2022
Find
THE BREAKTHROUGH CLUB
this year marks the 10th anniversary of one of bafta’s leading initiatives, breakthrough, supporting emerging talent to take the next rung up the ladder.
Above: The current 2022 UK cohort; Below: the original 2013 cohort
Creating something original that resonates with others is hard enough. But doing that again and again is even harder. It was to help overcome barriers that impact progression that BAFTA’s Breakthrough initiative was launched.
Over the course of a year, successful applicants receive bespoke support and advice, as well as mentorship and BAFTA membership, with all the unique perks that this provides. The initiative covers all three screen arts (film, games and television)
“They are all creatively talented people who deserve further attention.”
PHOTOS: BAFTA/Sophia Spring; BAFTA/Jessie Craig; BAFTA/Jessica Chou; BAFTA/Ian Derry; BAFTA
and actively encourages applications from talented practitioners from different backgrounds and experience. This year Breakthrough celebrates 10 years of activity, having supported more than 240 incredibly talented individuals over the course of the past decade.
“Breakthrough has always been about recognising that people sometimes struggle to translate their breakthrough moment into a long career,” says Tim Hunter, BAFTA’s executive director of learning, inclusion policy and membership. “It can be tricky – you get all this attention around being a new voice, but then how do you translate that into other opportunities? We wanted to support those people to do that, as well as make sure they are diverse and from different backgrounds... They are all creatively talented people who deserve further attention.”
The initiative has evolved over the years, and having originally launched in the UK in 2013 is now active in the US and India, too. The crafts represented have also expanded. In the early years, applications were dominated by performers and producers, perhaps because they are more experienced at pitching their abilities to others.
As the initiative has grown within the screen industries’ consciousness, so too have the recommendations, with represented crafts now including editors, writers, quality analysts, cinematographers, hair and make-up artists, programmers, technical artists and more.
“Breakthrough was more about making introductions at the start,” explains Hunter. “Now we offer more pastoral care, with support for such things as networking skills, resilience,
confidence building. We realised not everybody is as equally able to take the opportunities that Breakthrough presents. They may have imposter syndrome or be a naturally shy person who finds networking difficult.
“Our offer is very bespoke: we sit down with each of them individually at the beginning and ask them what their particular
barriers to progression are. It’s about more than just being in the right room with the right people. We want them to think of BAFTA as their mentor, who can offer a supportive hand as well as open our contacts book to help propel their careers to the next level.”
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bafta breakthrough is supported by netflix
Find out more: bafta.org/supporting-talent/breakthrough
Top: Four of the stars from 2015; Above: The 2022 India cohort; Opposite: The 2022 US cohort
TO Ready
Above: BAFTA’s chair of the Learning, Inclusion and Talent Committee, Ade Rawcliffe, helps launch the 2022-2024 initiative; Below: The current BAFTA Elevate cohort: producers
IMAGES: BAFTA/Oliver Mayhall
bafta elevate is not about hitting targets or silencing critics. it’s about giving some incredibly talented and experienced creatives a platform to secure gainful employment.
There’s nothing quite like BAFTA Elevate, an industrylevel professional development and leadership programme created to help support individuals from underrepresented backgrounds. Since its launch five years ago, the initiative has spotlighted 17 women directors, 18 writers, 21 actors and, most recently, 20 producers. It’s an extraordinary array of talent, who have between five and 20 years of craft experience each, but have faced barriers to progression.
“Elevate is the only programme of its kind that supports people at that level,” explains Mariayah Kaderbhai, BAFTA’s head of programmes. It gives them real tangible skills, as well as career and personal development. It’s also an invaluable peer-to-peer network for participants.”
The area of focus chosen for support is decided after extensive research, including conversations with industry experts, organisations, production companies, broadcasters and others, who pinpoint various
factors that need addressing, as well as pulling from the rich data BAFTA gathers from the BFI Diversity Standards’ inclusion in our Awards eligibility. We look at everything from what barriers exist and what stage of career is impacted to areas of representation that are in greater need of attention and support. Elevate also involves key consultants, advocates and mentors who help shape the programme for the cohort.
The ultimate aim is to get all of the Elevate participants, past and present, more opportunities for work. Kaderbhai sums it up best: “Look at the current cohort. Look at the previous cohort. Look at their work. Employ them. Interview them. Pay it forward. They are a ready-to-hire group, who have a level of experience that should mean they are in consistent work. Give them the opportunity. It only makes for a far more inclusive, interesting and imaginative workforce.”
For more: bafta.org/supporting-talent/bafta-elevate
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“Elevate is unique in terms of anything else that’s out there.”
You can’t make great television without investing in the people ScreenSkills: supporting growth and recovery UK-wide Read the stories of the people we support at screenskills.com
39 Comedy Entertainment Programme 41 Current Affairs 42 Daytime 43 Drama Series 45 Entertainment Performance 47 Entertainment Programme 49 Factual Series 51 Features 52 Female Performance in a Comedy Programme 53 International 55 Leading Actor 57 Leading Actress 59 Live Event Coverage 61 Male Performance in a Comedy Programme 63 Mini-Series 65 News Coverage 66 Reality & Constructed Factual 67 Scripted Comedy 68 Short Form Programme 69 Single Documentary 70 Single Drama 71 Soap & Continuing Drama 72 Specialist Factual 73 Sports Coverage 74 Supporting Actor 75 Supporting Actress 77 P&O Cruises Memorable Moment Award 79 THE NOMINATIONS
40 MAJOR PARTNERS BRINGING THE TV INDUSTRY TOGETHER SINCE 1976 22 --------------- 25 AUGUST 2023 KIRAN NATARAJA ADVISORY CHAIR 2023 Director of Content Strategy & Planning • Channel 4 EXCLUSIVE PASS RATES FOR BAFTA MEMBERS FIND OUT MORE → THETVFESTIVAL.COM
friday night live
Geoff Posner, Susie Hall, Lucy Ansbro, Shane Allen, Ben Elton
Phil McIntyre Television, Boffola Pictures/Channel 4
the graham norton show
Production Team
So Television/BBC One
taskmaster
Alex Horne, Andy Devonshire, Andy Cartwright, James Taylor
Avalon/Channel 4
would i lie to you ?
Peter Holmes, Rachel Ablett, Barbara Wiltshire, Adam Copeland, Jake Graham, Zoe Waterman
Zeppotron/BBC One
COMEDY ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAMME
41
afghanistan : no country for women ( exposure )
Ramita Navai, Karim Shah, Eamonn Matthews, Mark Summers, Ali Watt
Quicksilver Media/ITV1
children of the taliban
Marcel Mettelsiefen, Jordan Bryon, Juan Camilo Cruz, Stephen Ellis, Sayed Aman Sadat, Farzad Fetrat
Moondogs Films/Channel 4
the crossing ( exposure )
Handa Majed, David Modell, Ella Newton, Jamie Welham, Nechirvan Mando, Ben Ferguson
DM Productions/ITV1
mariupol : the people ’ s story ( panorama )
Robin Barnwell, Guy Creasey, Hilary Andersson, Darren Kemp, Tom Stone, Serhiy Solodko
Top Hat Productions, Hayloft Productions/BBC One
CURRENT AFFAIRS
42
the chase
Michael Kelpie, Martin Scott, Helen Tumbridge, Caroline Sale, John L Spencer, Hester Davies
Potato/ITV1
the repair shop : a royal visit
Production Team
Ricochet/BBC One
scam interceptors
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC One
43
DAYTIME
bad sisters
Sharon Horgan, Dearbhla Walsh, Faye Dorn, Brett Baer, Dave Finkel, Johann Knobel Merman, ABC Signature/ Apple TV+
the responder
Chris Carey, Laurence Bowen, Tony Schumacher, Tim Mielants, Rebecca Ferguson, Toby Bruce
Dancing Ledge/BBC One
sherwood
James Graham, Lewis Arnold, Rebecca Hodgson, Juliette Howell, Tessa Ross, Harriet Spencer House Productions/BBC One
somewhere boy
Pete Jackson, Petra Fried, Emily Harrison, Gavin O’Grady, Alex Winckler
Clerkenwell Films/Channel 4
DRAMA SERIES
45
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To redeem, please call 020 3747 1234 or email reservations@seacontainerslondon.com, quoting BAFTA. Alternatively, use code DSBAFT when you book online.
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big zuu
Big Zuu’s Big Eats
Boom Cymru/Dave
claudia winkleman
The Traitors
Studio Lambert/BBC One
lee mack
The 1% Club
Magnum Media/ITV1
mo gilligan
The Lateish Show with Mo Gilligan
Expectation, Momo G/ Channel 4
rosie jones
Rosie Jones’ Trip Hazard CPL Productions/Channel 4
sue perkins
Sue Perkins: Perfectly Legal Rumpus Media, Croydon Films/Netflix
ENTERTAINMENT PERFORMANCE
47
ant & dec ’ s saturday night takeaway
Production Team
Lifted Entertainment, Mitre Studios/ITV1
later ... with jools
holland : jools ’ 30 th birthday bash
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC Two
the masked singer
Derek McLean, Daniel Nettleton, Claire Horton, Diccon Ramsay, Lucy Eagle
Bandicoot Scotland/ITV1
strictly come dancing
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC One
Given in honour of Lew Grade
ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAMME
49
jeremy kyle show : death on daytime
Kira Phillips, Barry Ronan, Rosina Andreou, Graeme McAulay, Abi Walker, Charlie MacDonald
Blast! Films/Channel 4
libby , are you home yet ?
Anna Hall, Josephine Besbrode, Luke Rothery, Danielle Jones, Celia Jennison
Candour Productions/Sky Crime
vatican girl : the disappearance of emanuela orlandi
Production Team Raw TV/Netflix
worlds collide : the manchester bombing
Production Team Label1/ITV1
FACTUAL SERIES
51
big zuu ’ s big eats
Alex Gilman, Sam Grace, Chris Faith, Zuhair Hassan, Errol Ettienne, Rohan Minhas Boom Cymru/Dave
joe lycett vs beckham : got your back at xmas
Production Team
Rumpus Media, My Options Were Limited/Channel 4
the martin lewis money show live
Martin Lewis, Mike Blair, Clare Miller, Jaime Corby, Richard Jack, Ravinder Dehele
MultiStory Media/ITV1
the misadventures of romesh ranganathan
Production Team
Rumpus Media/BBC Two
FEATURES
52
daisy may cooper
Am I Being Unreasonable?
Boffola Pictures, Lookout Point/BBC One
diane morgan
Cunk on Earth
Broke & Bones/BBC Two
lucy beaumont
Meet the Richardsons
Second Act Productions/Dave
siobh Á n mcsweeney
Derry Girls
Hat Trick Productions/Channel 4
natasia demetriou
Ellie & Natasia
Nit Television/BBC Three
taj atwal
Hullraisers
Fable Pictures/Channel 4
FEMALE PERFORMANCE IN A COMEDY PROGRAMME
53
Sky proudly congratulates our 2023 nominees at the BAFTA TV Craft & BAFTA TV Awards with P&O Cruises
Lancashire Male
Factual Series Single Documentary Director: Factual Editing: Factual Make-up & Hair Design Sound: Fiction Special, Visual & Graphic Effects Leading Actress - Sarah
Performance in a Comedy Programme - Joseph Gilgun
Make-up & Hair Design International Supporting
Sharpe Leading
Piper
Photography: Factual
Actor - Will
Actress - Billie
Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes
Gangs of London
Julia Predators
Brassic
House of the Dragon
I Hate Suzie Too
The White Lotus
Libby, Are You Home Yet?
the bear
Christopher Storer, Joanna Calo, Josh Senior, Hiro Murai
FX Productions/Disney+
dahmer - monster : the jeffrey dahmer story
Ryan Murphy, Ian Brennan, Alexis Martin Woodall, David McMillian, Reilly Smith, Carl Franklin Ryan Murphy Productions/ Netflix
oussekine
wednesday
Production Team
MGM Television/Netflix
Anthony Lancret, Pierre Laugier, Juliette Lassalle, Antoine Chevrollier, Pauline Dauvin, Kevin Deysson
pachinko
Soo Hugh, Michael Ellenberg, Lindsey Springer, Theresa Kang, Richard Middleton Media Res, Blue Marble Pictures/ Apple TV+
Itinéraire Productions/Disney+ the white lotus
Mike White, David Bernad, Mark Kamine, John Valerio, Heather Persons
HBO, Rip Cord, The District/Sky Atlantic
55
INTERNATIONAL
ben whishaw
This Is Going to Hurt
SISTER, Terrible Productions/ BBC One
chaske spencer
The English Drama Republic, Eight Rooks/BBC Two
cillian murphy
Peaky Blinders
Caryn Mandabach Productions/ BBC One
gary oldman
Slow Horses See Saw Films/Apple TV+
martin freeman
The Responder Dancing Ledge/BBC One
taron egerton
Black Bird
Apple Studios/Apple TV+
LEADING ACTOR
57
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billie piper
I Hate Suzie Too Bad Wolf/Sky Atlantic
imelda staunton
The Crown Left Bank Pictures, Sony Pictures Television/Netflix
kate winslet
I Am Ruth Me+You Productions, Juggle Productions/Channel 4
maxine peake
Anne World Productions/ITV1
sarah lancashire
Julia Lionsgate Television, Mad Ben Productions, Modern O Productions, Inc., 3 Arts Entertainment, HBO Max/Sky Atlantic
vicky mcclure
Without Sin Left Bank Pictures/ITVX
LEADING ACTRESS
59
Multitude Media – proud to be the official PR agency for the 2023 BAFTA Television Awards with P&O Cruises and the BAFTA Television Craft Awards.
Representing production companies, broadcasters, festivals and leading organisations in television since 2015.
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE:
PROGRAMME CAMPAIGNS
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EVENT DAY MEDIA UNIT PUBLICITY
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
W multitudemedia.co.uk
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60
concert for ukraine
Guy Freeman, Richard Valentine, Anouk Fontaine, Tom Cuckson, Laura Djanogly, Jen Bollom
Livewire Pictures/ITV1
platinum jubilee : party at the palace
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC One
the state funeral of hm queen elizabeth ii
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC One
LIVE EVENT COVERAGE
61
daniel radcliffe
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
Funny Or Die, Tango Entertainment/ The Roku Channel
jon pointing
Big Boys
Roughcut TV/Channel 4
joseph gilgun
Brassic Calamity Films/Sky Max
lenny rush
Am I Being Unreasonable?
Boffola Pictures, Lookout Point/BBC One
matt berry
What We Do in the Shadows
FX Productions/Disney+
stephen merchant
The Outlaws
Big Talk Productions, Four Eyes Entertainment/ BBC One
MALE PERFORMANCE IN A COMEDY PROGRAMME
63
TO
NOMINEES AND WINNERS OF THE BAFTA TELEVISION AWARDS WITH P&O CRUISES OB TRUCKS • FIXED RIG • FLY PACKS REMOTE PRODUCTION • SPECIALIST CAMERAS AERIAL FILMING • RF WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY AND SERVICES UK.EMGLIVE.COM
CONGRATULATIONS
ALL
mood
Nicôle Lecky, Margery Bone, Lisa Walters, Dawn Shadforth, Stroma Cairns
Bonafide Films/BBC Three
a spy among friends
Alexander Cary, Nick Murphy, Chrissy Skinns, Patrick Spence, Damian Lewis
ITV Studios, Sony Pictures Television/ITVX
the thief , his wife and the canoe
David Nath, Richard Laxton, Chris Lang, Alison Sterling Story Films/ITV1
this is going to hurt
Adam Kay, Jane Featherstone, Naomi de Pear, James Farrell, Holly Pullinger, Lucy Forbes
SISTER, Terrible Productions/ BBC One
65
MINI-SERIES
bbc news at ten : russia invades ukraine
Production Team
BBC News/BBC One
channel 4 news : live in kyiv
Production Team
ITN/Channel 4
good morning britain : boris johnson interview
Production Team ITV Studios/ITV1
66
NEWS COVERAGE
freddie flintoff ’ s field of dreams
Andrew Mackenzie-Betty, Naomi Templeton, Cath Tudor, Drew Hill
South Shore/BBC One
rupaul ’ s drag race uk
RuPaul Charles, Fenton Bailey, Tom Campbell, Bruce McCoy, Matt Green, Tony Grech-Smith
World of Wonder/BBC Three
the traitors
Production Team
Studio Lambert/BBC One
we are black and british
Narinder Minhas, Becky Clarke, Lindsay Davies, Rebecca Nunn, Ryan Samuda, Jessica Mitchell
Cardiff Productions, The Open University/BBC Two
REALITY & CONSTRUCTED FACTUAL
67
am i being unreasonable ?
Daisy May Cooper, Selin Hizli, Jonny Campbell, Pippa Brown, Jack Thorne
Boffola Pictures, Lookout Point/BBC One
big boys
Jack Rooke, Jim Archer, Ash Atalla, Alex Smith, Bertie Peek
Roughcut TV/Channel 4
derry girls
Lisa McGee, Liz Lewin, Caroline Leddy, Michael Lennox, Brian J Falconer, Jessica Sharkey
Hat Trick Productions/Channel 4
ghosts
Production Team
Monumental Television, Them There/BBC One
SCRIPTED COMEDY
68
always , asifa
Shiva Raichandani, Alex Balcombe Raisilience/Together TV
biscuitland
Jess Thom, Matthew Pountney, Christine Robertson, Jon Rolph
Fremantle, North Bridge Media/ All 4
how to be a person
Anna Hashmi, Sindha Agha, Samira Mian, Anne Perri, Tobi Kyeremateng
The Corner Shop/E4
kingpin cribs
Lucy Johnstone, Benjamin Zand, Joshua Reynolds, Flaminia Giambalvo, Rory Murphy, Fiona Clark
Zandland Films/YouTube –Channel 4 Documentaries
SHORT FORM PROGRAMME
69
chernobyl : the lost tapes
James Jones, Darren Kemp, Rupert Houseman, Serhiy Solodko, Joanna Marshall, Sasha Odynova
Top Hat/Sky Documentaries
our falklands war : a frontline story
Guy King, Saskia Rusher, Simon McMahon, Zac Beattie, Guy Meachin, Libby Taylor The Garden Productions/ BBC Two
escape from kabul airport
Jamie Roberts, William Grayburn, Dan Reed
AMOS Pictures, HBO, ARTE/BBC Two
the real mo farah
Leo Burley, Hannah Richards, Rick Barker, Marvyn Benoit, Shona Thompson, Zad Rogers
Atomized Studios, Red Bull Studios/BBC One
Given in honour of Robert Flaherty
SINGLE DOCUMENTARY
70
i am ruth
Dominic Savage, Krishnendu Majumdar, Josh Hyams, Kate Winslet, Richard Yee, David Charap
Me+You Productions, Juggle Productions/Channel 4
the house
Paloma Baeza, Niki Lindroth von Bahr, Emma De Swaef, Marc James Roels, Charlotte Bavasso, Christopher O’Reilly Nexus Studios/Netflix
life and death in the warehouse
Joseph Bullman, Helen Black, Tracie Simpson, Aysha Rafaele, Tim Hodges, Steve Lawes BBC Studios/BBC Three
SINGLE DRAMA
71
casualty
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC One
eastenders
Production Team
BBC Studios/BBC One
emmerdale
Production Team
ITV Studios/ITV1
SOAP & CONTINUING DRAMA
72
aids : the unheard tapes
Leanne Klein, Morgana Pugh, Mark Henderson, Graham Taylor, Charlotte Howard-van Gool
Wall to Wall Media/BBC Two
the green planet
Michael Gunton, Rupert Barrington, Paul Williams, Peter Bassett, Rosie Thomas, Elisabeth Oakham
BBC Studios Natural History Unit, PBS, Bilibili, ZDF, China Media Group CCTV-9, France Télévisions, The Open University/BBC One
how to survive a dictator with munya chawawa
Production Team
Rumpus Media/Channel 4
russia 1985-1999: traumazone
Adam Curtis, Sandra Gorel, Rose Garnett, Grigor Atanesian BBC Film/BBC iPlayer
Given in honour of Huw Wheldon
SPECIALIST FACTUAL
73
birmingham 2022 commonwealth games
Production Team BBC Sport, Sunset+Vine/ BBC One
uefa women ’ s euro 2022
Production Team Whisper, BBC Sport/ BBC One
wimbledon 2022
Production Team BBC Sport, Wimbledon Broadcast Services/ BBC One
SPORTS COVERAGE
74
adeel akhtar
Sherwood House Productions/ BBC One
jack lowden
Slow Horses See-Saw Films/Apple TV+
josh finan
The Responder Dancing Ledge/BBC One
salim daw
The Crown Left Bank Pictures, Sony Pictures Television/Netflix
samuel bottomley
Somewhere Boy
Clerkenwell Films/Channel 4
will sharpe
The White Lotus HBO, Rip Cord, The District/Sky Atlantic
SUPPORTING ACTOR
75
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adelayo adedayo
The Responder
Dancing Ledge/BBC One
anne - marie duff
Bad Sisters Merman, ABC Signature/ Apple TV+
fiona shaw
Andor
Lucasfilm/Disney+
lesley manville
Sherwood
House Productions/BBC One
jasmine jobson
Top Boy
Cowboy Films, Easter Partisan Films, DreamCrew, SpringHill Entertainment/Netflix
saffron hocking
Top Boy
Cowboy Films, Easter Partisan Films, DreamCrew, SpringHill Entertainment/Netflix
All nominations correct at time of press
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
77
BRUT RÉSERVE
SOPHISTICATION AND BALANCE
OFFICIAL CHAMPAGNE TO BAFTA
derry girls
The finale, the people of Northern Ireland vote overwhelmingly for peace Hat Trick Productions/Channel 4
heartstopper
Nick and Charlie’s first kiss See-Saw Films/Netflix
platinum jubilee : party at the palace
Paddington meets the Queen BBC Studios/BBC One
stranger things
Lucas, Dustin and Steve rescue Max from the demonic Vecna by playing her favourite song –Kate Bush’s ‘Running Up That Hill’
Monkey Massacre Productions, 21 Laps Entertainment/Netflix
the real mo farah
Sir Mo Farah revealing he was illegally trafficked to the UK Atomized Studios, Red Bull Studios/BBC One
the traitors
The final roundtable Studio Lambert/BBC One
As voted for by the public
MEMORABLE MOMENT AWARD
79 P&O
CRUISES
THE JURIES
comedy entertainment programme
Claire Zolkwer (Chair)
Victoria Ashbourne
Gerard Barry
Gary Chippington
Andy Culpin
Isabel Forte
Eddie Kadi
Shappi Khorsandi
Simon London
Derek McLean
Jessie Swanson
current affairs
Rajiv Nathwani (Chair)
Hugh Davies
Jasmine Dotiwala
Lewis Goodall
Daniel Gordon
Moya Lothian-McLean
Dan Louw
Laura Martin-Robinson
Sophia Smith Galer
Emma Wakefield
daytime
Carl Callam (Chair)
Carl Akkouh
Amina Badresingh
Fi Cotter Craig
Rina Dayalji
Cam de la Huerta
Sally Debonnaire
Kulvinder Goodman
Tim Hancock
Jasmyn McGuile
Caroline O’Neill
Adrian Padmore
Joff Powell
drama series
Emma Butt (Chair)
Colin Barr
Karen Bryson
Emma Collins
Roger Goldby
Jermain Julien
Jen Kenwood
Chris May
Oona Menges
Kath Pollard
Miranda Walker
entertainment performance
Adeel Amini (Chair)
Madeline Addy
Mehreen Baig
Josephine Brassey
Dino Charalambous
Liz Clare
Ed de Burgh
Luti Fagbenle
Dinkesh Miesuria
Aaron Morgan
Shona Norval
Ruchika Tagore
80
entertainment programme
Hilary Rosen (Chair)
Wiliam Edwards
Nazleen Karim
Melanie Leach
Jo Maney
Michael Mannes
Caitlin Moran
Clare Pizey
Javone Prince
Mat Steiner
Tom Whitrow
Vanessa Woodard
factual series
Dan Isaacs (Chair)
Ravinder Chahal
Richard Cook
Scarlette Douglas
Ursula Macfarlane
Julia Nottingham
Lisa Perrin
Archie Powell
Mark Radice
Tanya Shaw
Sanjay Singhal
Alex Thomas
features
Lara Akeju (Chair)
Anna Abenson
Shani Dhanda
Sidra Khan
Claudia Lewis
Nadine Nohr
Gillane Seaborne
Reva Sharma
Nick Shearman
Ranj Singh
female performance in a comedy programme
Marc Samuelson (Chair)
Olivia Colman
Petra Fried
Saurabh Kakkar
Lucy Lumsden
Ania Magliano
Ambika Mod
Simon Neal
John Pocock
Jack Rooke
Alice Seabright
international
Ade Rawcliffe (Chair)
Sheun Adelasoye
Ariyon Bakare
Ruth Berry
Martha Brass
Peter Carlton
Jules Hussey
George Kay
Sarah Monteith
Isobel Nicholson
Jesse Quinones
Joel Wilson
81
leading actor
Krishnendu Majumdar (Chair)
Levi David Addai
Arsher Ali
Prano Bailey-Bond
Claes Bang
Candice Carty-Williams
Steven Cree
Boyd Hilton
Amanda Jenks
Nichola Martin
Kate Ogborn
Colin Salmon
leading actress
Beryl Richards (Chair)
Roger Ashton-Griffiths
Philippa Braithwaite
Charithra Chandran
Sophia Di Martino
Angela Grosvenor
Alex Hamilton
Brady Hood
Elwen Rowlands
Amit Shah
live event coverage
Pete Andrews (Chair)
Ayo Akinwolere
Carol Baffour-Awuah
Chris Bairstow
Harry Bell
Craig Chaplin
Geraldine Dowd
Helen Kuttner
James Russell
Laura Watts
male performance in a comedy programme
Paul Gilbert (Chair)
Stephen K Amos
Nicky Bligh
Dominic Brigstocke
Ryan J Brown
Sophie Clarke-Jervoise
Paul Coleman
Ria Lina
Rhian Petty
Joe Sims
mini - series
Katie Player (Chair)
Baff Akoto
Janet Awe
Chris Clark
Mickey Down
Mark Freeland
David Gyasi
Laura Hastings-Smith
Amy Neil
Victoria Smurfit
Freddie Stabb
Nikki Wilson
news coverage
Christine Healy (Chair)
John Deering
Poppy Dixon
Daniel Garrahan
Masood Khan
Paul Ziad Nassar
Joanna Potts
Sarah Ryder
Kofi Smiles
Laura Trimble
Katie Vanneck-Smith
Lucy West
Layla Wright
82
reality & constructed factual
Dan Maynard (Chair)
Matt Baker
Georgia Brown
Doug Bryson
Zeenat Butt
Sam Campbell
Jo Coffey
Scarlett Ewens
Daran Little
Emile Nawagamuwa
Kelly Sweeney
scripted comedy
Becky Cadman (Chair)
Anna Blue
Carly Brown
Cash Carraway
Errol Ettienne
Lynsey Evans
Nerys Evans
Ludo Graham
Ben Riley
Frog Stone
Iain Wimbush
short form
Anne Morrison (Chair)
George Cowin
Ada Enechi
Chris Fry
Anna Hall
Katie Lamborn
Ben Mallaby
Ed Moustafa
Amit Sharma
Ellora Torchia
Sarah Vignoles
single documentary
Denise Seneviratne (Chair)
Todd Austin
Heenan Bhatti
Ninder Billing
Belle Borgeaud
Nia Dryhurst
Jeremy Lee
Tom Porter
Andrew Miller
David Sumnall
Emma Westcott
single drama
Dan Isaacs (Chair)
Thomas Benski
Nicole Charles
Dan Jackson
Kristin Jones
Ruth Kenley-Letts
Simon Maloney
Sumrah Mohammed
Sian Robins-Grace
Adjani Salmon
Ed Sinclair
Tom Winchester
soap & continuing drama
Rajiv Nathwani (Chair)
Barry Agnew
Jordan Barrett
Lauren Evans
Simon Gibney
Mandip Gill
Stephen Greenhorn
Joe Mace
Jon Peake
Kate Phillips
Sohail Shah
83
specialist factual
Nicky Sargent (Chair)
Meriel Beale
Sara Brailsford
Harjeet Chhokar
Neil Crombie
Bettany Hughes
Samantha Lawrence
Marcus Plowright
Tamsin Summers
sports coverage
Miles Jacobson (Chair)
Sue Agyeman
Sue Anstiss
Martin Bayfield
Mihir Bose
James Davidson
Stephanie Hilborne
Alex Holden
Suzi Perry
Stewart Sugg
Iwan Thomas
Ben Turner
supporting actor
Sara Putt (Chair)
Gary Davy
Leonie Elliott
Jessica Gardner
Gillian Hawser
Lauren Lyle
Darcia Martin
Tim Renkow
Delyth Scudamore
Richard Signy
supporting actress
Christine Healy (Chair)
Josh Cole
Izabella Curry
Julie Gardner
Michael Hooley
Amrit Kaur
Sarah Lancashire
Sarah Niles
Ukweli Roach
Jo Southwell
p & o cruises memorable moment award
Sara Putt (Chair)
Scott Bryan
Lewis Corner
Rhianna Dhillon
Caroline Frost
Boyd Hilton
Michael Hogan
Jake Kanter
Jazmin Kopotsha
Mark Lawson
Rod McPhee
Louise Pentland
Kerri-Ann Roper
For details of the voting process, including any key changes made for 2023, please visit: awards.bafta.org/entry
84
Congratulations to all nominees and winners From BAFTA’s official scrutineers. Recognising talent, achievement and impact, together. deloitte.co.uk/TMT © 2023 Deloitte LLP. All rights reserved.
BAFTA TELEVISION CRAFT AWARDS 2023 WINNERS
an official television craft partner
the winners of the bafta television craft awards in 2023, held on 23 april, were...
COSTUME DESIGN
category sponsor
DIRECTOR: MULTI-CAMERA
directing team
The State Funeral of HM Queen Elizabeth II BBC Studios/BBC One
jane petrie
The Essex Serpent
See-Saw Films/Apple TV+
DIRECTOR: FACTUAL
felicity morris
The Tinder Swindler
Raw TV, Gaspin Media, AGC Studios/Netflix
DIRECTOR: FICTION
category sponsor
EDITING: FACTUAL
rupert houseman
Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes
Top Hat/Sky Documentaries
EDITING: FICTION
selina macarthur
This Is Going to Hurt
SISTER, Terrible Productions/ BBC One
EMERGING TALENT: FACTUAL
william stefan smith
Top Boy
Cowboy Films, Easter Partisan Films, DreamCrew, SpringHill Entertainment/Netflix
charlie melville (Producer/Director)
John & Joe Bishop: Life After Deaf
South Shore Productions, Lola/ITV1
86
EMERGING TALENT: FICTION
category sponsor
ORIGINAL MUSIC: FACTUAL
jessica jones
Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story
72 Films/Netflix
pete jackson (Writer)
Somewhere Boy
Clerkenwell Films/Channel 4
ENTERTAINMENT CRAFT TEAM
category sponsor
ORIGINAL MUSIC: FICTION
nic Ô le lecky , bryan senti , kwame ‘ kz ’
kwei - armah jr
Mood
Bonafide Films/BBC Three
catherine land , david bishop , patrick doherty , richard sillitto , david newton , joe phillips
Strictly Come Dancing
BBC Studios/BBC One
MAKE UP & HAIR DESIGN
amanda knight , barrie gower , rosalia culora
House of the Dragon
HBO, 1:26 Pictures, Bastard Sword, GRRM
Productions/Sky Atlantic
PHOTOGRAPHY: FACTUAL
marcel mettelsiefen , jordan bryon
Children of the Taliban
Moondogs Films/Channel 4
PHOTOGRAPHY & LIGHTING: FICTION
chas appeti
Jungle
Nothing Lost/
Amazon Prime Video
87
PRODUCTION DESIGN
category sponsor
SOUND: FICTION
becky sloan , joe pelling
Don’t Hug Me I’m Scared
Blink Industries/All 4
SCRIPTED CASTING
category sponsor
alastair sirkett , doug cooper , martin seeley , paula fairfield , tim hands , adele fletcher
House of the Dragon
HBO, 1:26 Pictures, Bastard Sword, GRRM Productions/ Sky Atlantic
SPECIAL, VISUAL & GRAPHIC EFFECTS
nina gold , martin ware
This Is Going to Hurt
SISTER, Terrible Productions/ BBC One
SOUND: FACTUAL
peter bridges , matthew charles , conrad fletcher , julian gough , andy james , andy payne
The State Funeral of HM Queen Elizabeth II
BBC Studios/BBC One
angus bickerton , nikeah forde , asa shoul , mike dawson , mpc , pixomondo
House of the Dragon
HBO, 1:26 Pictures, Bastard Sword, GRRM Productions/ Sky Atlantic
TITLES & GRAPHIC IDENTITY
peter anderson studio
Bad Sisters
Merman, ABC Signature/ Apple TV+
88
WRITER: COMEDY
lisa mcgee
Derry Girls
Hat Trick Productions/ Channel 4
WRITER: DRAMA
adam kay
This Is Going to Hurt
SISTER, Terrible Productions/ BBC One
Alison Barnett has been an unseen creative force behind some of the UK’s best television.
Her 40 years of exceptional service to television includes the likes of Edge of Darkness (1985), Lipstick on Your Collar (1993), Spooks (2003-2011), Bleak House (2005), Life on Mars (2006-2007), Broadchurch (2013-2017), Grantchester (2014-2017) and many more. In 2005, she joined Kudos to become one of the UK’s first heads of production, having previously climbed the ranks from studio floor assistant to production manager. Along the way, she’s been part of more than 80 BAFTA-nominated shows and 14 winning productions.
While this BAFTA award is hers, she’s quick to praise her team:
“I’m so thrilled that BAFTA has recognised the production office... We’re out of sight, out of mind, but without us everything would fall apart.... You have to wake up in the morning and think, ‘I’m going to work hard but I’m going to enjoy it.’ That’s my life, it’s my makeup and I hope I instil that in others.”
THE SPECIAL AWARD: ALISON BARNETT
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OFFICERS OF THE ACADEMY
officers
hrh the prince of wales kg kt President of BAFTA
barbara broccoli cbe Vice-President, Film
david gardner obe Vice-President, Games
dame pippa harris dbe Vice-President, Television board of trustees
krishnendu majumdar Chair of BAFTA
sara putt Deputy Chair of BAFTA and Chair, Television Committee
anna higgs Chair, Film Committee
ade rawcliffe Chair, Learning, Inclusion and Talent Committee
tara saunders Chair, Games Committee
bal samra Co-optee and Chair, Commercial Committee and Chair, Governance and Appointments Committee
paul taiano obe Co-optee and Chair, Finance, Audit and Risk Committee
co - optees
Kathryn Busby
Sir Lloyd Dorfman cbe
Patrick Keegan
Elliot Knight
Andrew Miller mbe
Siobhan Reddy honorary advisors
Medwyn Jones
Marc Samuelson executive
jane millichip Chief Executive Officer
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committees
elected members of the television committee
Sara Putt Chair
Nicky Sargent Deputy Chair
Emma Butt
Becky Cadman
Christine Healy
Dan Isaacs
Ade Rawcliffe
Beryl Richards*
Hilary Rosen
Claire Zolkwer
elected members of the games committee
Tara Saunders Chair
Des Gayle Deputy Chair
Jodie Azhar
Nick Button-Brown*
Elizabeth Mercuri
Anisa Sanusi
Catherine Woolley
elected members of the film committee
Anna Higgs Chair
Alexandra Derbyshire* Deputy Chair
Geraldine Atlee
Nainita Desai
Alexa Jago
Julie La’Bassiere
Jason Solomons
Clare Stewart
Emily Stillman
Yu-Fai Suen
* Children’s Representatives
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TELEVISION AWARDS PARTNERS
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HEADLINE SPONSOR
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With thanks...
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the television committee
Sara Putt (Chair), Nicky Sargent (Deputy Chair), Adeel Amini, Pete Andrews, Emma Butt, Becky Cadman, Carl Callam, Paul Gilbert, Christine Healy, Dan Isaacs, Dan Maynard, Rajiv Nathwani, Katie Player, Ade Rawcliffe, Beryl Richards, Hilary Rosen, Denise Seneviratne, Claire Zolkwer
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
bafta wishes to thank...
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AT BAFTA
executive director of awards & content
Emma Baehr
head of awards
Kelly Smith
television officer
Natalie Gurney
television craft officer
Nick Boocock
executive producer
Cassandra Hybel
senior producer
Victoria Walker
head of events
Lucy Waller
event producer
Phil Harrison
awards
Daljit Billen, Chloe Fraser, Deirdre Hopkins, Luke Hebblethwaite
Edward Hubbard, Lewis Peet, Katie Warren, Tia Wedderburn
productions
Harry Balmforth, Hattie Barker,
Ella Coveney, Daniel Dalton, Kristen Helmick, Tayjib Kerstan, Rachel Lucas, Georgia Maskery, Joe Okell, Jamie Rowland
events
Penney Chu, Olivia Comer, Sophie Griffiths, Holly Haycock, Elena Shortland, Natalie Stone
executive director of partnerships & fundraising
Louise Robertson
head of partnerships
Natalie Moss partnerships
Amy Elton, Emma Tarcy, Olivia Young, Shaya Kathirgamanathan
executive director of pr & communications
Donna Mathews
pr & communications
Mya Bailey, David Dougherty, Caoimhe Foran, Lorna Gibson, Dingile Kasote, Luka Kenyon, Paul MacMahon, Daisy Margolis, Natalie Paszkowski, Catie Poust, Lisa Wehrstedt, Nick Williams accounts
Michelle Diep
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HOST
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PROGRAMME CREDITS
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2023
TO ALL OF OUR PRODUCERS AND CREATIVE PARTNERS ON THEIR NOMINATIONS Congratulations also to all of our BAFTA TV Craft Awards nominees and thanks to the voting members of the Academy Eastenders The Green Planet Strictly Come Dancing Somewhere Boy Paddington and the Queen Am I Being Unreasonable?
Jubilee: Party at the Palace
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