Tag: Baftas

  • Bafta host Alan Cumming apologises after ‘trauma-triggering’ show

    Bafta host Alan Cumming apologises after ‘trauma-triggering’ show

    Bafta Film Awards host Alan Cumming has described this year’s ceremony as a “trauma-triggering” debacle following a furore that blew up after a Tourette’s campaigner involuntarily shouted a racial slur while two black actors were on stage.

    Posting on Instagram, Cumming said: “I’m so sorry for all the pain Black people have felt hearing the word echoed around the world. I’m so sorry the Tourettes community has been reminded of the lack of understanding and tolerance that abounds regarding their condition.”

    He added: “We were all let down by decisions made to both broadcast slurs and censor free speech.”

    The slur was audible when the BBC broadcast the ceremony on a two-hour delay, and the corporation’s executive complaints unit is now investigating.

    Cumming wrote: “The only possible good that could come of this is a reminder that words matter, that rushing to judgement about things that we are not fully cognisant is folly, that all trauma should be recognised and honoured.”

    He went on to congratulate “all the artists whose work was overshadowed by the night’s events”.

    The BBC has apologised several times since the broadcast on 22 February, and the ceremony remains unavailable to watch on iPlayer after the corporation removed it the following day.

    In a statement issued on the same day, Bafta said it wanted to acknowledge the “harm this has caused, address what happened and apologise to all”.

    Cumming had already apologised to the audience from the stage at the time for the language heard during the ceremony.

    The BBC has since said a second racial slur was edited out of the show, and that broadcasting the one aired when ‘Sinners’ stars Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage was a “serious mistake”.

    Davidson, from Galashiels in the Scottish Borders, has said the BBC should have “worked harder to prevent anything that I said” from being broadcast.

    Meanwhile, Lindo told Vanity Fair that he and Jordan “did what we had to do” as they carried on presenting the category, but also said he wished “someone from Bafta spoke to us afterward”.

  • Baftas 2026: Full list of winners

    Baftas 2026: Full list of winners

    The winners of the Bafta Film Awards, which celebrate the best on the big screen from the past 12 months, have been revealed.

    ‘One Battle After Another’ won the most awards with six, followed by ‘I Swear’, ‘Sinners’ and ‘Frankenstein’, which got three each, while Hamnet won two.

    Here are the winners and nominations in full.

    Best film

    • Winner: One Battle After Another
    • Hamnet
    • Marty Supreme
    • Sentimental Value
    • Sinners

    Outstanding British film

    • Winner: Hamnet
    • 28 Years Later
    • The Ballad of Wallis Island
    • Bridget Jones: Mad about the Boy
    • Die My Love
    • H Is For Hawk
    • I Swear
    • Mr Burton
    • Pillion
    • Steve

    Leading actress

    • Winner: Jessie Buckley – Hamnet
    • Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
    • Kate Hudson – Song Sung Blue
    • Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another
    • Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value
    • Emma Stone – Bugonia

    Leading actor

    • Winner: Robert Aramayo – I Swear
    • Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme
    • Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another
    • Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon
    • Michael B Jordan -Sinners
    • Jesse Plemons – Bugonia

    Supporting actress

    • Winner: Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners
    • Odessa A’zion – Marty Supreme
    • Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value
    • Carey Mulligan – The Ballad of Wallis Island
    • Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
    • Emily Watson – Hamnet

    Supporting actor

    • Winner: Sean Penn – One Battle After Another
    • Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another
    • Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein
    • Paul Mescal – Hamnet
    • Peter Mullan – I Swear
    • Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value

    Director

    • Winner: One Battle After Another – Paul Thomas Anderson
    • Bugonia – Yorgos Lanthimos
    • Hamnet – Chloé Zhao
    • Marty Supreme – Josh Safdie
    • Sentimental Value – Joachim Trier
    • Sinners – Ryan Coogler

    Outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer

    • Winner: My Father’s Shadow
    • The Ceremony
    • Pillion
    • A Want In Her
    • Wasteman

    Film not in the English language

    • Winner: Sentimental Value
    • It Was Just An Accident
    • The Secret Agent
    • Sirât
    • The Voice of Hind Rajab

    Outstanding British contribution to cinema

    Winner: Claire Binns, creative director of Picturehouse Cinemas and Picturehouse Entertainment

    Documentary

    • Winner: Mr Nobody Against Putin
    • 2000 Meters to Andriivka
    • Apocalypse in the Tropics
    • Cover-Up
    • The Perfect Neighbor

    Animated film

    • Winner: Zootropolis 2
    • Elio
    • Little Amélie

    Children’s and family film

    • Winner: Boong
    • Arco
    • Lilo & Stitch
    • Zootropolis 2

    Original screenplay

    • Winner: Sinners
    • I Swear
    • Marty Supreme
    • The Secret Agent
    • Sentimental Value

    Adapted screenplay

    • Winner: One Battle After Another
    • The Ballad of Wallis Island
    • Bugonia
    • Hamnet
    • Pillion

    EE Bafta Rising Star Award (voted for by the public)

    • Winner: Robert Aramayo
    • Miles Caton
    • Chase Infiniti
    • Archie Madekwe
    • Posy Sterling

    Original score

    • Winner: Sinners – Ludwig Göransson
    • Bugonia – Jerskin Fendrix
    • Frankenstein – Alexandre Desplat
    • Hamnet – Max Richter
    • One Battle After Another – Jonny Greenwood

    Casting

    • Winner: I Swear
    • Marty Supreme
    • One Battle After Another
    • Sentimental Value
    • Sinners

    Cinematography

    • Winner: One Battle After Another
    • Frankenstein
    • Marty Supreme
    • Sinners
    • Train Dreams

    Costume design

    • Winner: Frankenstein
    • Hamnet
    • Marty Supreme
    • Sinners
    • Wicked: For Good

    Editing

    • Winner: One Battle After Another
    • F1
    • A House of Dynamite
    • Marty Supreme
    • Sinners

    Production design

    • Winner: Frankenstein
    • Hamnet
    • Marty Supreme
    • One Battle After Another
    • Sinners

    Make-up and hair

    • Winner: Frankenstein
    • Hamnet
    • Marty Supreme
    • Sinners
    • Wicked: For Good

    Sound

    • Winner: F1
    • Frankenstein
    • One Battle After Another
    • Sinners
    • Warfare

    Special visual effects

    • Winner: Avatar: Fire and Ash
    • F1
    • Frankenstein
    • How to Train Your Dragon
    • The Lost Bus

    British short film

    • Winner: This Is Endometriosis
    • Magid / Zafar
    • Nostalgie
    • Terence
    • Welcome Home Freckles

    British short animation

    • Winner: Two Black Boys in Paradise
    • Cardboard
    • Solstice

  • Baftas 2025: Full list of winners

    Baftas 2025: Full list of winners

    The British Academy of Film and Televison Arts awards took place over the weekend with popular shows like Netflix’s Baby Reindeer and Disney’s Shogun taking home top prizes. 

    Among the favourites of British TV were Mr Loverman, Mr Bates and the Post Office, and Industry.

    See the full list of winners below.

    Drama series

    WINNER: Blue Lights – BBC One

    Limited drama

    WINNER: Mr Bates Vs The Post Office – ITV1

    Scripted comedy

    WINNER: Alma’s Not Normal (BBC Two)

    Leading actress

    WINNER: Marisa Abela – Industry (BBC One)

    Leading actor

    WINNER: Lennie James – Mr Loverman (BBC One)

    Supporting actress

    WINNER: Jessica Gunning – Baby Reindeer (Netflix)

    Supporting actor

    WINNER: Ariyon Bakare, Mr Loverman (BBC One)

    Female performance in a comedy

    WINNER: Ruth Jones – Gavin & Stacey: The Finale (BBC One)

    Male performance in a comedy

    WINNER: Danny Dyer – Mr Bigstuff (Sky Comedy)

    Soap

    WINNER: EastEnders (BBC One)

    Entertainment programme

    WINNER: Would I Lie To You? (BBC One)

    Entertainment performance

    WINNER: Joe Lycett Late Night Lycett – (Channel 4)

    Factual entertainment

    WINNER: Rob And Rylan’s Grand Tour (BBC Two)

    Reality

    WINNER: The Jury: Murder Trial (Channel 4)

    Daytime

    WINNER: Clive Myrie’s Caribbean Adventure (BBC Two)

    International

    WINNER: Shōgun (Disney+)

    Live event coverage

    WINNER: Glastonbury 2024 (BBC Two)

    Current affairs

    WINNER: State of Rage (Channel 4)

    Single documentary

    WINNER: Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods (BBC Two)

    Factual series

    WINNER: To Catch A Copper (Channel 4)

    Specialist factual

    WINNER: Atomic People (BBC Two)

    News coverage

    WINNER: BBC Breakfast: Post Office Special (BBC News/BBC One)

    Sports coverage

    WINNER: Paris 2024 Olympics (BBC Sport/BBC One)

    Memorable moment

    WINNER: Strictly Come Dancing – Chris McCausland and Dianne Buswell Waltz to You’ll Never Walk Alone (BBC One)

    Short form

    WINNER: Quiet Life (BBC Three)

    Children’s: Scripted

    WINNER: CBeebies As You Like It At Shakespeare’s Globe (CBeebies)

    Children’s: Non-scripted

    WINNER: Disability And Me – FYI Investigates (Sky Kids)