2024 British Academy Television Craft Awards

Awards ceremony

The 25th Annual British Academy Television Craft Awards took place on 28 April 2024, presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) to recognize technical achievements in British television of 2023.[1]

The nominees were announced on 20 March 2024 alongside the nominations for the 2024 British Academy Television Awards.[1] "Demon 79", the fifth episode of the sixth series of Black Mirror led the nominations with five, followed by The Crown, Silo, The Long Shadow and Slow Horses, each with four.[2]

Winners and nominees

The nominees were announced on 20 March 2024.[3][2]

Best Director: Fiction Best Director: Factual
  • The Last of Us – Peter Hoar (HBO / Sky Atlantic)
    • Partygate – Joseph Bullman (Channel 4)
    • The Long Shadow: "Episode 6" – Lewis Arnold (ITV)
    • Top Boy: "If We Are Not Monsters" – William Stefan Smith (Netflix)
  • Otto Baxter: Not a F***ing Horror Story – Peter Beard, Bruce Fletcher (Sky Documentaries)
    • Exposure: "Inside Iran: The Fight for Freedom" – Gesbeen Mohammad (ITV)
    • Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland – James Bluemel (BBC Two)
    • Lockerbie – John Dower (Sky Documentaries)
Best Director: Multi-Camera Best Scripted Casting
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2023 – Nikki Parsons, Ollie Bartlett, Richard Valentine (BBC One)
    • An Audience with Kylie – Julia Knowles (ITV)
    • The Coronation Concert – Julia Knowles (BBC One)
    • FA Cup Final – Paul McNamara (ITV)
  • Three Little Birds – Aisha Bywaters (ITVX)
    • Time – Amy Hubbard (BBC One)
    • Smothered – Amy Hubbard, Shannon Dowling-McNulty (Sky Max)
    • Black Mirror: "Demon 79" – Jina Jay (Netflix)
Best Writer: Comedy Best Writer: Drama
Best Original Music: Fiction Best Original Music: Factual
Best Entertainment Craft Team Best Production Design
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2023 – Julio Himede, Tim Routledge, Kojo Samuel, Michael Sharp, Dan Shipton (BBC One)
    • Squid Game: The Challenge – Diccon Ramsay, Paddy Fletcher, Rikki Finlay, James Tinsley, Mathieu Weekes, Ben Norman (Netflix)
    • Banged Up – Jamie Heath, Nick Harvey, Greg Menzel (Channel 4)
    • The Coronation Concert – Nigel Catmur, Tom Bairstow, Kevin Duff, Steve Nolan, Steve Sidwell, Simon Haw (BBC One)
  • Silo – Gavin Bocquet, Amanda Bernstein (Apple TV+)
    • The Long Shadow – Anna Higginson (ITV)
    • Nolly – Ben Smith (ITVX)
    • Black Mirror: "Demon 79" – Udo Kramer (Netflix)
Best Costume Design Best Make Up and Hair Design
  • The Great – Sharon Long (Lionsgate+)
    • The Crown: "Ritz" – Amy Roberts (Netflix)
    • Silo – Charlotte Morris (Apple TV+)
    • Black Mirror: "Demon 79" – Matthew Price (Netflix)
  • The Long Shadow: "Episode 6" – Lisa Parkinson (ITV)
    • The Crown: "Ritz" – Cate Hall, Emilie Yong-Mills, Fiona Rogers (Netflix)
    • Slow Horses – Lucy Sibbick (Apple TV+)
    • Three Little Birds – Sharon Miller, Kym Menzies-Foster, Kelly Taylor (ITVX)
Best Photography and Lighting: Fiction Best Photography: Factual
  • Black Mirror: "Demon 79" – Stephan Pehrsson (Netflix)
    • The Last of Us – Eben Bolter (HBO / Sky Atlantic)
    • The Long Shadow – Ed Rutherford (ITV)
    • The Sixth Commandment – Rik Zang (BBC One)
  • The Detectives: Taking Down an OCG – Benedict Sanderson (BBC Two)
    • Animals Up Close with Bertie Gregory – Bertie Gregory, Tom Walker, Anna Dimitriadis (Disney+)
    • The Man Who Played with Fire – Jean-Louis Schuller (Sky Documentaries)
    • Dublin Narcos – Narayan Van Maele, Patrick Smith (Sky Documentaries)
Best Sound: Fiction Best Sound: Factual
  • Slow Horses – Sound Team (Apple TV+)
    • The Crown – Chris Ashworth, Lee Walpole, Stuart Hilliker, Martin Jensen, Saoirse Christopherson, Iain Eyre (Netflix)
    • Boiling Point – Jules Woods, James Drake, Oscar Bloomfield-Crowe, Paddy McGuirk (BBC One)
    • The Witcher – Matthew Collinge, James Bain, Robert Farr, Tom Melling, Matt Davies, Alyn Sclosa (Netflix)
  • The Coronation of TM The King and Queen Camilla – Sound Team (BBC One)
    • If These Walls Could Sing – George Foulgham, Philip Moroz, Alex Gibson, Tom Verstappen, Adam Prescod (Disney+)
    • The Enfield Poltergeist – Nick Ryan, Ben Baird, Kirstie Howell, Jack Wensley, Jamie McPhee, Alexej Mungersdorff (Apple TV+)
    • Formula 1: Drive to Survive – Sound Team (Netflix)
Best Special, Visual and Graphic Effects Best Titles and Graphic Identity
  • The Witcher – Tim Crosbie, Caimin Bourne, Jet Omoshebi, Dan Weir, Cinesite, David Stephens (Netflix)
    • The Wheel of Time – Andy Scrase, Patricia Llaguno, Beau Garcia, Oliver Winwood, Huw Evans, Jodie Davidson (Prime Video)
    • The Crown – Ben Turner, Reece Ewing, Framestore, Rumble VFX, Asa Shoul, Chris Reynolds (Netflix)
    • Silo – Daniel Rauchwerger, Stefano Pepin, Richard Stanbury, Raphael Hamm, Ian Fellows (Apple TV+)
  • Wilderness – Tamsin McGee, Ben Hanbury, Hugo Moss, Paul McDonnell (Prime Video)
    • Doctor Who: "Wild Blue Yonder" – Dan May, James Coore, Painting Practice, Realtime Visualisation (BBC One)
    • Good Omens – Peter Anderson Studio (Prime Video)
    • Queen Charlotte – Studio AKA (Netflix)
Best Editing: Fiction Best Editing: Factual
  • Slow Horses: "Last Stop" – Sam Williams (Apple TV+)
    • Time – Alex Mackie (BBC One)
    • Happy Valley: "Episode 6" – Joe Carey (BBC One)
    • Slow Horses: "Old Scores" – Zsófia Tálas (Apple TV+)
  • Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland – Editing Team (BBC Two)
    • Lockerbie – Charlie Hawryliw (Sky Documentaries)
    • Formula 1: Drive to Survive – Editing Team (Netflix)
    • Beckham – Michael Harte (Netflix)
Best Emerging Talent: Fiction Best Emerging Talent: Factual
  • Fred Scott (director) – London Bridge: Facing Terror (Channel 4)
    • Ben Cheetham (director) – Pete Doherty, Who Killed My Son? (Channel 4)
    • Fola Evans-Akingbola, Jordan Pitt (directors) – Untold Stories: Hair on Set (Sky Documentaries)
    • Ted Evans (director) – Rose Ayling-Ellis: Sings for Change (BBC One)
Special Award
  • To be announced

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Rules and Guidelines or the 2024 awards" (PDF). British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  2. ^ a b Richardson, Holly (20 March 2024). "Bafta TV awards 2024 nominations: full list". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  3. ^ "BAFTA Television 2024: The Nominations". BAFTA. 20 March 2024. Retrieved 21 March 2024.

External links

  • Official website
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