BAFTA TV Awards: The Crown leads nominations for 2024 – with Happy Valley, Top Boy, The Last Of Us and Succession among big nominees | Ents & Arts News
The final series of royal drama The Crown leads this year’s BAFTA TV Awards nominations, picking up eight nods including four in the acting categories – but misses out on the best drama shortlist.
Happy Valley, The Gold, Slow Horses and Top Boy are the four shows up for the prize, which will be one of the biggest of the night.
Black Mirror’s Demon 79 episode follows closely behind The Crown with seven BAFTA TV nominations, while The Sixth Commandment, The Last Of Us, The Long Shadow and Succession also feature several times on the shortlist.
In the news coverage category, Sky News takes two of the three slots, for its coverage on Myanmar and the Israel-Hamas war. Channel 4 is also nominated for its coverage of the war.
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Inside Sky’s chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay’s month-long undercover mission embedded at the epicentre of Myanmar’s secretive resistance movement. WARNING: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES
After six seasons chronicling the Royal Family, the final season of The Crown covered the period from the late 1990s to 2005 – including the aftermath of the death of Princess Diana, William meeting Kate, and Charles and Camilla’s wedding.
Its success in the BAFTA TV nominations comes despite receiving less acclaim from critics than for previous seasons, and following criticism over its coverage of events such as Diana’s death.
Dominic West, who played the then Prince Charles, is up for best actor, while Elizabeth Debicki (Princess Diana), Lesley Manville (Princess Margaret) and Salim Daw (Mohamed Al Fayed) are shortlisted in the supporting categories. The series is also up for awards for craft awards for costume design, make-up and hair, sound, and visual effects.
The return of Charlie Brooker’s dystopian anthology series Black Mirror receives all its BAFTA TV nominations for one episode, titled Demon 79, about a girl who accidentally releases a demon who tells her she must commit three murders to prevent the end of the world.
Star Anjana Vasan is in the running for leading actress alongside Bella Ramsey for The Last Of Us, Anne Reid for The Sixth Commandment, Helena Bonham Carter for Nolly, Sarah Lancashire for Happy Valley, and Sharon Horgan for Best Interests.
In the leading actor category, West faces competition from Succession’s Brian Cox, Top Boy’s Kane “Kano” Robinson, Paapa Essiedu for The Lazarus Project, Steve Coogan for The Reckoning, and Timothy Spall for The Sixth Commandment.
In the comedy categories, Big Boys, Dreaming Whilst Black, Extraordinary and Such Brave Girls are up for best-scripted show, while Bridget Christie (The Change), Gbemisola Ikumelo (Black Ops), Mairead Tyers and Sofia Oxenham (Extraordinary), Roisin Gallagher (The Lovers), and Taj Atwal (Hullraisers) are shortlisted for best female performance.
Adjani Salmon (Dreaming Whilst Black), David Tennant (Good Omens), Hammed Animashaun (Black Ops), Jamie Demetriou (A Whole Lifetime with Jamie Demetriou), Joseph Gilgun (Brassic), and Mawaan Rizwan (Juice) are shortlisted for best male comedy performance.
Nominations mark a final chapter for several shows bowing out
A very British battle of the social classes is under way at this year’s TV BAFTAs.
Royal drama The Crown leads the field with its eight nominations, but don’t rule out the gritty realism of working-class life in Happy Valley shaking things up and possibly stealing more gold on the big night.
The show’s critically acclaimed return after a seven-year break makes it arguably the one to beat given Sarah Lancashire’s impeccable acting and Sally Wainwright’s masterful script.
Of course, a focus on class is not the only factor they share in common, as both marked the end of their respective dramas. And they aren’t alone – after what has been an outstanding year for prestige television, with some big shows coming to an end.
Succession’s grand goodbye also sees it up for five awards – and while Brian Cox’s Logan Roy was greatly missed by fans after he was killed off early on, it’ll no doubt please him – and them – that BAFTA has put him in the running for best actor.
While some of the characters might have hoped for better, for the shows bowing out over the last year the ceremony in May is a last chance for a happy ending – their BAFTA nominations a final chapter.
The Bear, Beef, Class Act, The Last Of Us, Love & Death, and Succession make up the shortlist in the international category, while The Long Shadow, Demon 79, Best Interests and The Sixth Commandment are the four shows up for best limited series.
Winners of the craft awards, for those behind the camera, will be announced at a ceremony in April, while the TV Awards winners will be announced at a ceremony hosted by Romesh Ranganathan and Rob Beckett in May.
The main nominations announcement comes after the reveal of the memorable moments shortlist, which was announced earlier this month.
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A total of 118 programmes have been nominated, and for 17 out of 44 nominees in the performance categories it is their first BAFTA nod.
BAFTA chair Sara Putt said the “exceptional” variety and quality of programmes nominated reflects the “creative powerhouse” that is the UK television industry.
She also referenced the directing categories for factual and fiction shows, which feature predominantly male nominees.
“I’m delighted to see so many first-time nominees, so much new and emerging talent and so many debut projects recognised,” she said.
“At a time when budgets are tight and creative risk-taking can feel ever riskier, we hope our awards can play a positive role in reinforcing the value of nurturing new talent and ideas, as well as holding a mirror up to stubborn industry inequities, particularly for talented female directors who are still significantly outnumbered by their male counterparts when it comes to awards submissions.”
The BAFTA Television Awards with P&O Cruises take place on 12 May, while the BAFTA Television Craft Awards take place on 28 April
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