2023 British Academy Television Craft Awards Awards ceremony
The 24th Annual British Academy Television Craft Awards took place on 23 April 2023 at The Brewery in London, presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) to recognize technical achievements in British television of 2022.[1] The ceremony was hosted by English comedian Mel Giedroyc.[2]
The nominees were announced on 22 March 2023 alongside the nominations for the 2023 British Academy Television Awards.[3] Drama series The English and This Is Going to Hurt led the nominations with four each. Fantasy drama House of the Dragon and medical comedy-drama This Is Going to Hurt received the most awards with three each.[2] Production manager Alison Barnett was honoured with the Special Award.[4]
Rule changes
The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) announced the creation of a new category:[5]
- The Best Original Music was separated into two categories: Original Music: Fiction and Original Music: Factual.
Winners and nominees
The nominees were announced on 22 March 2023.[3] Winners are listed first and in bold.[2]
Best Director: Fiction
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Best Director: Factual
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- Top Boy – William Stefan Smith (Netflix)
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Best Director: Multi-Camera
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Best Scripted Casting
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Best Writer: Comedy
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Best Writer: Drama
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Best Original Music: Fiction
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Best Original Music: Factual
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Best Entertainment Craft Team
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Best Production Design
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- Strictly Come Dancing – Catherine Land, David Bishop, Patrick Doherty, Richard Silitto, David Newton, Joe Phillips (BBC One)
- Concert for Ukraine – Jen Bollom, Gareth Iles, Tim Routledge, Steve Sidwell, Richard Valentine, Chris Vaughan (ITV)
- Platinum Jubilee: Party at the Palace – Tom Bairstow, Nigel Catmur, Andy Deacon, Kevin Duff, Simon Haw, Steve Sidwell (BBC One)
- Taskmaster – Andy Devonshire, James Dillon, Dru Masters, Rebecca Bowker (Channel 4)
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Best Costume Design
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Best Make Up and Hair Design
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Best Photography and Lighting: Fiction
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Best Photography: Factual
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- Jungle – Chas Appeti (Prime Video)
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- Children of the Taliban – Marcel Mettelsiefen, Jordan Byron (Channel 4)
- Hold Your Breath: The Ice Dive – Steve Jamison (Netflix)
- Predators – Sue Gibson, Robin Cox, Florian Schulz, Will Nicholls (Sky Nature)
- The Green Planet: "Tropical Worlds" – Tim Shepherd, Oliver Mueller, Todd Kewley, Jessica Mitchell, Sam Lewis (BBC One)
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Best Sound: Fiction
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Best Sound: Factual
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- House of the Dragon – Alastair Sirkett, Doug Cooper, Martin Seeley, Paula Fairfield, Tim Hands, Adele Fletcher (Sky Atlantic)
- SAS: Rogue Heroes – Judi Lee Headman, Nigel Squibbs, Tony Gibson, Darren McQuade (BBC One)
- Slow Horses – Martin Jensen, Joe Beal, Duncan Price, Craig Butters, Sarah Elias, Andrew Sissons (Apple TV+)
- The Crown – Sound team (Netflix)
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Best Special, Visual and Graphic Effects
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Best Titles and Graphic Identity
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- House of the Dragon – Angus Bickerton, Nikeah Forde, Asa Shoul, Mike Dawson, MPC, Pixomondo (Sky Atlantic)
- Andor – Mohen Leo, TJ Falls, Richard Van Den Bergh, Jean-Clément Soret, Industrial Light & Magic (Disney+)
- His Dark Materials – Russell Dodgson, Bryony Duncan, Sam Chynoweth, Damien Stumpf, Danny Hargreaves, Eliot Gibbins (BBC One)
- The Sandman – Industrial Light & Magic (Netflix)
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Best Editing: Fiction
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Best Editing: Factual
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Best Emerging Talent: Fiction
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Best Emerging Talent: Factual
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- Charlie Melville (Producer/Director) – John & Joe Bishop: Life After Deaf (ITV)
- Helen Hobin (Photography) – Frozen Planet II (BBC One)
- Jason Osborne (Director) – Our Jubilee (ITV)
- Joy Ash (Series Producer) – Super Surgeons: A Chance at Life (Channel 4)
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Special Award
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See also
References
External links
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