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The Royal Family and the Academy

BAFTA has enjoyed a long history of involvement and support from the Royal Family dating back to 1959, when HRH Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, was appointed its first President.

Event: EE British Academy Film AwardsDate: Sun 12th February 2017Venue: Royal Opera HouseHost: Stephen Fry-Area: Royal RotaBAFTA/Guy Levy


Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II

The Royal Opening of 195 Piccadilly in 1976BAFTA/Michael Barrett

In the early 1970s, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and The Duke of Edinburgh made the decision to gift the royalties from Richard Cawston's documentary Royal Family to the SFTA in the early 1970s, enabling the organisation to move from its office suite in Great Portland Street, London, to 195 Piccadilly, which was converted to house two preview theatres and a meeting place for members. The Grade II listed building was first opened by the Prince of Wales in 1882, and was formerly the galleries of the Royal Society of Painters in Watercolours. 

In 1976, the opening of these new headquarters was attended by Queen Elizabeth, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Princess Royal and The Earl Mountbatten of Burma. The SFTA was renamed the ‘British Academy of Film and Television Arts’, and BAFTA entered the nation's vocabulary. 195 Piccadilly has remained the home of BAFTA ever since.

On 4 April 2013 Queen Elizabeth was presented with an honorary award in recognition of her outstanding patronage of the film and television industries. Find out more about the honorary Award Presented to Queen Elizabeth 

We are deeply saddened by the death of Queen Elizabeth, whose close association with the Academy spanned 50 years. Read the message in full.


Royal Presidents of BAFTA

HRH Prince William, The Prince of Wales’s appointment to BAFTA’s presidency in February 2010 follows a long tradition of Royal patronage; all but one (Lord Attenborough, 2001-2010) in its history have been members of the Royal Family.


HRH Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh

The BRITISH FILM ACADEMY AWARDS in 1960BAFTA

The Duke of Edinburgh was the organisation’s first president in 1959, a year after The British Film Academy (founded 1947) and the Guild of Television Producers and Directors merged to create the Society of Film and Television Arts (‘SFTA’, a forerunner of BAFTA). 


The Earl Mountbatten of Burma

The BRITISH FILM ACADEMY AWARDS in 1970BAFTA

The Earl Mountbatten of Burma, The Duke of Edinburgh’s uncle, took over the organisation’s presidency from 1966 to 1972. The Earl Mountbatten, a man who at the time was of significant national stature, and a man of cinema in his own right, is credited with bringing films to King George’s ships in the early 20s and designing the conversion system to turn all the ships’ projectors to take ‘talkies’ after the silent film era.


HRH Princess Anne, The Princess Royal

The BRITISH FILM ACADEMY AWARDS in 19The BRITISH ACADEMY of FILM and TELEVISION ARTS AWARDS in 1983BAFTA

In 1971, the Fellowship award was introduced to ‘recognise the very highest standards of work in film and/or television’, and in that year it was presented by Princess Anne to Alfred Hitchcock. The following year, she became the organisation’s third president in its history, taking over from The Earl Mountbatten of Burma. In 1976, the year that the SFTA was renamed BAFTA, the first ‘BAFTA award’ – the bronze mask based on the original design by Mitzi Cunliffe – was presented by Princess Anne to Sir Charles Chaplin in honour of his Fellowship.

Over the course of her 30-year involvement with the Academy, Princess Anne helped increase the stature of the organisation in the UK and internationally at a time when film and television were not considered in the same spectrum as dance, theatre and opera. She represented BAFTA internationally. In 1985, she opened A Royal Day of Film and Television, held at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles. In 2001, when she stepped down as president, BAFTA was an international organisation, with branches in New York and Los Angeles, as well as Scotland and Wales. The main cinema theatre at BAFTA’s headquarters, 195 Piccadilly, was renamed The Princess Anne Theatre in her honour. 


HRH Prince William, The Prince of Wales

Event: YGD EventDate: 23 October 2015Venue: Abertay UniversityBAFTA/Alan Richardson

Since his appointment in February 2010, The Prince of Wales has supported BAFTA through attendance of its Awards and engaging in our learning and new talent activity. Visit the Academy President page for more information on His Royal Highness' current presidency, and past presidents of BAFTA.