The Sixth Commandment and Top Boy each win two BAFTAs
Performance category winners are: Timothy Spall; Sarah Lancashire; Jasmine Jobson; Matthew Macfadyen; Mawaan Rizwan; Gbemisola Ikumelo and Joe Lycett
Public vote Happy Valley’s final kitchen showdown between Catherine Cawood and Tommy Lee Royce as the P&O Cruises Memorable Moment Award winner
Lorraine Kelly receives BAFTA Special Award
Baroness Floella Benjamin receives BAFTA Fellowship
View the full list of winners here
BAFTA has announced the winners of the BAFTA Television Awards with P&O Cruises 2024 at a star-studded ceremony in London. Celebrating the very best of television broadcast in 2023, the show was hosted by award-winning comedians Rob Beckett and Romesh Ranganathan and broadcast on BBC One and iPlayer, as well as @BAFTA’s social channels.
Sarah Lancashire won the BAFTA for Leading Actress for her role in Happy Valley, her second BAFTA for the same role. Happy Valley also won the only award voted for by the British public, P&O Cruises Memorable Moment Award, for Catherine Cawood and Tommy Lee Royce’s final kitchen showdown moment.
Jasmine Jobson won her first BAFTA – Supporting Actress for her performance in Top Boy, which also won the BAFTA for Drama Series.
Timothy Spall won his first BAFTA – Leading Actor for his performance in true-crime drama The Sixth Commandment, which also won the BAFTA for the Limited Drama.
Matthew Macfadyen won the BAFTA for Supporting Actor for his role in the final series of Succession – the second time he has won for this role, having won the BAFTA for Supporting Actor in 2022.
Mawaan Rizwan, the writer, comedian and creator of Juice won his first BAFTA for Male Performance in a Comedy.
Gbemisola Ikumelo won Female Performance in a Comedy for Black Ops, which she also co-created. This is her first performance BAFTA.
Following his 2023 BAFTA win in the Features category, Joe Lycett was awarded the BAFTA for Entertainment Performance for his show Late Night Lycett.
Rob Beckett and Romesh Ranganathan collected the BAFTA for Comedy Entertainment for Rob & Romesh VS.
Following Kat Sadler’s win at the BAFTA Television Craft Awards last month, Such Brave Girls won in Scripted Comedy.
Ellie Simmonds: Finding My Secret Family won Single Documentary; Cheltenham Festival Day One won Sports Coverage; Eurovision Song Contest 2023 won Live Event Coverage; Casualty won Soap for the second year running; Scam Interceptors won Daytime; Strictly Come Dancing won Entertainment; Factual Entertainment was won by Celebrity Race Across the World; Reality was won by Squid Game: The Challenge.
Lockerbie won Factual Series; Specialist Factual was won by White Nanny, Black Child; News Coverage was presented to Channel 4 News: Inside Gaza: Israel and Hamas At War; Current Affairs was won by The Shamima Begum Story (This World); Short Form was won by Mobility and the BAFTA for International was awarded to Class Act.
The BAFTA Special Award was presented by Brian Cox to presenter and broadcaster Lorraine Kelly for her outstanding contribution to the television industry. 2024 marks four-decades of her unstoppable and impressive broadcasting career, as a hugely significant presence on daytime television.
The Fellowship, the highest accolade bestowed by BAFTA, was presented by Clive Myrie to Baroness Floella Benjamin in recognition of her exceptional contribution to television. From the moment she appeared on the nation’s screens fifty years ago, she has been a tireless advocate of diversity and inclusion, and for the rights of children.
The ceremony took place at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall and featured a special dance theatre performance of Rambert’s Peaky Blinders: The Redemption of Thomas Shelby, as well as an exclusive music performance from chart-topping British singer Ella Eyre. The night’s attendees and guest presenters can be found here.
The 2024 BAFTA Television Awards with P&O Cruises was broadcast in North America, the Nordics, South Africa and Australia on BritBox International, in Australia and New Zealand on BBC Studios ANZ, and in 24 countries across Africa and the Middle East on AlThaqafeya and MBC Channels, and on seven ships within the P&O Cruises fleet.
Photography is available via BAFTA Thirdlight. Visit www.bafta.org/media-centre/TV for information on photography and video clips, logos and more.
The Voting Process
The winners were determined through a combination of BAFTA TV membership-wide voting, Juries and Chapter voting.
Given the very high volume of entries to the BAFTA Television and BAFTA Television Craft Awards, the use of Juries ensures every longlisted entry for each category is seen and considered. This year, over 500 voters participated in 43 juries, and four Chapter votes took place to decide the nominations.
Juries are comprised of voters with the relevant professional expertise and balance of gender, background, location and age. Chapters are made up of BAFTA members who hold specialist knowledge in the relevant craft to the category in consideration. BAFTA’s membership includes over 5700 television industry creative practitioners. Latest demographic information on BAFTA’s membership is here.
BAFTA’s guiding principles are to celebrate creative excellence, level the playing field, provide a fair and robust process, and encourage positive industry change.