British Academy Television Craft Award for Best Director: Factual
Appearance
British Academy Television Craft Award | |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Presented by | British Academy of Film and Television Arts |
First awarded | 2008 |
Currently held by | Felicity Morris for The Tinder Swindler (2023) |
Website | http://www.bafta.org/ |
The British Academy Television Craft Award for Best Director: Factual is one of the categories presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) within the British Academy Television Craft Awards, the craft awards were established in 2000 with their own, separate ceremony as a way to spotlight technical achievements, without being overshadowed by the main production categories.
In 2006 and 2007 there was only on category for directors but in 2008 the category was split in three separate categories to recognize directing for different programming, first creating Best Director: Factual and Best Director: Fiction and then in 2011 Best Director: Multi-Camera.
Winners and nominees
[edit]2000s
[edit]Best Director
Year | Recipient(s) | Title | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | Brian Percival | Much Ado About Nothing | BBC One |
Simon Cellan Jones | The Queen's Sister | Channel 4 | |
Joe Ahearne | Doctor Who | BBC One | |
Justin Chadwick | Bleak House | ||
2007 | Edmund Coulthard | Soundproof | BBC Two |
Tom Hooper | Longford | Channel 4 | |
Adrian Shergold | Low Winter Sun | ||
Bharat Nalluri | Life on Mars | BBC One |
Best Director: Factual
Year | Recipient(s) | Title | Episode | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | Jezza Neumann | Dispatches | "China’s Stolen Children" | Channel 4 |
Annabel Gillings | Earth: The Power of the Planet | "Atmosphere" | BBC Two | |
Livia Russell | Grand Designs | Channel 4 | ||
Joseph Bullman | The Seven Sins of England | |||
2009 | Morgan Matthews | The Fallen | BBC Two | |
Amanda Blue | Prescott: The Class System and Me | BBC Two | ||
Jonathan Smith | The Family | Channel 4 | ||
Stephen Walker | A Boy Called Alex |
2010s
[edit]Year | Recipient(s) | Title | Episode | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Patrick Forbes | The Force | Channel 4 | |
Annabel Gillings | How Earth Made Us | "Water" | BBC Two | |
Nick Read | Dispatches | "The Slumdog Children of Mumbai" | Channel 4 | |
Dan Reed | "Terror in Mumbai" | |||
2011 | Dan Reed | Dispatches | "The Battle for Haiti" | Channel 4 |
Gideon Bradshaw, Paul Olding | Wonders of the Solar System | "Empire of the Sun" | BBC Two | |
Chris Holt | "The Thin Blue Line" | |||
Nicolas Brown | Human Planet | "Arctic" | BBC One | |
2012 | David Clews | Educating Essex | Channel 4 | |
Vanessa Berlowitz, Chadden Hunter, Kathryn Jeffs | Frozen Planet | "To the Ends of the Earth" | BBC One | |
Sacha Mirzoeff | Protecting Our Children | BBC Two | ||
Charlie Russell | Terry Pratchett: Choosing to Die | |||
2013 | Ben Chanan | The Plot to Bring Down Britain's Planes | Channel 4 | |
Katharine English | Our War | BBC Three | ||
John Dower | Bradley Wiggins: A Year in Yellow | Sky Atlantic | ||
Ben Anthony | 7/7 One Day in London | BBC Two | ||
2014 | Nick Holt | The Murder Trial | Channel 4 | |
Lee Phillips | Her Majesty's Prison Aylesbury | ITV | ||
David Brindley, Grace Reynolds | Educating Yorkshire | Channel 4 | ||
Sara Hardy, Blue Ryan | The Unspeakable Crime: Rape | BBC One | ||
2015 | Dan Reed | The Paedophile Hunter | Channel 4 | |
Ben Anthony | Life and Death Row | "Execution" | BBC Three | |
Alisa Pomeroy | 24 Hours in Police Custody | Channel 4 | ||
Neil Crombie | Grayson Perry: Who Are You? | |||
2016 | Dave Nath | The Murder Detectives | Channel 4 | |
Adam Jessel | Professor Green: Suicide and Me | BBC Three | ||
James Newton | The Detectives | BBC Two | ||
Ursula Macfarlane | Charlie Hebdo: Three Days That Shook Paris | Channel 4 | ||
2017 [1] |
James Bluemel | Exodus: Our Journey to Europe | BBC Two | |
Anna Hall | Behind Closed Doors | BBC One | ||
Daniel Gordon | Hillsborough | BBC Two | ||
Peter Beard | Gender Clinic: Kids on the Edge | Channel 4 | ||
2018 [2] |
Charlie Russell | Chris Packham: Asperger's and Me | BBC Two | |
Anna Hall | Catching a Killer | "The Search for Natalie Hemming" | Channel 4 | |
Will Yapp | The Real Full Monty | ITV | ||
Xavier Alford | Drugsland | "Heroin Love Story" | BBC Three | |
2019 [3] |
Ben Anthony | Grenfell | BBC One | |
David Soutar, Joe Pearlman | Bros: After the Screaming Stops | BBC Four | ||
James Rogan | Stephen: The Murder that Changed a Nation | BBC One | ||
Paddy Wivell | Prison | Channel 4 |
2020s
[edit]Year | Recipient(s) | Title | Episode | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 [4][5] |
Arthur Cary, Morgan Matthews, Katherine Anstey, Joby Gee | The Last Survivors | BBC Two | |
Dan Reed | Leaving Neverland | Channel 4 | ||
Mark Lewis | Don't F**k with Cats: Hunting an Internet Killer | Netflix | ||
Robin Barnwell | Exposure | "Undercover: Inside China's Digital Gulag" | ITV | |
2021 [6] |
Teresa Griffiths | Lee Miller – A Life on the Front Line | BBC Two | |
Xavier Alford | Storyville | "Locked in: Breaking the Silence" | BBC Four | |
James Bluemel | Once Upon a Time in Iraq | BBC Two | ||
Deeyah Khan | Exposure | "America's War on Abortion" | ITV | |
2022 [7][8] |
James Newton | Grenfell: The Untold Story | Channel 4 | |
Arthur Cary | Surviving 9/11 | BBC Two | ||
Jamie Roberts | Four Hours at the Capitol | |||
James Newton | Baby Surgeons: Delivering Miracles | Channel 4 | ||
2023 [9][10] |
Felicity Morris | The Tinder Swindler | Netflix | |
James Jones | Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes | Sky Documentaries | ||
Emma Cooper | The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes | Netflix | ||
Sophie Robinson | My Dead Body | Channel 4 | ||
2024 [11] |
Gesbeen Mohammad | Exposure | "Inside Iran: The Fight for Freedom" | ITV |
James Bluemel | Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland | BBC Two | ||
John Dower | Lockerbie | Sky Documentaries | ||
Peter Beard, Bruce Fletcher | Otto Baxter: Not a F***ing Horror Story |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "BAFTA TV Craft Award Winners Include 'The Crown', 'The Night Manager', 'National Treasure' — Full List". Deadline. 23 April 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ "Nominations Announced for the British Academy Television Craft Awards in 2018". Bafta. 22 March 2018. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ "Nominations announced: Virgin Media British Academy Television Awards and British Academy Television Craft Awards in 2019". www.bafta.org. 2019-03-28. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
- ^ "Bafta TV Awards: Richard Ayoade to host socially-distanced delayed ceremony". bbc. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ "'Chernobyl' Leads 2020 BAFTA TV Craft Awards". bbc. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
- ^ "BAFTA TV 2021: Nominations for the Virgin Media British Academy Television Awards and British Academy Television Craft Awards". www.bafta.org. 2021-04-28. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
- ^ Ritman, Alex (30 March 2022). "BAFTA TV Awards: Russell T. Davies' 'It's a Sin' Dominates Nominations". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ Ritman, Alex (April 24, 2022). "BAFTA TV Craft Awards: 'Landscapers,' 'We Are Lady Parts' Among Top Winners". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
- ^ Ritman, Alex (22 March 2023). "BAFTA TV Awards: 'This is Going to Hurt,' 'The Responder' Lead Pack of Nominees". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
- ^ Ravindran, Manori (23 April 2023). "'House of the Dragon,' 'This Is Going to Hurt' Lead Winners at BAFTA TV Craft Awards". Variety. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
- ^ Szalai, Georg (March 20, 2024). "BAFTA TV Awards: 'The Crown,' 'Black Mirror' Lead Nominations". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved March 24, 2024.