Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,604,530 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Attenborough, Branagh honoured at Britain's Baftas


Naturalist David Attenborough, actor Kenneth Branagh and comedy duo French and Saunders were honoured Sunday with gongs at the British Academy of Film and Television Awards (Bafta).

In a glittering ceremony in London, Attenborough picked up the specialist factual Bafta for "Life in Cold Blood," his series on reptiles and amphibians -- the eighth time he and his wildlife programmes have been honoured here.

"Our thanks, of course, go to the spitting cobras, axolotls, golden frogs, dwarf chameleons, those happy tortoises, and this (award) belongs not to me or to them but the production team," the 82-year-old said.

Actor and director Branagh, best known for his Shakespearean roles on stage and on screen, took his first Bafta for a television appearance for "Wallander," which he produced and also stars in as a Swedish detective.

Accepting the best drama award, which comes 20 years after he won a film Bafta for Henry V, Branagh thanked the BBC for commissioning the show.

"They took a risk in wondering whether the world would be interested in the troubled life of a melancholy Scandinavian, but as I have spent half my life trying to make a living doing that, it wasn't such a stretch for me," he said, referring to his performances of the Danish prince "Hamlet."

Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders, who have been cracking jokes together for the past 30 years, were jointly given the academy fellowship, which Saunders said was a "great honour."

Golden Globe-winning US drama "Mad Men," about an advertising agency in 1960s New York, won the prize for best international programme.

The Bafta for best actor went to Stephen Dillane for "The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall," a drama about the death of a British peace activist in Israel, while Anna Maxwell Martin won best actress for "Poppy Shakespeare."

Jonathan Ross, the BBC chat show host who was taken off the air for 12 weeks last year following public outrage over a lewd on-air prank, missed out on the best entertainment performance gong, which went to comedian Harry Hill.

Copyright 2009 AFP Global Edition
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:AFP
Publication:AFP Global Edition
Date:Apr 26, 2009
Words:340
Previous Article:Crisis turning into 'human calamity': IMF, World Bank
Next Article:Cappone hands Toulouse late reprieve



Related Articles
BRANAGH'S DOUBTFUL DANE DOES JUSTICE TO THE BARD : THE FACTS.
Docs and kids: two genres evolve over a quarter-century.
Bourne downs Coens to take people's choice gong
Atonement scoops top prize at Attenborough awards
Never write him off: how Branagh staged his great comeback

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles