‘Extraordinary' and ‘wide open' Bafta Games Awards field hailed
British-made action-adventure game Senua's Saga: Hellblade II leads the way with 11 nominations at this year's Bafta Games Awards, with the head of Bafta calling the range of nominees 'extraordinary'.
A total of 41 games have been nominated across 17 categories for the awards, which take place in April.
Made by Cambridge-based studio Ninja Theory, Senua's Saga: Hellblade II's nominations include in the animation, artistic achievement, audio achievement and British game categories, while Sony's Astro Bot and indie horror game Still Wakes The Deep each have eight nominations.
The nominations feature a host of independent and first-time nominees as well as big name franchises and well-known series such as Call Of Duty, Star Wars and Final Fantasy, which Bafta chief executive Jane Millichip said showed the gaming industry was 'really healthy'.
'I think it's a wide open field,' she told the PA news agency.
'That's what is extraordinary this year, it's the range of genres, the size of games – indie, big studio, multiplayer – it's a bewildering variety.
'It's really interesting to see how broad it is, and great to see so many British studios represented – 11 British studios from the length and breadth of the country, from Yorkshire to Brighton.
'It's a kind of mesmerising variety and certainly in the short time I've been involved in Bafta, it seems more than ever that that is the distinguishing factor this year, which is really exciting, and with a really open field of 41 games nominated it's really, really healthy.'
Tara Saunders, chair of the Bafta Games Committee, said the nominees were a 'beacon of light' following some 'dark times' for the gaming industry in recent years, which has seen widespread job cuts in the wake of an economic downturn.
'It's a huge testament, and I think it shows the resilience of the teams and individuals that are making this content – it takes a lot of effort to make a fun product, and I think they're channelling all their energy into that,' she told PA.
'I think it's really important that we take this moment to celebrate the teams and the individuals that have crafted these standout games experiences.
'I really love that in the best game (category) we've got some indie games going shoulder to shoulder with some really big budget games.
'And I love that Bafta gives that platform for that to happen, to really shine a light on some of the smaller teams that are out there.'
Comedy game Thank Goodness You're Here – made by independent Yorkshire studio Coal Supper – has seven nominations for this year's awards, including for best game, British game and debut game.
In the best game category, it will compete alongside titles from industry giants Sony, the makers of the PlayStation, and Nintendo, for whom The Legend Of Zelda: Echoes Of Wisdom, the latest instalment in the hugely popular, long-running fantasy series, has been nominated.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Chicago Tribune
16 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
‘Downton Abbey' star will bring her play about Ava Gardner to Chicago
Elizabeth McGovern, the American actress best known for playing Lady Cora in the British TV and movie franchise 'Downton Abbey,' will star in a show headed to Chicago that is based series of real-life interviews given by the Hollywood actress Ava Gardner. Titled 'Ava: The Secret Conversations,' the show was written by McGovern and is directed by Moritz Von Stuelpnagel. Aaron Costa Ganis also appears in the piece, which will run Sept. 24 to Oct. 12 at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago's Fine Arts Building. Karl Sydow is the producer of this commercial production, managed by Pemberley Productions, which has brought several shows to Chicago. McGovern becomes the third 'Downton Abbey' star to work in Chicago theater, following Brendan Coyle, who appeared at the Goodman Theatre, and Lesley Nicol, whose solo show was performed at the Greenhouse Theatre Center. 'Ava: The Secret Conversations' has previously been seen at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles and NY City Center in New York. It is drawn from the series of interviews Gardner gave to the British writer Peter Evans (played by Ganis) between 1988 and 1990, wherein the Golden Age star spoke of her various marriages to Mickey Rooney, Artie Shaw and Frank Sinatra, as well as her famously turbulent relationship with Howard Hughes. Evans had been hired to write Gardner's autobiography, but she ended up firing him. His book detailing the interview was not published until 2013, and has been re-imagined by McGovern for the stage. McGovern will also be seen this fall on screen in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale.'

Boston Globe
34 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
A quick guide to this year's Boston Early Music Festival
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up There are at least three offerings packed into most days of the festival. Sometimes there are more. It's a maybe-overwhelming array of options, so if you don't know where to start, here are some picks for events I wouldn't want to miss. Advertisement OPERATIC OFFERINGS The elaborate centerpiece opera, which will be performed four times during the week (June 8-June 15), is an institution of the festival. Usually, musical directors Paul O'Dette and Stephen Stubbs and stage director Gilbert Blin put up a deep cut from the Baroque repertoire that even seasoned opera-goers may never have heard of, let alone seen performed. No effort is spared in the production, which features a full baroque orchestra in the pit, sumptuous sets and costumes, and a dance company led by Marie-Nathalie Lacoursière in addition to the cast of singers, which features Hungarian soprano and BEMF veteran Emőke Baráth in the title role this year. Advertisement It's also a 3-hour time commitment, so if that's more than you want to bite off, consider the chamber opera double bill of Telemann's short and snappy comedy 'Pimpinone' and dramatic cantata 'Ino,' going up at Jordan Hall on June 14 with more performances in Great Barrington later in June. THE REGULARS ARE COMING! This year's biennial marks the 23rd for the festival, and it has nourished a network of world-class performers and ensembles that have become regular visitors. Violinist Robert Mealy, head of Yale University's respected early music program, leads the festival's in-house orchestra, which is primarily occupied in the pit for the opera, but it takes center stage with its own program of water-inspired works by Handel and Telemann (June 12). The 'Octavia' singers are booked and busy as well on their off nights - tenor Aaron Sheehan joins Paul O'Dette for a wine-soaked recital program (June 9), soprano Sherezade Panthaki teams up with Austria-based Ensemble Castor (June 10), and nearly the whole gang piles on stage for Saturday evening's post-chamber-opera extravaganza. (June 14) BEMF presents the Tallis Scholars in a Yuletide concert most years, but they're on hand during this summer festival for two programs – one with the English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble (June 9) and a Sistine Chapel-inspired program on their own (June 11). And I'm personally biased because I have a friend in period string ensemble ACRONYM, but I never pass up a chance to see them – and going by the fact that this is the group's fourth consecutive festival, neither do the BEMF organizers. Advertisement RARER SIGHTS & SOUNDS Boston Camerata is hardly an unfamiliar name around town, but for BEMF, the ensemble is rolling out the local debut of 'A Gallery of Kings,' which premiered to acclaim at France's Reims Cathedral several years ago. Stephen Stubbs is also known around these parts for being one of BEMF's creative head honchos, but he also artistic directs the Seattle-based Pacific MusicWorks, which makes its BEMF debut in the late-night slot on June 10 with the intriguingly titled 'Murder, Mayhem, Melancholy, and Madness,' featuring soprano Danielle Reuter-Harrah. The relentlessly creative Norwegian ensemble Trio Mediaeval is returning to the festival after several years away, with an intriguing lineup of chant by Hildegard von Bingen and elaborate songs by English composer Leonel Power; their arrangements feature a miniature organ, hurdy-gurdy, and Hardanger fiddle – a Norwegian violin variant known for its haunting, resonant sound (June 11). Montreal-based Constantinople, helmed by Kiya Tabassian on the setar (three-stringed Persian lute), is behind the Bach and Khayyam program; soprano Hana Blažíková lends her voice to the group, which incorporates classical Middle Eastern instruments alongside the Baroque European. BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL June 8-15. Various venues. A.Z. Madonna can be reached at


Forbes
40 minutes ago
- Forbes
How Former Apple Music Mastermind Larry Jackson Signed Mariah Carey To His $400 Million Startup
Around midnight, the day after Halloween, Mariah Carey was sitting in the lavish Bel Air mansion of music producer Antonio 'L.A.' Reid. The 56-year-old Carey may be one of the top-selling recording artists of all-time—with five Grammy awards and 19 number-one hits (the most by any solo artist)—but she still solicits the opinion of Reid, a friend of more than 20 years, and the man who shaped the careers of Usher, TLC, Pink and other artists as the chairman of Epic, Arista, and Island Def Jam record labels. Also in the attendance was Larry Jackson, the 44-year-old CEO of the two-year-old music startup, Gamma. As Carey played tracks to from her upcoming 16th album, Jackson, who has been in the business for more than 30 years, was awestruck by the moment. 'Why am I in this room?' he recalls thinking. But as Carey told him, 'I know who you are. I know what you've done. And I think you're the right person to take me to new heights.' With the midnight release of Carey's new single, 'Type Dangerous,' the ultimate challenge begins. Among the heights Carey wants to reach is having a 20th number-one single—which would tie her with the Beatles—and then a 21st. It's the music equivalent of LeBron James breaking Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's NBA all-time scoring record. And Carey is counting on Jackson to put her on top of music's Mount Olympus 'I think that Larry might be downplaying his popularity,' Reid tells Forbes. 'Mariah Carey knows who Larry Jackson is.' A cofounder of Beats Music with Dr. Dre and producer Jimmy Iovine, and one of the masterminds behind Apple Music, Jackson started the industry at 11, as an intern at KMEL radio station in San Francisco and became music director at 16. 'It would be unthinkable today,' he says of the gig. 'But these were more unregulated times.' Jackson soon began being mentored by Clive Davis, the legendary founder and CEO of Arista Records, who launched the career of Whitney Houston, among many other artists. Throughout his career, Jackson produced the late Luther Vandross, once managed Kanye West and produced Houston's last studio album. He eventually moved to Interscope records to work with Iovine, who later co-founded Beats with Dr. Dre. In 2014, the company sold to Apple for more than $3 billion., which is how Jackson became the creative force behind Apple Music. 'I didn't graduate high school and didn't go to college,' Jackson told Billboard about his career trajectory in 2023. 'My university was working with Clive. Graduate school was working with Jimmy.' After seven years at Apple, Jackson did what few executives in Cupertino ever do—he left to start his own venture. He launched Gamma in 2023 with backing from billionaire Todd Boehly's Eldridge Capital, the independent film studio A24, and Apple itself. Gamma soon acquired Vydia, the New Jersey-based digital distribution company that serves as its technology platform, signed deals with Usher and Rick Ross, and took a stake in the Death Row records archive, which Snoop Dogg purchased the previous year. Late last year, Gamma also partnered with Snoop and jewelry entrepreneur Carolyn Rafaelian, the founder of Metal Alchemist and Alex and Ani, to launch Snoop's jewelry brand, Lovechild. 'He's as a straight shooter as it gets,' Boehly says of Jackson. 'And he cares more about the artists and wants them to build their businesses and think differently about what the opportunities are, and not just go down the traditional [label] path. I see entrepreneurs backing entrepreneurs in a world that's becoming more entrepreneurial. And you've got great artists like Snoop and Usher and now Mariah Carey coming to Larry because they're becoming more entrepreneurial.' Solid Gold: One of Jackson's Gamma ventures is Lovechild, a new jewelry brand by Snoop Dogg. 'What Larry Jackson is building at Gamma,' Carey tells Forbes, 'is beyond music. It's a cultural shift, and I'm excited to be part of something that honors legacy while pushing boundaries. This next chapter is about owning my narrative and creating freely on my own terms.' Adds Reid, who will executive-produce Carey's album under his new company, Mega, 'It is a game-changing moment because it's one of our premier stars who has made a decision to join forces with an independent, self-contained company that is not associated with any of the major labels. It's a game changer for both Gamma and Mariah.' Jackson and Carey chose June, which is Black Music Month, to make their partnership official. The parties tell Forbes they agreed to a multi-album deal as she aims for music history. 'I don't have a crystal ball,' Reid says. 'But my intuition tells me that this one works. She's fighting to stay contemporary. He's fighting to stay contemporary, to be contemporary. I think it's a win-win.' Born in San Francisco in 1980, Jackson is the son of a college instructor and technology engineer. His father worked for years at publicly traded Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) before meeting Jackson's mom and becoming a professor. 'I came from a very strong-rooted house,' says Jackson, says of his parents, who are still married after more than 50 years. 'I learned what not to do more than what to do.' By eight, a young Larry fell in love with music by watching the Showtime at the Apollo on Saturday nights. The program fine-tuned Jackson's ear for music, and by 17 he had dropped out of high school to focus on his job as the music director of KMEL. The first station to fully embrace hip-hop and R&B culture on the West Coast, KMEL gave afternoon airplay time to the likes of MC Hammer, Tony! Toni! Toné!, Digital Underground, and E-40. 'I remember seeing Green Day play [the] Bottom of the Hill [club] in San Francisco for 50 people before they blew up,' Jackson recalls. 'These were all the things that I was exposed to very early on. These were all the people that came through the radio station that I saw.' In 2000, Jackson's mentor at KMEL, Keith Naftaly joined Davis at the newly launched J Records after the duo's ouster at Arista. Expanding their A&R staff, Davis called Jackson who was playing records at KMEL that turned into hits. 'I took the meeting and came with a hit,' Jackson says. The song was Vandross' Take You Out. 'I got the job right on the spot.' 'I didn't just come here by accident,' he continues. 'You really don't understand the journey and the sacrifice and the hard work of how someone got to where they are. So, you realize when you hear someone's story that there are levels to this.' With a clear decline in the number of Black executives who shape music, following the deaths of towering figures like Quincy Jones and Clarence Avant, Jackson sees an opportunity for disruption with Gamma—much like how Berry Gordy changed music with Motown in the 1960s. (Gordy sold the groundbreaking label in 1988 for $61 million, or about $167 million today.) 'If you look around the [music] business in terms of leadership,' he says, 'there's nobody who looks like me.' In many ways, Jackson's career is coming full circle this week. On Wednesday, he was in New York to present Davis with a Lifetime Achievement award at the same Apollo Theater he once dreamed about as a kid. Back in his hotel room, he wants to enjoy the moment and also prepare for Carey's single release. Music Men: Jackson presented his mentor, Clive Davis, with the Legacy Award at the Apollo Theater in Harlem this week. The teaser video for 'Type Dangerous,' Jackson says, had more than six million views, 'and that's just between Instagram and X.' He sees that as a healthy sign there is pent-up demand for a new Carey album. Only this time, Gamma can control its own algorithm with the help of Apple to make sure Carey gets maximum exposure. 'She's been a part of the machine for her entire career,' he says. 'It's about unfinished business and it's about independence,' Jackson adds. 'A lot of companies are really focused on frothy, viral, trendy, TikTok hits versus really understanding the art form of artist development and what it takes to work with a diva. And it takes having a different kind of master's degree or a PhD to really understand exactly how to guide a career of that particular nature at this particular time.'