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‘Ridiculous' for Channel 4 to start making in-house TV shows, says Sony
‘Ridiculous' for Channel 4 to start making in-house TV shows, says Sony

Western Telegraph

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Western Telegraph

‘Ridiculous' for Channel 4 to start making in-house TV shows, says Sony

Under a new strategy, launched in May, the broadcaster unveiled how it would start to develop in-house production capabilities with a separate company focused on 'entertainment, reality and entertainment genres with international potential'. Wayne Garvie, the president of international production at Sony Pictures Television, whose company is behind Netflix hit Cobra Kai and Starz series Outlander, told the Media and Telecoms 2025 and Beyond Conference in London on Tuesday that Channel 4's plan is 'ridiculous' and 'it won't work'. Channel 4 chief executive Alex Mahon (Ian West/PA) He added that those 'who run in-house production businesses' know that when you start 'you lose money for the first three years'. He claimed that Channel 4 is doing this without owning many intellectual rights or having an 'institutional knowledge of how to run a production business'. Mr Garvie said: 'It could be potentially disastrous for Channel 4, because it's got limited resources. It's got to adapt to a change in (the) broadcast market.' However, he did praise outgoing Channel 4 chief executive Alex Mahon with helping the broadcaster continue, but pointed out that even with 'good people' it is going to take half a decade to make money. Mr Garvie said the UK having multiple public broadcasters is 'unsustainable', and added: 'The future has got to be, surely, Channel 4 and the BBC coming together, and that should be the focus for a new chair of Channel 4 (who replaces Sir Ian Cheshire).' Sir Ian Cheshire, the outgoing Channel 4 executive (Ofcom/PA) Netflix's vice president of content for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), Larry Tanz, dismissed that the streaming giant would not have commissioned Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, at the event, which is hosted by Enders Analysis and Deloitte at Convene Sancroft in the St Paul's area. '(Vice president of UK Content at Netflix) Anne Mensah, and her team in the UK, commissioned Adolescence, Baby Reindeer and Toxic Town for the UK audience first and foremost,' he said. 'Maybe I can finally put that to rest here and say we absolutely would have commissioned Mr Bates in the UK if we had the opportunity, we think our audience would have loved it.' It follows Wolf Hall director Peter Kosminsky, who has pushed for a levy on streaming companies to finance public broadcasters, which include ITV, BBC, Channel 4 and Channel 5. Mr Kosminsky told the BBC Two current affairs programme Newsnight that Adolescence, which explores themes such as incel culture and bullying and has been a global hit for Netflix, is a 'fantastic programme', but the streaming giant would not make the show if it was not successful outside the UK. He claimed that streamers would not make issue-led dramas such as Mr Bates Vs The Post Office and Hillsborough as they are too British-focused, and voiced concerns that public broadcasters do not have the money to finance such commissions.

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards
Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

North Wales Chronicle

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • North Wales Chronicle

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

The event, on Sunday in London, saw dark comedy series Baby Reindeer win one prize on the night for Jessica Gunning, who earned the best supporting actress gong for playing a stalker in the hit Netflix series. Elsewhere, the Bafta for limited drama was awarded to ITV's Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, which has renewed public attention on the subpostmasters who fought to clear their names in the wake of the Horizon scandal. The show had already seen ITV win a special award for making the programme, and its managing director Kevin Lygo called for compensation for those wrongfully convicted, telling the Government to 'hurry up and pay these people'. He also urged all TV corporations to continue making series that hold 'power to account', as the ceremony also saw the BBC win the news coverage prize for BBC Breakfast: The Post Office Special. James won for the BBC series Mr Loverman based on the acclaimed 2013 novel by the Booker Prize-winning author Bernardine Evaristo. On stage at London's Royal Festival Hall, The Walking Dead actor admitted he had not 'prepared anything', explaining he 'didn't think this was coming my way'. The BBC series, based on Evaristo's novel of the same name about a man who contemplates leaving his wife for his male lover, also won an best supporting actor gong for Ariyon Bakare. James beat Toby Jones, who was nominated for his role playing Sir Alan Bates, a former subpostmaster and lead campaigner, as well as Baby Reindeer creator Richard Gadd, David Tennant for hit Disney+ series Rivals, and Martin Freedman for police crime drama The Responder, and Gary Oldman for spy series Slow Horses. Collecting her award, 28-year-old Abela said: 'I've been filming Industry for about six years now and (production company) Bad Wolf and HBO, the fact that they let us carry on after season one is mental.' She also said she booked the BBC series, about a group of young finance graduates, in her first year of drama school and said the role of Yasmin 'changed my life' as she has gone on to play the late singer Amy Winehouse in the film Back To Black. Abela triumphed over Monica Dolan for playing former subpostmistress Jo Hamilton, Anna Maxwell Martin for true crime miniseries Until I Kill You, Lola Petticrew for historical Northern Irish drama Say Nothing, Sharon D Clarke for Mr Loverman, and Billie Piper for Netflix drama Scoop, about the Newsnight interview between Emily Maitlis and the Duke of York. Over in the comedy section, the performance categories went to ex-EastEnders star Danny Dyer for Sky's sitcom Mr BigStuff, and Welsh actress Ruth Jones for her role playing Vanessa Shanessa 'Nessa' Jenkins in the Gavin And Stacey finale. 'I'm not going to lie this is immense,' Jones said. 'The person I would like to thank most his my dear, dear talented friend James Corden.' Gavin And Stacey co-creator Corden attended the event, after he returned to play his character Neil 'Smithy' Smith in the Christmas special, which saw his character concluded Smithy and Nessa's love story. The In Memoriam Bafta segment paid tribute to Kenneth Cope, Richard Chamberlain, William Russell, Brian Murphy, Linda Nolan, Michael Mosley, Timothy West, The Vivienne, Paul Danan, and Michelle Trachtenberg among others who have died recently. The ceremony was opened by host and Scottish actor Alan Cumming, who referenced his presenting role on The Traitors US in a sketch with footage of him shown in the Scottish Highlands castle where the hit reality series takes place. The BBC's Blue Lights, a Northern Irish police drama, was named best drama series, while comedian and actor Joe Lycett won best entertainment performance for his Channel 4 comedy programme Late Night Lycett. Birmingham comedian Lycett was absent on the night, and he succeeded over Geordie duo Anthony McPartlin, and Declan Donnelly for their Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, which is on pause, and Claudia Winkleman for BBC hit The Traitors among others. The Traitors season two also failed to win memorable moment or reality programme, as the hit psychological game series was beaten by fellow BBC show Strictly Come Dancing, and Channel 4's recreation of a court case, The Jury: Murder Trial. Professional dancer Dianne Buswell picked up the memorable moment gong, which recognised a 'blackout' dance with her celebrity partner and fellow Strictly winner blind comedian Chris McCausland. Elsewhere, the BBC coverage of Glastonbury won the Bafta Live Event Coverage award for the first time, and the sport award went to the corporation for its airing of the Paris 2024 Olympics. The best single documentary Bafta went to the BBC's Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, which follows Ukrainian soldiers fighting against Russia, while the current affairs award went to State Of Rage, about Palestinian and Israeli families in the West Bank, from Channel 4. The international Bafta was won by Disney+ for Shogun, which focused on the scheming in 1600s Japan after the emperor dies, and a traveller arrives from England, while Rob And Rylan's Grand Tour, about Rylan Clark and Robert Rinder exploring Italy, won the factual entertainment prize. The BBC documentary Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, was made by London-based Hoyo Films, who had their programme Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone pulled from BBC iPlayer. The broadcaster is carrying out 'further due diligence with the production company', after it emerged that the film's child narrator is the son of Ayman Alyazouri, who has worked as Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Former Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark received a standing ovation as she collected her Bafta fellowship, the body's highest accolade, and said she had seen the 'most joyous change in television', after 'the number of women in senior roles' increased. The Bafta TV Awards is broadcast on BBC One, and BBC iPlayer.

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards
Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

Leader Live

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Leader Live

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

The event, on Sunday in London, saw dark comedy series Baby Reindeer win one prize on the night for Jessica Gunning, who earned the best supporting actress gong for playing a stalker in the hit Netflix series. Elsewhere, the Bafta for limited drama was awarded to ITV's Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, which has renewed public attention on the subpostmasters who fought to clear their names in the wake of the Horizon scandal. The show had already seen ITV win a special award for making the programme, and its managing director Kevin Lygo called for compensation for those wrongfully convicted, telling the Government to 'hurry up and pay these people'. He also urged all TV corporations to continue making series that hold 'power to account', as the ceremony also saw the BBC win the news coverage prize for BBC Breakfast: The Post Office Special. James won for the BBC series Mr Loverman based on the acclaimed 2013 novel by the Booker Prize-winning author Bernardine Evaristo. On stage at London's Royal Festival Hall, The Walking Dead actor admitted he had not 'prepared anything', explaining he 'didn't think this was coming my way'. The BBC series, based on Evaristo's novel of the same name about a man who contemplates leaving his wife for his male lover, also won an best supporting actor gong for Ariyon Bakare. James beat Toby Jones, who was nominated for his role playing Sir Alan Bates, a former subpostmaster and lead campaigner, as well as Baby Reindeer creator Richard Gadd, David Tennant for hit Disney+ series Rivals, and Martin Freedman for police crime drama The Responder, and Gary Oldman for spy series Slow Horses. Collecting her award, 28-year-old Abela said: 'I've been filming Industry for about six years now and (production company) Bad Wolf and HBO, the fact that they let us carry on after season one is mental.' She also said she booked the BBC series, about a group of young finance graduates, in her first year of drama school and said the role of Yasmin 'changed my life' as she has gone on to play the late singer Amy Winehouse in the film Back To Black. Abela triumphed over Monica Dolan for playing former subpostmistress Jo Hamilton, Anna Maxwell Martin for true crime miniseries Until I Kill You, Lola Petticrew for historical Northern Irish drama Say Nothing, Sharon D Clarke for Mr Loverman, and Billie Piper for Netflix drama Scoop, about the Newsnight interview between Emily Maitlis and the Duke of York. Over in the comedy section, the performance categories went to ex-EastEnders star Danny Dyer for Sky's sitcom Mr BigStuff, and Welsh actress Ruth Jones for her role playing Vanessa Shanessa 'Nessa' Jenkins in the Gavin And Stacey finale. 'I'm not going to lie this is immense,' Jones said. 'The person I would like to thank most his my dear, dear talented friend James Corden.' Gavin And Stacey co-creator Corden attended the event, after he returned to play his character Neil 'Smithy' Smith in the Christmas special, which saw his character concluded Smithy and Nessa's love story. The In Memoriam Bafta segment paid tribute to Kenneth Cope, Richard Chamberlain, William Russell, Brian Murphy, Linda Nolan, Michael Mosley, Timothy West, The Vivienne, Paul Danan, and Michelle Trachtenberg among others who have died recently. The ceremony was opened by host and Scottish actor Alan Cumming, who referenced his presenting role on The Traitors US in a sketch with footage of him shown in the Scottish Highlands castle where the hit reality series takes place. The BBC's Blue Lights, a Northern Irish police drama, was named best drama series, while comedian and actor Joe Lycett won best entertainment performance for his Channel 4 comedy programme Late Night Lycett. Birmingham comedian Lycett was absent on the night, and he succeeded over Geordie duo Anthony McPartlin, and Declan Donnelly for their Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, which is on pause, and Claudia Winkleman for BBC hit The Traitors among others. The Traitors season two also failed to win memorable moment or reality programme, as the hit psychological game series was beaten by fellow BBC show Strictly Come Dancing, and Channel 4's recreation of a court case, The Jury: Murder Trial. Professional dancer Dianne Buswell picked up the memorable moment gong, which recognised a 'blackout' dance with her celebrity partner and fellow Strictly winner blind comedian Chris McCausland. Elsewhere, the BBC coverage of Glastonbury won the Bafta Live Event Coverage award for the first time, and the sport award went to the corporation for its airing of the Paris 2024 Olympics. The best single documentary Bafta went to the BBC's Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, which follows Ukrainian soldiers fighting against Russia, while the current affairs award went to State Of Rage, about Palestinian and Israeli families in the West Bank, from Channel 4. The international Bafta was won by Disney+ for Shogun, which focused on the scheming in 1600s Japan after the emperor dies, and a traveller arrives from England, while Rob And Rylan's Grand Tour, about Rylan Clark and Robert Rinder exploring Italy, won the factual entertainment prize. The BBC documentary Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, was made by London-based Hoyo Films, who had their programme Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone pulled from BBC iPlayer. The broadcaster is carrying out 'further due diligence with the production company', after it emerged that the film's child narrator is the son of Ayman Alyazouri, who has worked as Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Former Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark received a standing ovation as she collected her Bafta fellowship, the body's highest accolade, and said she had seen the 'most joyous change in television', after 'the number of women in senior roles' increased. The Bafta TV Awards is broadcast on BBC One, and BBC iPlayer.

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards
Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

South Wales Argus

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South Wales Argus

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

The event, on Sunday in London, saw dark comedy series Baby Reindeer win one prize on the night for Jessica Gunning, who earned the best supporting actress gong for playing a stalker in the hit Netflix series. Elsewhere, the Bafta for limited drama was awarded to ITV's Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, which has renewed public attention on the subpostmasters who fought to clear their names in the wake of the Horizon scandal. Toby Jones and Monica Dolan. (Ian West/PA) The show had already seen ITV win a special award for making the programme, and its managing director Kevin Lygo called for compensation for those wrongfully convicted, telling the Government to 'hurry up and pay these people'. He also urged all TV corporations to continue making series that hold 'power to account', as the ceremony also saw the BBC win the news coverage prize for BBC Breakfast: The Post Office Special. Marisa Abela (Jordan Pettitt/PA) James won for the BBC series Mr Loverman based on the acclaimed 2013 novel by the Booker Prize-winning author Bernardine Evaristo. On stage at London's Royal Festival Hall, The Walking Dead actor admitted he had not 'prepared anything', explaining he 'didn't think this was coming my way'. The BBC series, based on Evaristo's novel of the same name about a man who contemplates leaving his wife for his male lover, also won an best supporting actor gong for Ariyon Bakare. Danny Dyer (Ian West/PA) James beat Toby Jones, who was nominated for his role playing Sir Alan Bates, a former subpostmaster and lead campaigner, as well as Baby Reindeer creator Richard Gadd, David Tennant for hit Disney+ series Rivals, and Martin Freedman for police crime drama The Responder, and Gary Oldman for spy series Slow Horses. Collecting her award, 28-year-old Abela said: 'I've been filming Industry for about six years now and (production company) Bad Wolf and HBO, the fact that they let us carry on after season one is mental.' She also said she booked the BBC series, about a group of young finance graduates, in her first year of drama school and said the role of Yasmin 'changed my life' as she has gone on to play the late singer Amy Winehouse in the film Back To Black. Abela triumphed over Monica Dolan for playing former subpostmistress Jo Hamilton, Anna Maxwell Martin for true crime miniseries Until I Kill You, Lola Petticrew for historical Northern Irish drama Say Nothing, Sharon D Clarke for Mr Loverman, and Billie Piper for Netflix drama Scoop, about the Newsnight interview between Emily Maitlis and the Duke of York. Jessica Gunning attending the 2025 Bafta Television Awards (Jordan Pettitt/PA) Over in the comedy section, the performance categories went to ex-EastEnders star Danny Dyer for Sky's sitcom Mr BigStuff, and Welsh actress Ruth Jones for her role playing Vanessa Shanessa 'Nessa' Jenkins in the Gavin And Stacey finale. 'I'm not going to lie this is immense,' Jones said. 'The person I would like to thank most his my dear, dear talented friend James Corden.' Gavin And Stacey co-creator Corden attended the event, after he returned to play his character Neil 'Smithy' Smith in the Christmas special, which saw his character concluded Smithy and Nessa's love story. The In Memoriam Bafta segment paid tribute to Kenneth Cope, Richard Chamberlain, William Russell, Brian Murphy, Linda Nolan, Michael Mosley, Timothy West, The Vivienne, Paul Danan, and Michelle Trachtenberg among others who have died recently. The ceremony was opened by host and Scottish actor Alan Cumming, who referenced his presenting role on The Traitors US in a sketch with footage of him shown in the Scottish Highlands castle where the hit reality series takes place. James Corden and his Gavin And Stacey co-star Ruth Jones. (Ian West/PA) The BBC's Blue Lights, a Northern Irish police drama, was named best drama series, while comedian and actor Joe Lycett won best entertainment performance for his Channel 4 comedy programme Late Night Lycett. Birmingham comedian Lycett was absent on the night, and he succeeded over Geordie duo Anthony McPartlin, and Declan Donnelly for their Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, which is on pause, and Claudia Winkleman for BBC hit The Traitors among others. The Traitors season two also failed to win memorable moment or reality programme, as the hit psychological game series was beaten by fellow BBC show Strictly Come Dancing, and Channel 4's recreation of a court case, The Jury: Murder Trial. Professional dancer Dianne Buswell picked up the memorable moment gong, which recognised a 'blackout' dance with her celebrity partner and fellow Strictly winner blind comedian Chris McCausland. Elsewhere, the BBC coverage of Glastonbury won the Bafta Live Event Coverage award for the first time, and the sport award went to the corporation for its airing of the Paris 2024 Olympics. The best single documentary Bafta went to the BBC's Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, which follows Ukrainian soldiers fighting against Russia, while the current affairs award went to State Of Rage, about Palestinian and Israeli families in the West Bank, from Channel 4. Strictly Come Dancing's Dianne Buswell. (Ian West/PA) The international Bafta was won by Disney+ for Shogun, which focused on the scheming in 1600s Japan after the emperor dies, and a traveller arrives from England, while Rob And Rylan's Grand Tour, about Rylan Clark and Robert Rinder exploring Italy, won the factual entertainment prize. The BBC documentary Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, was made by London-based Hoyo Films, who had their programme Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone pulled from BBC iPlayer. The broadcaster is carrying out 'further due diligence with the production company', after it emerged that the film's child narrator is the son of Ayman Alyazouri, who has worked as Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Former Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark received a standing ovation as she collected her Bafta fellowship, the body's highest accolade, and said she had seen the 'most joyous change in television', after 'the number of women in senior roles' increased. The Bafta TV Awards is broadcast on BBC One, and BBC iPlayer.

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards
Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

Rhyl Journal

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Rhyl Journal

Marisa Abela and Lennie James win Baftas as Post Office drama picks up two awards

The event, on Sunday in London, saw dark comedy series Baby Reindeer win one prize on the night for Jessica Gunning, who earned the best supporting actress gong for playing a stalker in the hit Netflix series. Elsewhere, the Bafta for limited drama was awarded to ITV's Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, which has renewed public attention on the subpostmasters who fought to clear their names in the wake of the Horizon scandal. The show had already seen ITV win a special award for making the programme, and its managing director Kevin Lygo called for compensation for those wrongfully convicted, telling the Government to 'hurry up and pay these people'. He also urged all TV corporations to continue making series that hold 'power to account', as the ceremony also saw the BBC win the news coverage prize for BBC Breakfast: The Post Office Special. James won for the BBC series Mr Loverman based on the acclaimed 2013 novel by the Booker Prize-winning author Bernardine Evaristo. On stage at London's Royal Festival Hall, The Walking Dead actor admitted he had not 'prepared anything', explaining he 'didn't think this was coming my way'. The BBC series, based on Evaristo's novel of the same name about a man who contemplates leaving his wife for his male lover, also won an best supporting actor gong for Ariyon Bakare. James beat Toby Jones, who was nominated for his role playing Sir Alan Bates, a former subpostmaster and lead campaigner, as well as Baby Reindeer creator Richard Gadd, David Tennant for hit Disney+ series Rivals, and Martin Freedman for police crime drama The Responder, and Gary Oldman for spy series Slow Horses. Collecting her award, 28-year-old Abela said: 'I've been filming Industry for about six years now and (production company) Bad Wolf and HBO, the fact that they let us carry on after season one is mental.' She also said she booked the BBC series, about a group of young finance graduates, in her first year of drama school and said the role of Yasmin 'changed my life' as she has gone on to play the late singer Amy Winehouse in the film Back To Black. Abela triumphed over Monica Dolan for playing former subpostmistress Jo Hamilton, Anna Maxwell Martin for true crime miniseries Until I Kill You, Lola Petticrew for historical Northern Irish drama Say Nothing, Sharon D Clarke for Mr Loverman, and Billie Piper for Netflix drama Scoop, about the Newsnight interview between Emily Maitlis and the Duke of York. Over in the comedy section, the performance categories went to ex-EastEnders star Danny Dyer for Sky's sitcom Mr BigStuff, and Welsh actress Ruth Jones for her role playing Vanessa Shanessa 'Nessa' Jenkins in the Gavin And Stacey finale. 'I'm not going to lie this is immense,' Jones said. 'The person I would like to thank most his my dear, dear talented friend James Corden.' Gavin And Stacey co-creator Corden attended the event, after he returned to play his character Neil 'Smithy' Smith in the Christmas special, which saw his character concluded Smithy and Nessa's love story. The In Memoriam Bafta segment paid tribute to Kenneth Cope, Richard Chamberlain, William Russell, Brian Murphy, Linda Nolan, Michael Mosley, Timothy West, The Vivienne, Paul Danan, and Michelle Trachtenberg among others who have died recently. The ceremony was opened by host and Scottish actor Alan Cumming, who referenced his presenting role on The Traitors US in a sketch with footage of him shown in the Scottish Highlands castle where the hit reality series takes place. The BBC's Blue Lights, a Northern Irish police drama, was named best drama series, while comedian and actor Joe Lycett won best entertainment performance for his Channel 4 comedy programme Late Night Lycett. Birmingham comedian Lycett was absent on the night, and he succeeded over Geordie duo Anthony McPartlin, and Declan Donnelly for their Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, which is on pause, and Claudia Winkleman for BBC hit The Traitors among others. The Traitors season two also failed to win memorable moment or reality programme, as the hit psychological game series was beaten by fellow BBC show Strictly Come Dancing, and Channel 4's recreation of a court case, The Jury: Murder Trial. Professional dancer Dianne Buswell picked up the memorable moment gong, which recognised a 'blackout' dance with her celebrity partner and fellow Strictly winner blind comedian Chris McCausland. Elsewhere, the BBC coverage of Glastonbury won the Bafta Live Event Coverage award for the first time, and the sport award went to the corporation for its airing of the Paris 2024 Olympics. The best single documentary Bafta went to the BBC's Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, which follows Ukrainian soldiers fighting against Russia, while the current affairs award went to State Of Rage, about Palestinian and Israeli families in the West Bank, from Channel 4. The international Bafta was won by Disney+ for Shogun, which focused on the scheming in 1600s Japan after the emperor dies, and a traveller arrives from England, while Rob And Rylan's Grand Tour, about Rylan Clark and Robert Rinder exploring Italy, won the factual entertainment prize. The BBC documentary Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods, was made by London-based Hoyo Films, who had their programme Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone pulled from BBC iPlayer. The broadcaster is carrying out 'further due diligence with the production company', after it emerged that the film's child narrator is the son of Ayman Alyazouri, who has worked as Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Former Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark received a standing ovation as she collected her Bafta fellowship, the body's highest accolade, and said she had seen the 'most joyous change in television', after 'the number of women in senior roles' increased. The Bafta TV Awards is broadcast on BBC One, and BBC iPlayer.

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