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Winners announced for the RTS Programme Awards 2023

Mar 30, 2023

The winners were crowned at the prestigious awards ceremony hosted by comedian Tom Allen at London’s JW Marriott Grosvenor House.

Guests in attendance included Kate Winslet, Billie Piper, Sarah Lancashire, Martin Freeman, Charlie Brooker, Sharon Horgan, Daisy May Cooper, Huw Edwards, Gaby Roslin, Claudia Winkleman, Stephen Merchant, Susan Wokoma, Gabby Logan, Jack Thorne, Ade Adepitan, Kit Connor, Jordan Banjo, Adeel Akhtar and many other incredible names from the world of UK television.

Across the 30 categories, the BBC reigned with 17 wins, three of which were for the hit comedy series Am I Being Unreasonable? and Channel 4 followed with six wins, with Derry Girls recognised across two of the categories: Scripted Comedy and Writer – Comedy. Other series that received wins across multiple categories included BBC’s The Traitors for Entertainment and Entertainment Performance, BBC’s Sherwood for Drama Series and Adeel Akhtar for the brand-new Supporting Actor – Male category.

New for 2023, the Supporting Actor – Female award was presented to Ambika Mod for BBC and AMC’s This Is Going to Hurt, and the inaugural Comedy Drama award was given to Sky’s Brassic. In addition, BET UK celebrated its first ever RTS award, taking home the win in the Arts category for The Evolution of Black British Music.

In addition to the 30 competitive categories, Charlotte Moore, Chief Content Officer at the BBC was presented with the prestigious Judges’ Award, for leading the BBC through one of the most momentous years in history with what the judges described as, “an exceptional combination of steadfast level headedness, confidence and creative flair”. For the Outstanding Achievement Award, actor and producer Sarah Lancashire OBE (Happy ValleyLast Tango in Halifax) was celebrated this evening for not only her outstanding talent and intelligence, but her total commitment and dedication to the television industry.

Chair of the Awards, Kenton Allen, said: “2022 was a phenomenal year on and off screen. We introduced new categories for Comedy Drama and Supporting Actors to further reflect the incredible range and diversity in the scripted world and I’m thrilled to say that we saw a sensational response, with all of the nominees and winners reflecting an incredible range of creative excellence. As we come together to honour the genre-defining programming from the past year, I am also delighted to celebrate the outstanding achievements of the sensational Sarah Lancashire and reveal that the Judges’ Award goes to Charlotte Moore for the incredible leadership she has provided the BBC in a remarkable year for innovation, creativity and seismic current affairs. Congratulations to all of the nominees and winners this evening, you are the best of the best and we salute you.”

WINNERS

Arts: The Evolution of Black British Music

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Fan Studios & Motion Content Group for BET UK

NOMINEES:

The Ghost of Richard Harris
This Is Joan Collins

Breakthrough Award: Lenny Rush

TITLE: Am I Being Unreasonable?
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Boffola Pictures & Lookout Point for BBC

NOMINEES:

Nicôle Lecky – Mood 
Eddie Kadi – Sorry, I Didn’t Know

Children’s Programme: Dodger

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Universal International Studios for CBBC

NOMINEES:

COP27: Six Ways to Save Our Planet
Corpse Talk

Comedy Drama: Brassic

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Calamity Films for Sky Max

NOMINEES:

Am I Being Unreasonable?
Cheaters

Comedy Entertainment: Friday Night Live

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Phil McIntyre Television & Boffola Pictures for Channel 4

NOMINEES:

Joe Lycett vs David Beckham, A Got Your Back Special
Sorry, I Didn’t Know

Comedy Performance (Female): Daisy May Cooper

TITLE: Am I Being Unreasonable?
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Boffola Pictures & Lookout Point for BBC

NOMINEES:

Leah Brotherhead – Hullraisers 
Rose Matafeo – Starstruck

Comedy Performance (Male): Lenny Rush

TITLE: Am I Being Unreasonable?
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Boffola Pictures & Lookout Point for BBC

NOMINEES:

Samson Kayo – Bloods 
Jon Pointing – Big Boys

Daytime Programme: Loose Men

PRODUCTION COMPANY: ITV Studios Daytime for ITV1

NOMINEES:

Come Dine With Me: The Professionals
Scam Interceptors

Documentary Series: Gazza

PRODUCTION COMPANY: A Haviland Digital, Mark Stewart Productions & Western Edge Pictures production for BBC

NOMINEES:

Big Oil vs The World
Jeremy Kyle Show: Death On Daytime

Drama Series: Sherwood

PRODUCTION COMPANY: House Productions for BBC

NOMINEES:

The Responder
Top Boy

Entertainment: The Traitors

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Studio Lambert Scotland for BBC

NOMINEES:

Joe Lycett’s Big Pride Party
The Lateish Show with Mo Gilligan

Entertainment Performance: Claudia Winkleman

TITLE: The Traitors
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Studio Lambert Scotland for BBC

NOMINEES:

Jordan Stephens – Don’t Hate The Playaz 
Mo Gilligan – The Lateish Show with Mo Gilligan

Formatted Popular Factual: Gogglebox

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Studio Lambert for Channel 4

NOMINEES:

Idris Elba’s Fight School
The Repair Shop: A Royal Visit

History: Our Falklands War: A Frontline Story

PRODUCTION COMPANY: The Garden Productions for BBC

NOMINEES:

Aids: The Unheard Tapes
Italia 90: Four Weeks that Changed the World

Leading Actor (Female): Kate Winslet

TITLE: I Am Ruth
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Me+You Productions in association with Juggle Productions for Channel 4

NOMINEES:

Billie Piper – I Hate Suzie Too 
Monica Dolan – The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe

Leading Actor (Male): Kit Connor

TITLE: Heartstopper
PRODUCTION COMPANY: A See-Saw Films Production for Netflix

NOMINEES:

Kane Robinson – Top Boy 
Chaske Spencer – The English

Limited Series: Mood

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Bonafide Films for BBC

NOMINEES:

Anne
Chloe

Live Event: The State Funeral of HM The Queen Elizabeth II

PRODUCTION COMPANY: BBC Studios Events Productions for BBC

NOMINEES:

Glastonbury 2022
Platinum Party at the Palace

Presenter: Ramita Navai

TITLE: Afghanistan: No Country for Women
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Quicksilver Media for ITV1

NOMINEES:

Huw Edwards – The State Funeral of HM The Queen Elizabeth II 
Martin Lewis – The Martin Lewis Money Show Live

Science & The Natural World: The Green Planet

PRODUCTION COMPANY: BBC Studios Natural History Unit with PBS, bilibili, ZDF, China Media Group, CCTV9, France Télévisions & The Open University for BBC

NOMINEES:

My Dead Body
My Garden of a Thousand Bees

Scripted Comedy: Derry Girls

PRODUCTION COMPANY: Hat Trick Productions for Channel 4

NOMINEES:

Big Boys
Cunk On Earth

Single Documentary: The Tinder Swindler

PRODUCTION COMPANY: A Raw Production with Gaspin Media and AGC Studios in association with VG for Netflix

NOMINEES:

Dying to Divorce
Will Young: Losing My Twin Rupert

Single Drama: Life and Death in the Warehouse

PRODUCTION COMPANY: BBC Studios Drama Productions for BBC

NOMINEES:

The House
Then Barbara Met Alan

Soap and Continuing Drama: Casualty

PRODUCTION COMPANY: BBC Studios Continuing Drama for BBC

NOMINEES:

EastEnders
Hollyoaks

Sports Presenter, Commentator or Pundit: Ade Adepitan

TITLE: Winter Paralympics 2022
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Whisper for Channel 4

NOMINEES:

Gabby Logan – Women’s Euro 2022 
Roy Keane – FIFA World Cup 2022

Sports Programme: Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games

PRODUCTION COMPANY: BBC Sport / Sunset+Vine for BBC

NOMINEES:

Winter Paralympics: Today in Beijing
Women’s Euro 2022

Supporting Actor – Female: Ambika Mod

TITLE: This Is Going to Hurt
PRODUCTION COMPANY: SISTER in Association with Terrible Productions for BBC and AMC

NOMINEES:

Saffron Hocking – Top Boy 
Adelayo Adedayo – The Responder

Supporting Actor – Male: Adeel Akhtar

TITLE: Sherwood
PRODUCTION COMPANY: House Productions for BBC

NOMINEES:

Stephen Walters – Anne 
Stephen Merchant – Four Lives

Writer – Comedy: Lisa McGee

TITLE: Derry Girls
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Hat Trick Productions for Channel 4

NOMINEES:

Jack Rooke – Big Boys 
Sam Leifer and Tom Basden – Plebs: Soldiers of Rome

Writer – Drama: Lucy Prebble

TITLE: I Hate Suzie Too
PRODUCTION COMPANY: Bad Wolf for Sky Atlantic

NOMINEES:

Sharon Horgan – Bad Sisters 
Will Smith – Slow Horses

Judges’ Award: Charlotte Moore

NOMINEES:

The Judges’ Award is presented to an executive who has led our national broadcaster through one of the most momentous years in its history…and who has done so with an exceptional combination of steadfast level-headedness, confidence and creative flair.

In the BBC’s centenary year, its Chief Content Officer Charlotte Moore navigated the Corporation’s television output through a particularly difficult time for our nation. It was the year we began to emerge from the pandemic, there was unprecedented political turmoil in Downing Street and in the Autumn came the death of Her Majesty. Add to all that, the war in Ukraine and a cost-of-living crisis, and it was a year few of us will forget. It’s said that in times of national upheaval viewers turn to the BBC – and so it proved in 2022. At the helm, Charlotte tore up the regular schedules to make way for programming to cover every unfolding story as it happened, responding immediately and appropriately to the nation’s need to be informed as well as entertained.

It was also a year of great triumphs for BBC Television, as we’ve seen tonight. There was thrilling sporting coverage with the World Cup, the Women’s Euros and the Birmingham Commonwealth Games; there was The Responder and Sherwood, an improvised episode of Casualty, a second Frozen Planet with Attenborough, and breakout new hit The Traitors; there was the BBC Three relaunch, the casting of a diverse Doctor Who, the Platinum Jubilee Party at The Palace and the fiftieth year of Newsround. And important to remember that all of this was planned, commissioned, and produced under the challenging conditions of the pandemic.

It was the year too in which Charlotte showed the BBC’s commitment to television from the regions was real – Morning Live relocated to Manchester, the first BBC Comedy Festival landed in Newcastle, Masterchef announced a move to Birmingham, and Eurovision is heading for Liverpool. Programmes made in all corners of Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales as well as England all filled the schedules.

But it was during the events which began on September 8th that most of us turned to the BBC. From the ominous sign of Huw Edwards wearing a black tie on that dark Thursday afternoon, to Kirsty Young’s personal reflections at the end of the funeral coverage…they were twelve days that BBC Television had of course anticipated for many years – but when the moment came, the plan was carried out to utter perfection.

Through it all, Charlotte’s been an outstanding leader for the BBC’s content. She’s championed it, defended it, pushed it to be the best it can be. And while doing all that, she’s remained approachable and accessible…always keen to find the next show that will resonate with viewers, always determined to make the next turn of the wheel.

Outstanding Achievement Award: Sarah Lancashire OBE

NOMINEES:

Sarah Lancashire first caught the nation’s attention on the evening of 25th January 1991, the night that Raquel Wolstenhulme made her earliest appearance in Coronation Street. Raquel was a checkout assistant in Weatherfield’s local supermarket, but such was her impact in the show that before long Raquel had become a barmaid and was pulling pints of Newton and Ridleys in the legendary Rovers Return.

In many ways Coronation Street was the perfect beginning for Sarah’s career on television. She grew up just a few miles away from Granada’s studios, and after training at London’s Guildhall School of Music and Drama she returned to live and work in the North, teaching at Salford University between theatre jobs. She knew the North – she knew its people, its speech rhythms. And she brought all of that to Raquel. As a foretaste of what was to come later in Sarah’s career, in Raquel she created a character that transcended the image of the bottle-blonde barmaid – she gave the audience someone they really believed in, had empathy with, and felt they knew. She made Raquel complex. She made her a real person.

Little wonder then that on the night of Raquel’s last appearance in Coronation Street, twenty million viewers tuned in. They’d fallen in love with Sarah’s performance. It was the
first sign of a special relationship that would develop between Sarah and the viewing audience – one in which they felt deep affection and respect for her work. Three decades on, it’s stronger than ever.

Sarah has said to me on a number of occasions that she never ever watches her own performances. She must be the only person left in the country who doesn’t!

Sarah followed Coronation Street with three seasons of the Sunday night series Where The Heart Is, and then took on a great variety of roles in some of the most popular dramas on television. She starred opposite John Thaw in The Glass, and alongside Billy Connolly in Gentleman’s Relish; there was Clocking Off, Seeing Red, The Rotters’ Club, and Rose and Maloney. There was classic period drama too – Sons and Lovers, Oliver Twist and Wuthering Heights.

Sarah was strongly attracted to contemporary roles that really challenged her as an actor, parts which pushed her into difficult places – including real life roles, like that of Rosemary Nicholls, mother of one of the Ipswich serial murder victims…or Angela Cannings, who was wrongfully convicted of killing her two baby sons. Another challenging role came in 2018 in Jack Thorne’s Kiri, in which Sarah played Miriam, the disorganised social worker for a girl who is abducted and murdered. Difficult characters to play, difficult places to inhabit.

In 2012 came the first series of Last Tango In Halifax, in which Sarah played Caroline – the school headteacher in a same-sex relationship with fellow teacher Kate, and a role for which Sarah won major critical acclaim. Her performance was all about Caroline’s humanity which ensured the character truly resonated with viewers. Last Tango was also Sarah’s first work to be written by Sally Wainwright. They would go on to collaborate on the amazing Happy Valley, which Sally wrote specifically for her…the perfect alchemy of the right character for the right actor from the right creator.

Happy Valley has gone on to become a colossal hit and that rarest of beasts these days – a show we wait for so eagerly we actually watch it at the time it transmits. In police sergeant Catherine Cawood, Sarah’s given us one of the defining characters of contradictory psychological complexity for our times. Love and guilt, despair and pain, weakness and courage – it’s all there in Catherine’s character, all beautifully realised in Sarah’s performance.

And then most recently came Julia, HBO’s mini-series about America’s pioneering TV chef Julia Child, and a world as far away from Happy Valley as it’s possible to get. So total was Sarah’s transformation into Julia Child, it was impossible to believe this was the same actor we’d just watched laying down the law in the bleak landscapes of West Yorkshire. But that’s what Sarah does. She inhabits each character she plays with utter integrity. She takes the audience into that character’s reality and shows them the world from the character’s point of view.

And she does it supremely well, not only with outstanding talent and intelligence, but also with total commitment and dedication. She’s the consummate screen actor, the real deal. What a privilege it’s been for us all to watch her performances on television over the decades.

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