1999 British Academy Television Awards

The 1999 British Academy Television Awards were held on 9 May at the Grosvenor House Hotel in Park Lane, London. It was hosted solely by Michael Parkinson, who was due to share hosting duties with Jill Dando until her murder two weeks earlier.[1]

Winners and nominees

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface; the nominees are listed below.[2][3]

Best Actor award winner Tom Courtenay.
Best Actress winner Thora Hird.
Best Drama Series Best Drama Serial
  • The Cops (World Productions / BBC Two)
    • Jonathan Creek (BBC / BBC One)
    • Playing the Field (Tiger Aspect Productions / BBC One)
    • Undercover Heart (BBC / BBC One)
  • Our Mutual Friend (BBC / BBC One)
    • Amongst Women (Parallel Film Productions Limited / BBC Two)
    • A Respectable Trade (BBC / BBC One)
    • Vanity Fair (BBC / A&E Network / BBC One)
Best Actor Best Actress
Best Comedy (Programme or Series) Best Comedy Performance
Best Single Drama Best Factual Series
  • A Rather English Marriage (Wall to wall television / BBC One)
    • A Life For A Life – The True Story Of Stefan Kiszko (Picture Palace Productions / ITV)
    • Playing Sandwiches (Slow Motion Limited / BBC Two)
    • Waiting for the Telegram (Slow Motion Limited / BBC Two)
  • The Human Body (BBC / BBC One)
    • The Clintons - A Marriage of Power (Channel 4)
    • Cold War (Jeremy Isaacs Television Limited / Channel 4)
    • The Life of Birds (BBC / BBC One)
Best Feature Best Soap Opera
Best Light Entertainment Performance Best Light Entertainment Programme or Series
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (Celador / ITV)
    • Big Train (TalkBack Productions / BBC Two)
    • Goodness Gracious Me (BBC / BBC Two)
    • Rory Bremner - Who Else? (Kudos Film & Television / Channel 4)
Best News and Current Affairs Journalism Best Live Outside Broadcast Coverage
  • Dispatches: - Inside The Animal Liberation Front (Channel 4)
Flaherty Award for Single Documentary Huw Wheldon Award for Arts Programme or Series
  • After Lockerbie (BBC Two)
    • 42 Up (Granada Television / BBC One)
    • Mir Mortals
    • Tongue Tied
  • ArenaThe Brian Epstein Story (BBC / BBC Two)
    • ArenaThe Noël Coward Trilogy (BBC / BBC Two)
    • The Secret Art of Government
    • Vile Bodies: Naked
Originality Best International Programme or Series
  • The Human Body (BBC One)
The Lew Grade Award The Dennis Potter Award
  • Goodnight Mr Tom
The Alan Clarke Award The Richard Dimbleby Award

Craft Awards

Best Costume Design Best Original Television Music
Best Design Best Make-Up
  • Our Mutual FriendMalcolm Thornton
    • Hornblower: The Even Chance – Andrew Mollo
    • Far from the Madding Crowd – Adrian Smith
    • Alice Through the Looking Glass – Anne Tilby
  • Our Mutual FriendLisa Westcott
Best Photography - Factual Best Photography and Lighting - Fiction
  • 42 UpGeorge Jesse Turner
    • ArenaThe Brian Epstein Story – Luke Cardiff
    • Born to Be Wild: Operation Lemur with John Cleese – Mike Eley, Warwick Sloss, Gavin Thurston
    • The Human Body – Chris Hartley, David Barlow, Tim Shepherd, Rob Franklin
  • Far from the Madding CrowdJohn Daly
    • Vanity Fair – Oliver Curtis
    • Cold Feet – Peter Middleton
    • Our Mutual Friend – David Odd
Best Editing - Factual Best Editing - Fiction/Entertainment
  • Lockerbie: A Night RememberedBrian Tagg
    • ArenaThe Brian Epstein Story – Roy Deverell, Guy Crossman
    • ArenaThe Noël Coward Story – David Kitson
    • Bring Me Sunshine: The Heart And Soul Of Eric Morecambe (Omnibus) – Andrew Quigley
Best Sound - Factual Best Sound - Fiction/Entertainment
  • The Life of BirdsTeam
    • Omnibus: Andre Previn – Bob Blauvelt, Bill Chesneau, Steve Jankowski, Peter Davies
    • Lockerbie: A Night Remembered – David Lindsay, Matt Skilton
    • The Human Body – Team
Best Graphic Design
  • The Human BodyTim Goodchild, David Haith

Special Awards

In Memoriam

References

  1. ^ "TV stars honour Jill Dando". BBC. 10 May 1999. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Television Craft - 1999". British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  3. ^ "Television - 1999". British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Retrieved 21 February 2021.

External links

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