2012 British Academy Scotland Awards

The 2012 British Academy Scotland Awards, were given by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA), Scotland (also known as BAFTA Scotland, or BAFTA in Scotland), and honoured the best Scottish film, television and animated productions, and video games released between the period of 31 August 2011 - 31 July 2012.[2] Presented on 18 November 2012, the event was presided over by Scottish media personality Edith Bowman at the Radisson Blu Hotel, in Glasgow, Scotland.[3][1]

2012 British Academy Scotland Awards
Date18 November 2012
SiteRadisson Blu Hotel, Glasgow,
Scotland
Hosted byEdith Bowman
Television coverage
NetworkStreaming webcast
Duration1 hour, 56 minutes[1]

The Angels' Share received the most nominations with four, winning two for Best Actor/Actress in a Film and Best Writer, and Up There was nominated for two awards, winning both for Best Feature Film and Best Director. Television series Rab C. Nesbitt and Young James Herriot were given two nominations each, the former of which won an award for Best Actor/Actress in Television. Actor Billy Connolly received the Outstanding Contribution to Television and Film Award, a lifetime achievement award and the highest accolade BAFTA in Scotland can bestow.

Winners and nominees

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface; the nominees are listed below alphabetically and not in boldface.[4]

Best Feature Film Best Comedy Entertainment Programme
Best Actor/Actress - Film Best Actor/Actress - Television
Best Director Best Writer
Best Current Affairs Programme Best Factual Series
Best Features/ Factual Entertainment Programme Best Single Documentary
  • After Life: The Strange Science of Decay (BBC Four)
    • A Life Through The Lens: David Peat (BBC Two)
    • RBS: Inside The Bank That Ran Out Of Money
Best Game Best Animation
  • Bad Hotel
    • Golf Squared
    • Ibomber Defence Pacific
  • The Making of Longbird
    • All That Glisters
    • I Am Tom Moody

Special awards

Billy Connolly received the Outstanding Contribution to Television and Film Award, a lifetime achievement award, "In recognition of [his] enormous achievements as one of Scotland’s most successful talents."[5][6] The awards for Special Achievement in 2012 went to Christopher Young, who produced The Inbetweeners Movie (2011), Callum Macrae, for directing the television documentary, Sri Lanka's Killing Fields, and Paul Mcguigan, director of the television series, Sherlock. Stuart Cosgrove was given the Outstanding Contribution To Broadcasting award, and Trisha Biggar collected the award for Outstanding Contribution For Craft.

gollark: Ideally a well-rated one which has been around for a while, since you don't want it to fail badly and break everything else.
gollark: It says just 80+.
gollark: I'd generally suggest 80+ Bronze-rated ones and possibly semimodular ones.
gollark: The 500W one?
gollark: Oh, good.

See also

References

  1. Staff (16 November 2012). "Watch the 2012 Awards Live - Awards - Scotland - The BAFTA site". British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  2. Staff (18 June 2012). "British Academy Scotland Awards 2012 - Call for Entries - Awards - Scotland - The BAFTA site". British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  3. Staff (19 November 2012). "Scottish Baftas: Angels' Share, Gregor Fisher and BBC honoured". BBC News Scotland. British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  4. Staff (18 November 2012). "British Academy Scotland Awards Winners in 2012 - Awards - Scotland - The BAFTA site". British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  5. Staff (29 October 2012). "Billy Connolly - Outstanding Contribution to Television and Film Award - Awards - Scotland - The BAFTA site". British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  6. Stewart, Catriona (26 October 2012). "Connolly's delight at Bafta Scotland accolade". Herald Scotland. Herald & Times Group. Retrieved 3 December 2012.

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