2002 British Academy Television Craft Awards
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2002 British Academy Television Craft Awards
The British Academy Television Craft Awards of 2002 are presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and were held on 12 May 2002 at the Savoy Hotel, City of Westminster, Westminster, the ceremony was hosted by Harry Enfield. Winners and nominees Winners will be listed first and highlighted in boldface. Special awards * ''BBC Natural History Unit, BBC Natural History'' * Edward Mansell See also * 2002 British Academy Television Awards References External linksBritish Academy Craft Awards official website
{{DEFAULTSORT:British Academy Television Craft Awards 2002 2002 television awards 2002 in British television 2002 in British cinema 2002 in London May 2002 events in the United Kingdom British Academy Television Craft Awards, 2002 ...
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Savoy Hotel
The Savoy Hotel is a luxury hotel located in the Strand in the City of Westminster in central London, England. Built by the impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte with profits from his Gilbert and Sullivan opera productions, it opened on 6 August 1889. It was the first in the Savoy group of hotels and restaurants owned by Carte's family for over a century. The Savoy was the first luxury hotel in Britain, introducing electric lights throughout the building, electric lifts, bathrooms in most of the lavishly furnished rooms, constant hot and cold running water and many other innovations. Carte hired César Ritz as manager and Auguste Escoffier as ''chef de cuisine''; they established an unprecedented standard of quality in hotel service, entertainment and elegant dining, attracting royalty and other rich and powerful guests and diners. The hotel became Carte's most successful venture. Its bands, Savoy Orpheans and the Savoy Havana Band, became famous, and other entertainers (who were als ...
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Daniel Brocklehurst
Danny Brocklehurst (born June 1971 in Hyde, Cheshire) is an English screenwriter and playwright. He has won both BAFTA and Royal Television Society writing awards. He was featured in the writers' section of the ''Broadcast magazine'' Hot 100 2007. In 2013 he also wrote the track "Ring" with dance band Mint Royale, featuring the vocals of Willem Dafoe. Early career Brocklehurst worked as a journalist for several years (as a freelancer for ''The Guardian'', '' City Life'' and ''Manchester Evening News'' and senior feature writer for ''The Big Issue'') before becoming a full-time screenwriter. He cited Tony Marchant, Jimmy McGovern and Alan Bleasdale as his writing inspirations. In a Creative Times feature in 2010, he wrote that ''Our Friends in the North'' was his favourite drama of all time. Writing Television work Brocklehurst wrote several episodes of the BAFTA award-winning series ''Clocking Off'', as well as the two-part BBC film ''The Stretford Wives'', which was shot b ...
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The Cazalets
''The Cazalets'' is a 2001 television drama series in six episodes (five episodes when broadcast in the US) about the life of a large privileged family in the years 1937 to 1947. Most of the action takes place in London, and at the family's large estate in Sussex. The drama was based on ''The Light Years'' and ''Marking Time'', the first two novels in the series of five by Elizabeth Jane Howard, entitled ''The Cazalet Chronicles'' and first published in the 1990s. For the TV series, they were adapted by the screenwriter Douglas Livingstone and directed by Suri Krishnamma. The series was originally produced by Cinema Verity for BBC One and is available on DVD. A BBC Radio 4 BBC Radio 4 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC that replaced the BBC Home Service in 1967. It broadcasts a wide variety of spoken-word programmes, including news, drama, comedy, science and history from the BBC' ... version in 45 episodes, in five series, was also produced ...
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Love In A Cold Climate (2001 TV Series)
''Love in a Cold Climate'' is a British serial drama miniseries produced by the BBC in association with WGBH Boston, and first broadcast in two parts on BBC One on 4 and 11 February 2001. The series was adapted by Deborah Moggach from Nancy Mitford's novels ''The Pursuit of Love'' (1945) and ''Love in a Cold Climate'' (1949), and was directed by Tom Hooper. It stars Rosamund Pike as Fanny, Elisabeth Dermot Walsh as Linda, Megan Dodds as Polly, Alan Bates as Uncle Matthew, and Celia Imrie as Aunt Sadie. The production staff researched the background to Mitford's novels by interviewing her surviving sister Deborah. The series was accompanied by an '' Omnibus'' profile of Mitford and a documentary series entitled ''The Mitford World'' on BBC Knowledge. ''Love in a Cold Climate'' was nominated for two British Academy Television Awards; Bates was nominated for Best Actor, and the production team received nominations in the Costume Design and Production Design categories. An e ...
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Othello (2001 Film)
''Othello'' is a 2001 British television film starring Eamonn Walker, Christopher Eccleston and Keeley Hawes. It is an adaptation in modern English of William Shakespeare's play '' Othello''. It was scripted by Andrew Davies and directed by Geoffrey Sax. Plot The film is narrated by Ben Jago, a corrupt police detective who is prepared to manipulate those around him to get what he wants, even the people he loves. After the Commissioner of London's Metropolitan Police Sinclair Carver is caught using racist language he is forced to resign. The Home Secretary and Prime Minister choose John Othello, a black policeman, to be the next Commissioner as a publicity stunt after a reporter praises him for ending a riot. Jago, Carver's second-in-command, feels that Othello stole his chance to become Commissioner himself, as he had been the favourite for the job. Jago plots to take revenge on Othello by ruining his life and driving him out of his new job. Jago posts on a neo-Nazi w ...
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The Life And Adventures Of Nicholas Nickleby (2001 Film)
''The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby'' (a.k.a. ''Nicholas Nickleby'') is a British TV film which aired in 2001, directed by Stephen Whittaker, based on the 1839 novel ''Nicholas Nickleby'' by Charles Dickens. Cast *James D'Arcy as Nicholas Nickleby *Sophia Myles as Kate Nickleby *Diana Kent as Mrs. Nickleby *Charles Dance as Ralph Nickleby *George Innes as Newman Noggs *Lee Ingleby as Smike *Donald Sumpter as Mr. Brooker *Gregor Fisher as Wackford Squeers *Pam Ferris as Mrs. Squeers *Debbie Chazen as Fanny Squeers *Chris Roebuck as Wackford Squeers Junior *Hannah Storey as Tilda Price * Tom Ellis as John Browdie * Berwick Kaler as Mr. Snawley *Abigial McKern as Miss La Creevy *Tom Hollander as Alfred Mantalini *Marian McLoughlin as Madame Mantalini *Rosalind March as Miss Knag *Dominic West as Sir Mulberry Hawk * Roderic Culver as Lord Verisopht *Malcolm Tierney as Vincent Crummles *Jacqueline Tong as Mrs. Crummles *Ruth Chapman as Ninetta Crummles, The "Infant Phe ...
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The Lost World (2001 Film)
''The Lost World'' is a 2001 British made-for-television film adaptation of the 1912 novel of the same name by Arthur Conan Doyle, directed by Stuart Orme and adapted by Tony Mulholland and Adrian Hodges. It was filmed at various locations on the West Coast of New Zealand. The 145-minute film was divided into two 75-minute episodes when broadcast on BBC One on 25 and 26 December 2001, receiving 8.68 million and 6.98 million viewers respectively. Bob Hoskins played Professor Challenger and was supported by James Fox, Peter Falk, Matthew Rhys, Tom Ward and Elaine Cassidy. Plot Part 1 While in the Amazon rainforest, Professor George Challenger shoots an animal he believes to be a pterosaur. Returning to England, Challenger crashes a lecture at the Natural History Museum held by his rival, Professor Leo Summerlee. Challenger proposes an expedition to discover the home of the pterosaur, but is dismissed by the science community. However, hunter Lord John Roxton, and ''Daily ...
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Adrian Johnston (musician)
Adrian Johnston (born 1961) is an English musician and composer for film and television, who resides in London and Samois-sur-Seine. Biography Born in the county of Lancashire, Johnston attended the University of Edinburgh, studying English. He has been a drummer in bands including Moles for Breakfast, The Waterboys, the Wanglers, Combo Zombo, and The Mike Flowers Pops. During his twenties, he travelled the world providing music accompaniment to silent films at film festivals. He later scored productions for the Royal National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company. Johnston's first film score was for the 1996 Thomas Hardy adaptation '' Jude''. He has also composed original scores for ''Becoming Jane'', a 2007 film about Jane Austen, and the 2008 adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's ''Brideshead Revisited''. In 2008, he was awarded a BAFTA for the score of the BBC film '' Capturing Mary''. Johnston's score for Charles Sturridge's mini-series ''Shackleton'' won a 2002 Primetime Emm ...
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Perfect Strangers (TV Serial)
''Perfect Strangers'' is a television drama first aired in 2001, produced for BBC Two. It was written and directed by Stephen Poliakoff, and starred Michael Gambon, who won a British Academy Television Award for his performance, Lindsay Duncan, Matthew Macfadyen, Claire Skinner, and Toby Stephens. The drama received two Royal Television Society awards and a Peabody Award. The action takes place during a large family reunion at a hotel. It aired on BBC America under the title ''Almost Strangers''. Summary The series is set over a three-day family reunion of considerably more than a hundred guests, that draws together the extended branches of the Symon family. Raymond Symon (Michael Gambon) reluctantly attends with his wife Esther (Jill Baker) and son Daniel (Matthew Macfadyen), who was not aware of the sprawl of his extended family because of his father Lionel's (Jay Simon) estrangement from his relatives. The stories Daniel learns about his family's past are episodic and non-li ...
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Nicholas Hooper
Nicholas Hooper is a British film and television composer and guitarist. He has scored the award-winning BBC productions ''Land of the Tiger'' and ''Andes to Amazon'', as well as the TV movies ''The Girl in the Café'' and ''My Family and Other Animals'' among others. Hooper won a BAFTA Award and an Ivor Novello Award for Original Score in 2004 for ''The Young Visiters'' and a BAFTA for Best Original Television Music in 2007 for '' Prime Suspect: The Final Act''. His highest-profile scores were for ''Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix'' and ''Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince'', for which he reunited with old friend director David Yates, with whom he had worked before on ''The Tichborne Claimant'', ''The Way We Live Now'', '' State of Play'', ''The Young Visiters'' and ''The Girl in the Café''. These were Hooper's most notable works on blockbuster films. For ''Half-Blood Prince'', he was nominated for a Grammy. However, he chose not to return for the final two instal ...
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The Way We Live Now (2001 TV Serial)
''The Way We Live Now'' is a 2001 four-part television adaptation of the Anthony Trollope 1875 novel ''The Way We Live Now''. The serial was first broadcast on the BBC and was directed by David Yates, written by Andrew Davies and produced by Nigel Stafford-Clark. David Suchet starred as Augustus Melmotte, with Shirley Henderson as his daughter Marie, Matthew Macfadyen as Sir Felix Carbury, Cillian Murphy as Paul Montague and Miranda Otto as Mrs Hurtle. Plot summary Augustus Melmotte is a foreign financier with a mysterious past. When he and his family move to London, the city's upper crust begins buzzing with rumours about him and a host of characters find their lives changed because of him. Lady Carbury is a widow living in straitened circumstances with her handsome but dissolute son, Sir Felix, and her modest, intelligent daughter, Henrietta. Sir Felix has gambled away his inheritance and his mother supports them by writing. Her close friend, Mr Broune, a newspaper publishe ...
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George Fenton
George Richard Ian Howe (born 19 October 1949), known professionally as George Fenton, is an English composer. Best known for his work writing film scores and music for television, he has received five Academy Award nominations, several Ivor Novello, BAFTA, Golden Globe, Emmy and BMI Awards, and a Classic BRIT. He is one of 18 songwriters and composers to have been made a Fellow of the Ivors Academy (formally BASCA). He has frequently collaborated with the directors Richard Attenborough, Nora Ephron, Alastair Fothergill, Stephen Frears, Nicholas Hytner, Ken Loach, Andy Tennant, Neil Jordan and Terry Gilliam. Early life and career George Fenton was born in 1949 in Bromley, Kent, one of five siblings. He was educated at Carn Brea School and St Edward's School, Oxford. He began learning the guitar at the age of 8 and at St Edwards studied the organ with Peter Whitehouse. He did not attend music college but continued to study with Pete Whitehouse and subsequently with the ethn ...
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