Summary

  • Ceremony has taken place at London's Royal Albert Hall

  • La La Land wins five awards, including best film

  • Outstanding British film is won by I, Daniel Blake

  • Casey Affleck is named best actor and Emma Stone wins best actress

  • Dev Patel is named best supporting actor

  1. Paying tribute to those we've lostpublished at 20:36 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason takes to the stage to play Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah, as images of some of those we've lost in the past year are flashed up on the screen.

    Among the actors who have died over the last 12 months are Gene Wilder, Debbie Reynolds, Carrie Fisher, Om Puri and John Hurt. 

  2. A song from William..?published at 20:35 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Stephen Fry tells the audience that there is going to be a rousing rendition of Happy Birthday to mark Bafta's 70th birthday - led by none other than the Duke of Cambridge. 

    As he says he's just been told there is no time for that after all, the camera pans to William who gives a smile - presumably of relief.

  3. Patel on 'overwhelming' awardpublished at 20:33 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Dev Patel says of his win: 

    Quote Message

    Wow, that just happened. This is so overwhelming. I sit at home and watch this with my family, who are here with me tonight.

    He said Lion was about family, and "a love that transcends borders, race, colour, anything".  

    Quote Message

    You guys are my driving force.

  4. Best supporting actor - Dev Patelpublished at 20:28 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Dev PatelImage source, EPA

    Dev Patel wins the Bafta for best supporting actor for his role in Lion.

    The other nominees were:  

    Mahershala Ali - Moonlight

    Jeff Bridges - Hell or High Water

    Hugh Grant - Florence Foster Jenkins

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson - Nocturnal Animals

  5. Outstanding British debut: Under the Shadowpublished at 20:23 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    This one goes to Under the Shadow - Babak Anvari (writer/director), Emily Leo, Oliver Roskill, Lucan Toh (producers)

    The other nominees were:

    The Girl with All the Gifts - Mike Carey (writer), Camille Gatin (producer)

    The Hard Stop - George Amponsah (writer/director/producer), Dionne Walker (writer/producer)

    Notes on Blindness - Peter Middleton (writer/director/producer), James Spinney (writer/director), Jo-Jo Ellison (producer)

    The Pass - John Donnelly (writer), Ben A William (director)

  6. Best special visual effects - The Jungle Bookpublished at 20:19 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    The Jungle Book has been awarded the Bafta for best special visual effects. Robert Legato, Dan Lemmon, Andrew R. Jones and Adam Valdez took to the stage to collect their prize.  

    The other nominees were: 

    Arrival - Louis Morin

    Doctor Strange - Richard Bluff, Stephane Ceretti, Paul Corbould, Jonathan Fawkner

    Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Tim Burke, Pablo Grillo, Christian Manz, David Watkins

    Rogue One: A Star Wars Story - Neil Corbould, Hal Hickel, Mohen Leo, John Knoll, Nigel Sumner

  7. Best animated film - Kubo and the Two Stringspublished at 20:12 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Kubo and the Two Strings has won the best animated film Bafta. 

    The other nominees were: 

    Finding Dory

    Moana

    Zootropolis

  8. Best supporting actress - Viola Davis for Fencespublished at 20:06 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Viola DavisImage source, PA

    Viola Davis wins best supporting actress for her performance in Fences. Accepting the award, she paid tribute to August Wilson, who wrote the play upon which the film is based. 

    Quote Message

    When my father took his last breath, one of the thoughts that went through my mind was, 'Did his life matter?' And August answers that question so brilliantly.

    Quote Message

    Because what he did is said that our lives mattered as African-Americans. The people who did not make it into history books, but they have a story, and those stories deserve to be told. Thank you, August.

    The other nominees were:

    Naomie Harris - Moonlight

    Nicole Kidman - Lion

    Hayley Squires - I, Daniel Blake

    Michelle Williams - Manchester by the Sea

  9. Lion star is a 'discovery for the ages'published at 20:04 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Luke Davies makes a special mention for Sunny Pawar, the five-year-old non-professional actor who stars as a young Saroo in Lion. 

    Davies describes him as a "discovery for the ages". 

    He also credits Dev Patel for taking the film "and making it his own" in the second half, as an adult Saroo searching for his home. 

  10. Adapted screenplay - Luke Davies for Lionpublished at 20:01 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    LionImage source, Weinstein Company

    Luke Davies wins the award for adapted screenplay for Lion.

    The other nominees were:

    Arrival - Eric Heisserer

    Hacksaw Ridge - Robert Schenkkan, Andrew Knight

    Hidden Figures - Theodore Melfi, Allison Schroeder

    Nocturnal Animals - Tom Ford

  11. Film not in the English language - Son of Saulpublished at 19:57 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Now for the award for best film not in the English language. 

    It goes to Laszlo Nemes and Gabor Sipos for Holocaust film Son of Saul. 

    The other nominees were: 

    Dheepan - Jacques Audiard, Pascal Caucheteux

    Julieta - Pedro Almodovar

    Mustang - Deniz Gamze Erguven, Charles Gillibert

    Toni Erdmann - Maren Ade, Janine Jackowski

  12. Documentary - 13thpublished at 19:51 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    The best documentary prize goes to 13th - about the US criminal justice system.

    The other nominees were:

    The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years

    The Eagle Huntress

    Notes on Blindness

    Weiner

  13. Production design - Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Thempublished at 19:48 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Fantastic BeastsImage source, AP

    Stuart Craig and Anna Pinnock win for Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, based on the JK Rowling book of the same name. 

    The other nominees were: 

    Doctor Strange - John Bush, Charles Wood

    Hail, Caesar! - Jess Gonchor, Nancy Haigh

    La La Land - Sandy Reynolds-Wasco, David Wasco

    Nocturnal Animals - Shane Valentino, Meg Everist

  14. Editing - Hacksaw Ridgepublished at 19:46 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Hacksaw RidgeImage source, Summit

    Now the award for best editing. 

    It goes to John Gilbert for World War Two epic Hacksaw Ridge.

    He faced competition from: 

    Arrival - Joe Walker

    La La Land - Tom Cross 

    Manchester by the Sea - Jennifer Lame 

    Nocturnal Animals - Joan Sobel

  15. On the menu tonight...published at 19:43 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Feeling hungry? Well, here's what the stars are going to be eating tonight after the ceremony is all done and dusted. 

    There will be a Cornish crab salad (or a vegetarian alternative of mixed grain salad with pickled vegetables), venison Wellington (or a puff pastry parcel filled with goats cheese and roasted winter vegetables for the non-meat eaters) and then chocolate pudding for some 2,000 guests at the Grosvenor House on Park Lane. 

    They're travelling there after the proceedings at the Royal Albert Hall have finished. 

  16. British short film - Homepublished at 19:42 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Shpat Deda, Afolabi Kuti, Daniel Mulloy and Scott O'Donnell are on the stage to pick up the best British short film award, for Home.  

    The other nominees were: 

    Consumed - Richard John Seymour

    Mouth of Hell - Bart Gavigan, Samir Mehanovic, Ailie Smith, Michael Wilson

    The Party - Farah Abushwesha, Emmet Fleming, Andrea Harkin, Conor MacNeill

    Standby - Charlotte Regan, Jack Hannon

  17. British short animation - A Love Storypublished at 19:37 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    This one goes to A Love Story - Khaled Gad, Anushka Kishani Naanayakkara and Elena Ruscombe-King.

    In her acceptance speech - Kishani gave a shout out to "the girls at the deli counter in Morrisons"!

    The other nominees were The Alan Dimension (Jac Clinch, Jonathan Harbottle, Millie Marsh) and Tough (Jennifer Zheng).

  18. Sound - Arrivalpublished at 19:35 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Amy AdamsImage source, Paramount

    Arrival has won its first Bafta. 

    Claude La Haye, Bernard Gariepy Strobl and Sylvain Bellemare picked up the award for sound. 

    The other nominees were: 

    Deepwater Horizon - Mike Prestwood Smith, Dror Mohar, Wylie Stateman, David Wyman

    Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Niv Adiri, Glenn Freemantle, Simon Hayes, Andy Nelson, Ian Tapp

    Hacksaw Ridge - Peter Grace, Robert Mackenzie, Kevin O'Connell, Andy Wright

    La La Land - Mildred Iatrou Morgan, Ai-Ling Lee, Steve A Morrow, Andy Nelson

  19. Costume design - Jackiepublished at 19:32 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    JackieImage source, AP

    The winner is Madeline Fontaine for her work on Jackie, about Jackie Kennedy. 

    The other nominees were:

    Allied - Joanna Johnston

    Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Colleen Atwood

    Florence Foster Jenkins - Consolata Boyle

    La La Land - Mary Zophres

  20. Original music: La La Landpublished at 19:29 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2017

    Justin Hurwitz has won for La La Land. 

    The other nominees were: 

    Arrival - Johann Johannsson

    Jackie - Mica Levi

    Lion - Dustin O'Halloran, Hauschka

    Nocturnal Animals - Abel Korzeniowski