Gongs galore
If you’re waiting until 7pm and planning to watch the Bafta Awards then, look away now…
Comedy drama American Fiction has won best adapted screenplay at the Bafta film awards ceremony. American writer and former Gawker journalist Cord Jefferson said winning a Bafta was “surreal”, and that he had his speech written for him because he did not think he would need it.
Jefferson said in a “risk-averse industry”, he is thankful for his film – about a novelist who spoofs the “black genre” of books, which becomes a ruse he has to maintain – was made.
Da’Vine Joy Randolph has won the supporting actress Bafta for her role in The Holdovers. The American, who plays Mary Lamb, the head of the kitchen at a private school whose son has died during the Vietnam War, paid tribute to her co-star Paul Giamatti. Randolph said she “cries every time” she says his name, as she became emotional. “I’m proud to call you a friend and thank you for never wavering,” she added.
She also hailed her character Mary, who would “never would have got a chance to wear a beautiful gown”, before adding it was a “responsibility I don’t take lightly”.