Bafta Awards face backlash over all-white winners

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Group photo of Bafta winnersImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Co-presenter Alison Hammond was the only black person in the winners' group photo

The Bafta Awards have come under fire, after all the winners at its film ceremony on Sunday were white.

The prestigious British event had a diverse set of nominees, with people belonging to ethnic minorities taking almost 40% of acting shortlist slots.

But that did not translate into wins, with the 49 victors across all categories being white.

It comes three years after an outcry and subsequent reforms when all 20 acting nominees were white.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Cate Blanchett and Austin Butler won best lead actress and actor at the Baftas

Marcus Ryder, director of consultancy at the Sir Lenny Henry Centre for Media Diversity, said Sunday's results were "quite depressing", and showed there had been "no substantial change" over the past decade.

"Ten years ago, in 2013, Lenny Henry made headlines at the TV Baftas when he labelled it as 'All white on the night'," he said.

"And depressingly, despite a massive overhaul, on which I and many other industry people were consulted and which resulted in 120 changes to the Bafta award processes, 1,000 new members from under-represented groups etc, the end result is there is no substantial change."

The focus should not be on ceremonies like the Baftas, he said, which are "just the tip of the iceberg" of a wider film industry that "suffers from systemic racism".

Film and TV critic and Bafta short film jury member Ashanti Omkar said she felt "quite devastated" after watching the ceremony and seeing the group photo of winners.

"Alison Hammond was the only person of the global majority in it, and she was not a winner but working at the event like many others who added colour to the red carpet, performed music and presented awards," she said. "That felt regressive and like these were cosmetic steps forward as opposed to real systemic change."

Omkar said the winners all deserved awards, but that she worried about whether people were going "back to old voting practices" after progress in recent years.

"This is what I was feeling, and I honestly I was heartbroken," she told BBC News. "I felt quite devastated."

Disappointed!! I've felt this deep pain in the pit of my stomach of late, as I'm seeing the #film industry behind the scenes and the supremacy that it flaunts in my face so much, day by day, so it's not a surprising result, but in 2023, it is deeply regressive and uncalled for ↓ https://t.co/j9aT8ZHcKW

— A$hanti OMkar ௐ London, She | Her, Film, TV Critic (@AshantiOmkar) February 19, 2023

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Writer and critic Leila Latif wrote in The Guardian that, on the night, there was a "creeping discomfort that the awards were benefiting from the work and presence of many people of colour without ever handing them a statuette".

"By the end of the night, when it slowly sank in that every single winner was white, you could practically feel the Bafta team's heads sink into their hands as they braced for yet another social media storm," she said.

I watched clips of the #BAFTAS and didn’t see a single black or brown person win
Not because they’e not white but because they’re good, really good and the best. In so many categories.
Overlooked and ignored time & again
So depressing
Unconscious bias & systemic#BaftasSoWhite

— Saima Mohsin (@SaimaMohsin) February 20, 2023

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There’s a sense that representative noms shows the system is working better. That everyone then is on a level playing field. BUT you can’t look at last night’s winners pic and say that the very best work in film the last year has exclusively/only been done by those who are white

— Terri White (@Terri_White) February 20, 2023

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Bafta declined to comment on the lack of diversity among its winners, but noted the reforms introduced in 2020. They included adding more voters with a focus on under-represented groups, and making voters see all longlisted films in the categories for which they vote.

The organisation's chairman Krishnendu Majumdar told the New York Times before the ceremony that he wants to "to level the playing field", but that recognition "has to be on merit".

Bafta chief executive Jane Millichip told the paper the process of reviewing the set-up would be ongoing and constant, and that the 2020 reforms were "not a perfect full stop".

In 2021 and 2022, half of the acting winners were not white.

Dr Clive Nwonka, who led a study into racial inequality in the UK film industry in 2021, said it would take five or six years to get a full sense of the impact of Bafta's changes.

I take no pleasure in pointing back to this @nytimes article from less than 2 days ago. Anyone expecting an instant, continued and sequential flow of racial difference across the @BAFTA awards needs a much more sophisticated understanding of how the politics of diversity works. https://t.co/6R8rbn2tgs

— Clive Nwonka (@CJNwonka) February 19, 2023

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This year, German-language World War One epic All Quiet On The Western Front was the big winner with seven awards, while Cate Blanchett and Austin Butler took the lead acting prizes.

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