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Message posted on 10 Dec 2020 08:40 AM
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Winners Announced
10th December 2020
The winners of this year’s 24th annual South Bank Sky Arts Awards were announced yesterday in a socially distanced ceremony at the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera. Hosted by Melvyn Bragg, the awards continue their legacy as the only awards ceremony in the world to represent the entire spectrum of the arts, with categories for TV Drama, Classical Music, Theatre, Comedy, Dance, Film, Visual Art, Pop, Literature and Opera. The awards will be free for everyone to watch on Sky Arts, Freeview channel 11, at 8pm on Sunday 20th December.
Ian McKellen took to the stage to accept the Outstanding Achievement Award, recognising his incomparable contribution to theatre and film. He joins Tracey Emin, Harold Pinter, Julie Walters, Sylvia Guillem, Benedict Cumberbatch, Andrew Lloyd Webber, The Who, Paul Abbott, Simon Rattle, Eddie Izzard, and Sir Lenny Henry in the Outstanding Achievement hall of fame. He was also congratulated via video by Dame Judi Dench and Dame Helen Mirren.
Receiving his award, Ian McKellen commented:
“I am very happy and honoured to be in the company of the nominees for this tricky year’s South Bank Sky Arts awards…The closure of theatres in response to an outside threat to the country, is not unprecedented. When another plague reached London 450 years ago, the theatres were closed and Shakespeare’s company was out of work. No furlough. His response to one lockdown was to write Macbeth, Antony & Cleopatra and King Lear. I hope during our lockdowns that playwrights have been busy writing plays. More, I hope others have been planning and imagining future productions.”
The Times Breakthrough Award was awarded to Waad al-Kateab, the Syrian journalist, filmmaker and activist whose critically-acclaimed documentary For Sama won two BAFTAs and an Academy Award. She joins the likes of Tom Hiddleston, Billie Piper, Stormzy, Amma Asante, Sheku Kanneh-Mason and Jessie Buckley as Times Breakthrough recipients.
In television, Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s renowned series Fleabag won the Comedy category, seeing off Netflix’s Sex Education and Channel 4’s Home. Meanwhile, Sky Original drama Chernobyl won out in the TV Drama category for its unflinching portrayal of the nuclear accident.
In music, Dave conquered the Pop category with his winning album Psychodrama, fighting off Kano and Michael Kiwanuka. In Classical Music, Thea Musgrave’s Trumpet Concerto triumphed, whilst The Royal Opera took home the coveted Opera trophy for Katya Kabanova. Northern Ballet were thrilled to accept the Dance award for their production of Victoria, with Choreographer Cathy Marston commenting, “It’s so exciting to think back after such a challenging year to a time when we were in the studio creating and inspiring one another.”
Haunting masterpiece The Souvenir took home the Film award, with director Joanna Hogg and actor Tilda Swinton joining the ceremony via video to accept the gong. The Sheffield Crucible won this year’s hotly contested theatre award for its outstanding production Standing at the Sky’s Edge, collected by Robert Hastie, Artistic Director of Sheffield Theatres.
Steve McQueen’s Year 3, which appeared at Tate Britain and on billboards across London won the Visual Art category. Joining the ceremony from Amsterdam, Steve thanked “all of the schoolchildren and their teachers. Here’s to their future.” Meanwhile, Edna O’Brientriumphed in the Literature category for her masterful novel Girl, inspired by the women abducted by Boko Haram.
Phil Edgar-Jones, Director of Sky Arts and Entertainment, commented:
“Congratulations to all the winners of the South Bank Sky Arts Awards. We all know what a difficult year it’s been for everyone who works in the arts so to see the level of talent, creativity and entertainment in show here is heartwarming and kind of heartbreaking at the same time. Here’s to 2021 and the road to recovery.”
Two special performances also took place on stage over the course of the evening. Trumpet virtuoso Alison Balsom performed her own arrangement of Albinoni’s Oboe Concerto in D minor whilst Faith Omole gave a rendition of Richard Hawley’s ‘Coles Corner’ from Standing at the Sky’s Edge.
Trumpet Virtuoso Alison Balsom commented:
“The UK performing arts industry has been the envy of the world for decades, centuries. But this year has been, there is no other way to describe it, than catastrophic for tens and thousands of artists and creatives, but also joyless for the millions of us who know that the Arts give us all something to live for. That the South Bank Sky Arts Awards have yet again been able to recognise more of these achievements, despite everything, is a ray of hope for the future.”
Full List of Winners
Classical Music
Thea Musgrave Trumpet Concerto
Cheltenham Music Festival / City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
Comedy
Fleabag
BBC Three and Amazon Prime Video / Two Brothers Pictures Ltd
Dance
Victoria
Northern Ballet
Film
The Souvenir
Literature
Girl
Edna O’Brien
Opera
Katya Kabanova
The Royal Opera
Pop
Dave
Psychodrama
Theatre
Standing at the Sky’s Edge
Crucible Theatre, Sheffield
TV Drama
Chernobyl
Sister / The Mighty Mint / Word Games / Sky Atlantic / HBO
Visual Art
Steve McQueen: Year 3
Tate Britain and billboards across London
A partnership between Tate, Artangel and A New Direction
The Times Breakthrough Award
Waad al-Kateab
Outstanding Achievement Award
Ian McKellen
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