News: Writers' Guild Awards For Comedy Talent

Satirical sitcom Veep won Best TV Situation Comedy and Deborah Frances-White won Best Radio Comedy for Deborah Frances-White Rolls The Dice at the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain Awards last night.

A special tribute was also made to Writers’ Guild member David Nobbs, who died on 8 August 2015 and was best known for writing the 1970s series The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, adapted from his own novels. Novelist and writer Jonathan Coe, whose novel What a Carve Up! was adapted by David Nobbs, gave a speech in his memory.

Acclaimed writer and producer, Russell T Davies, was presented the coveted Outstanding Contribution to Writing Award.

The award was presented to Davies by writer Paul Abbott in honour of his body of work for TV including critical and popular successes such as the seminal Queer as Folk, the hugely successful revival of Doctor Who, and recent innovative drama trilogy; Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Davies and Abbott are both members of the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain (WGGB).

Of his win, Davies said: “For me, this is the greatest of honours, coming from fellow writers, and I’m enormously grateful to the Writers’ Guild - for this, and for the work it does for writers everywhere.”

Comedian Susan Calman hosted the event honouring the cream of British film, TV, theatre, radio and gaming writing talent in front of an audience from a broad range of creative industries.

Other winners included Paul King who was awarded Best Screenplay for the heartwarming hit film Paddington. Timberlake Wertenbaker took home the award for Best Play for American Revolution drama Jefferson’s Garden. Best Long Running TV Series went to Scottish soap River City and Louise Ironside. Best Writing in a Video Game was won by Dan Pinchbeck for celebrated first-person adventure game, Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture. 

Pictured: The Veep team with Susan Calman and Helen Lederer.

 

Writers’ Guild Awards 2016 winners: 

 

Outstanding Contribution to Writing

Russell T Davies

 

Best Radio Comedy

Winner: Deborah Frances-White Rolls The Dice by Deborah Frances-White

Shortlisted: Ed Reardon’s Week by Andrew Nickolds & Christopher Douglas, Boswell’s Lives by

Jon Canter

 

Best Radio Drama

Winner: Quill by Tony Jones

Shortlisted: Fragments by Laura Lomas, Orpheus & Eurydice by Linda Marshall Griffiths

 

Best Long Running TV Series

Winner: River City, Series 13, Episode 8 by Louise Ironside

Shortlisted: Holby City, Series 17, Episode 50 “At First I was Afraid” by Julia Gilbert, Emmerdale, Episode 7188/89 by Maxine Alderton 

 

Best Writing in a Video Game

Winner: Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture by Dan Pinchbeck

Shortlisted: Her Story by Sam Barlow, Sunless Sea by Alexis Kennedy, Richard Cobbett, Amal El-Mohtar, Chris Gardiner, Meg Jayanth and Emily Short

 

Best Children’s TV Episode

Winner: Eve – Final Episode: “Control, Alter, Delete” by Emma Reeves

Shortlisted: The Dumping Ground – Series 3, Episode 10 “Dragon Slayer” by Julie Dixon, Katie Morag and the Worst Day Ever by Sergio Casci

 

Best Long Form TV Drama

Winner: Not Safe for Work by DC Moore

Shortlisted: Banished by Jimmy McGovern, Wolf Hall by Peter Straughan 

 

Best First Screenplay

Winner: X + Y by James Graham

Shortlisted: ’71 by Gregory Burke, The Falling by Carol Morley

 

Best Play for Young Audiences

Winner: Three Wise Monkeys, Mike Kenny 

Shortlisted: Bird by Laura Lomas, Muddy Choir by Jesse Briton

 

Best Play

Winner: Jefferson’s Garden by Timberlake Wertenbaker

Shortlisted: Liberian Girl by Diana Nneka Atuona, Temple by Steve Waters 

 

Best Screenplay

Winner: Paddington by Paul King

Shortlisted: Wild by Nick Hornby, Ex Machina by Alex Garland

 

Best TV Situation Comedy

Winner: Veep Season Four by Simon Blackwell, Jon Brown, Kevin Cecil, Roger Drew, Peter Fellows, Neil Gibbons, Rob Gibbons, Sean Gray, Callie Hersheway, Armando Iannucci, Sean Love, Ian Martin, Georgia Pritchett, David Quantick, Andy Riley, Tony Roche, Will Smith

Shortlisted: Catastrophe by Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney, W1A by John Morton 

 

Best Short Form TV Drama

Winner: Code of a Killer by Michael Crompton

Shortlisted: The Casual Vacancy by Sarah Phelps, The Gamechangers by James Wood

 

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