The most controversial BAFTA Film Awards moments ever

Jennifer Lawrence, Stephen Fry and BAFTA protestors have all had reasons to be upset.
Jennifer Lawrence, Stephen Fry and BAFTA protestors have all had reasons to be upset.

It’s the BAFTAs on Sunday, and we couldn’t be more excited. Partly because we love award shows, partly because we can’t wait to gawp at what everyone’s wearing, and partly because these things invariably involve at least one completely bonkers moment, and we can’t wait to find out what it is this year.

We’d attempt to guess what it’s going to be, but if it’s anything like the following examples, it’s going to be impossible to predict.

Jennifer Lawrence vs Joanna Lumley

Actress Jennifer Lawrence poses for photographers upon arrival at the BAFTA Awards 2018 in London, Sunday, Feb. 18, 2018. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)
Actress Jennifer Lawrence poses for photographers upon arrival at the BAFTA Awards 2018 in London, Sunday, Feb. 18, 2018. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)

For example, who knew that Jennifer Lawrence was going to start a FEUD with Joanna Lumley, OBE? The 2018 ceremony was barely moments old before Lumley stepped up to introduce Lawrence.

“Right let’s start giving out some of those beautiful BAFTAs shall we?” Lumley said.

“And we start with the award for Outstanding British Film and who better to kick the whole evening off than the hottest actress on the planet.”

“Soon to be seen in Red Sparrow, it’s the ravishing Jennifer Lawrence.”

Looking uncomfortable, Lawrence replied with a deadpan: “Hi, that was a bit much but thank you Joanna.”

Viewers were NOT happy.

Lawrence was forced to explain, telling Magic Radio: “Everybody thought that I was being rude. But to be fair, I couldn’t have just walked out after she was like, ‘biggest movie star in the world!’ and gone, ‘thank you, Joanna’.

“It would have been like, ‘so you agree? You think you’re really pretty’.'”

Which is fair enough.

BAFTA bubbles

401521 16: Actress Rosamund Pike arrives at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) awards ceremony February 24, 2002 in London. (Photo by UK Press/Getty Images)
401521 16: Actress Rosamund Pike arrives at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) awards ceremony February 24, 2002 in London. (Photo by UK Press/Getty Images)

When the guests of the 2002 Baftas arrived at the red carpet for the awards show they were greeted by an entirely different sort of bubbles than they expected.

Rather than a cool glass of champers, guests at the 55th British Academy Film Awards found the red carpet was drenched in a thick layer of soap suds. Stars including Kate Winslet and Dame Judi Dench had their shoes ruined after torrential rain turned the carpet into foam in London's Leicester Square, where the awards were hosted that year.

The stars of the big screen leave their footprints on a very wet  red carpet after their arrived for the Orange British Academy Film Awards at the Odeon cinema in London's Leicester Square.   (Photo by Yui Mok - PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images)
The stars of the big screen leave their footprints on a very wet red carpet after their arrived for the Orange British Academy Film Awards at the Odeon cinema in London's Leicester Square. (Photo by Yui Mok - PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images)

Kevin Spacey, who was presenting an award, joked that Dame Judi Dench's shoes had been ruined and she was holding organisers responsible. Host Stephen Fry replied: "I think it's the years of greasy flattery given to actors which is finally bubbling up."

Reports at the time laid the finger of blame at the suppliers of the carpet, saying that flame retardant chemicals had reacted with the torrential rain. It was later destroyed.

BAFTA vs female directors

Lynne Ramsay missed out on a film award nomination for You Were Never Really Here.
Lynne Ramsay missed out on a film award nomination for You Were Never Really Here.

2019 was an incredible year for women directors. Whether it was Greta Gerwig’s Little Women or Lulu Wang’s The Farewell, or many more examples, women directors deserved to be rewarded for their incredible work at every single awards ceremony in 2020. Which probably explains why people were so upset to see yet another all-male line-up at the BAFTAs this year.

It wouldn’t be so bad, if the BAFTAs hadn’t been through the EXACT SAME THING last year, when they snubbed Lynne Ramsay’s You Were Never Really Here and Debra Granik’s Leave No Trace and everyone noticed that they haven’t nominated a woman for Best Director since 2013.

BAFTA chief executive Amanda Berry said it is "disappointing" that there are no female directors recognised.

She said: "Being totally honest we are disappointed and that is not to take anything away from the people who have been nominated.

"We do have 13 directors nominated who are females across other categories, so everybody from Jennifer Lee who directed Frozen 2, and this is what gives me joy and hope actually, six female directors in the shorts category and that is the category where we are really seeing talent at the start of their career and they are the industry of the future but we are going to do more, we are not going to stop pushing."

Which really doesn’t explain why things haven’t changed this year, but okay.

#BaftaBlackOut

Protesters who are part of a group called Creatives of Colour Network stage a “peaceful” demonstration at the junction of Russell Street and Bow Street in London, ahead of the EE British Academy Film Awards, at the Royal Opera House, London, against what it describes as a lack of diversity in front of the camera.
Protesters who are part of a group called Creatives of Colour Network stage a “peaceful” demonstration at the junction of Russell Street and Bow Street in London, ahead of the EE British Academy Film Awards, at the Royal Opera House, London, against what it describes as a lack of diversity in front of the camera.

In 2016, protestors took to the Bafta red carpet to highlight an uncomfortable truth about the awards – there were barely any black nominees. Beasts Of No Nation star Idris Elba, who was nominated for best supporting actor, and Star Wars actor John Boyega, who ultimately won Rising Star, were the only black actors on the 2016 shortlist.

‘Creatives of Colour Network’ demonstrated at London’s Royal Opera House, with placards and banners. Did it make a difference? Let’s have a look at 2017 and see, we’re sure it’s fine.

#BaftasSoWhite

Barry Jenkins speaks at the Foreign Language Film Oscar nominees reception sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills, California, on March 2, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / ANGELA WEISS (Photo credit should read ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images)
Barry Jenkins speaks at the Foreign Language Film Oscar nominees reception sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills, California, on March 2, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / ANGELA WEISS (Photo credit should read ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images)

Oh. In 2017, NO BAME actors were nominated for leading-role categories, or for best director. When you consider this was the year that Barry Jenkins was winning awards for Moonlight (packed with stunning performances), and Denzel Washington scorched the screen in Fences (both were nominated for Oscars that year) that’s actually really strange.

The situation was so weird that a hashtag was created, which turned the story into global news.

2019 saw an improvement – Spike Lee was up for Best Director for BlacKkKlanman, Viola Davis was nominated for Best Actress for Widows, and Barry Jenkins got a Best Adapted Screenplay nod for If Beale Street Could Talk, but 2020 saw another huge step backward for Bafta diversity.

All of the acting nominees for this year's film awards are white, Margot Robbie even appears twice on the Best Supporting Actress docket.

Stephen Fry vs Jenny Beavan

Stephen Fry is a national treasure. His Twitter feed was one of the most popular since the very earliest days of the service, thanks to Fry’s combination of open honesty, twinkly-eyed wisdom and genuinely funny bon mots.

So it was a fairly major shock when he quit tweeting, after a massive backlash against his 2016 Bafta hosting skills.

People were specifically upset about his perceived insult towards costume designer Jenny Beavan, when he called her a ‘bag lady’ when he was presenting her with an award for her work on Mad Max: Fury Road.

British comedian and actor Stephen Fry poses for photographs with a BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) statuette, 2015. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
British comedian and actor Stephen Fry poses for photographs with a BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) statuette, 2015. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

“Only one of the great cinematic costume designers would come to an awards ceremony dressed as a bag lady,” Fry quipped.

As with Jennifer Lawrence, it was an in-joke that went too far in the opinion of the online audience, with Twitter exploding in annoyance at Fry.

Beavan later clarified: “Yes we are friends, and I am absolutely not upset. But I don’t want to talk any further because if I talk about it it will just create more fuss”.