BAFTA Awards Undergo Overhaul

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is revamping its voting system for the Orange British Academy Film Awards.

LONDON --

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is revamping its voting system for the Orange British Academy Film Awards.

According to a report from The Hollywood Reporter, the move reduces the voting rounds from three to two, and will be introduced in time for this year's voting period leading to the 2013 winners. The change will help keep BAFTA's film awards nominations ahead of the Oscars and maintain the British awards' prominent role during awards season.

The other goal is to give BAFTA members more opportunities to vote on relevant categories and follows after "extensive discussion, consideration and research over several years," the organization said.

BAFTA CEO Amanda Berry said the organization "wanted to keep its nominations ahead of the Oscars," noting that the changes bring the voting procedures closer to the Oscar process. Last year, the nomination date for the Academy Awards was moved a week earlier in the schedule.

"We've set our nominations date for January 9, 2013, and the Oscars are scheduled for January 15, 2013, so we'll be six days ahead," Berry said. "There's a short space in the calendar when the world is focused on film, and we wanted to be part of that to help promote British film and our members." This year, BAFTA nominations came out January 17, followed by the Oscars on January 24.

The BAFTA awards ceremony will be held February 10, 2013; the Oscars will take place February 24.

As with previous years, members will vote for both the nominations and the winner in the best film category and the four performance categories – actor, actress, supporting actor, supporting actress.

Members also will have the opportunity to opt in to chapters to vote for the nominees and winner in the animation, documentary, "film not in the English language" and outstanding British film categories.

Berry said the rule changes will allow members to abstain for categories they do not feel their expertise lies in.

BAFTA said individual chapters now will decide the nominees, and members then will vote for the winner across the adapted screenplay and original screenplay, cinematography, costume design, director, editing, makeup & hair, original music, production design, sound and special visual effects prize categories.

Voting procedures remain unchanged for outstanding debut by a writer, director or producer in their first feature film, short film and short animation categories.

A jury will decide both the nominations and winner for outstanding debut; the short film and short animation nominations also will be decided by a jury and the winners decided by an opt-in chapter.

BAFTA’s Film Committee chair Nik Powell said: "This decision was taken due to the simplicity and clarity of a two-round system, not to mention its potential to involve members more. These changes capitalize on the strength and expertise of the academy’s chapter voting system, which was first introduced in 2004-05."

BAFTA has 6,500 voting members, and its chapter sizes range from the 100s to the 1,000s depending on which field is picked.

Jennifer Wolfe's picture

Formerly Editor-in-Chief of Animation World Network, Jennifer Wolfe has worked in the Media & Entertainment industry as a writer and PR professional since 2003.

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