(Reuters) – A British mini-series based on the life of serial killer Fred West led the BAFTA TV
nominations on Tuesday with four, including best actor and actress for the two central characters.
“Appropriate Adult” features Dominic West as Fred West, charged
with the murder of 12 girls and young women but who was found hanging in his cell in 1995 in an apparent suicide before he
stood trial.
His co-star, Emily Watson, plays Janet Leach, the woman who was selected at random to act as an
“appropriate adult” and who had to sit in on police interrogations of West.
The program was criticized by Leach’s son
and a former police officer who led the investigation for what they said were inaccuracies and sensationalism, but many
critics praised its depiction of one of Britain’s most shocking crime cases.
Watson and Dominic West were shortlisted
in the best actress and actor categories respectively, while Appropriate Adult, which aired on the commercial ITV1 channel,
also picked up BAFTA nominations for best supporting actress and best mini-series.
Close behind was public broadcaster
BBC’s “Sherlock”, with Benedict Cumberbatch in the role of Sherlock Holmes up for best actor and co-stars Martin Freeman and
Andrew Scott both contesting the supporting actor category.
“This Is England ’88”, aired on Channel 4, also picked up
three nominations for leading actor, leading actress and mini-series.
Other nominations included veteran Maggie Smith
for her supporting role in the hit period drama “Downton Abbey”, and a first BAFTA nominations for Arab news channel Al
Jazeera in the current affairs category for its program on the uprisings in Bahrain.
Among the leading channels, BBC1
led the field with a total of 22 nominations, followed by BBC2 (15), ITV1 (13) and BBC4 (10).
The British Academy of
Film and Television (BAFTA) TV awards, sponsored by Arqiva, will be announced on May 27.
(Reporting by Mike Collett-White,
editing by Paul Casciato)