Express & Star

Wait goes on for first non-white winner of best actress Bafta

The award has now been given to a white performer 57 years in a row.

By contributor Ian Jones, PA
Published
Mikey Madison with her Bafta for best actress
Mikey Madison won the Bafta for best actress for her role in the comedy drama Anora (Ian West/PA)

Mikey Madison’s Bafta success means the wait goes on for the first ever non-white winner of the award for best actress.

Two of the six nominees in the category this year were from an ethnic minority background: Cynthia Erivo, for the musical fantasy Wicked, and Marianne Jean-Baptiste, for the drama Hard Truths.

Both lost out to Mikey Madison, who won for her role in the comedy drama Anora.

The Bafta for best actress has now been given to a white performer 57 years in a row, since the category was first introduced in 1969.

By contrast, there have been six non-white winners of the best actor award, most recently Will Smith in 2022 for the film King Richard, and five non-white winners of best supporting actor, such as Daniel Kaluuya in 2021 for Judas & the Black Messiah.

Zoe Saldana with her Bafta for best supporting actress, for her role in the film Emilia Perez
Zoe Saldana with her Bafta for best supporting actress, for her role in the film Emilia Perez (Ian West/PA)

The most diverse roll call is in the category for best supporting actress, which has seen nine non-white winners since 1969, including Da’Vine Joy Randolph last year for The Holdovers, and Zoe Saldana this year for the musical crime film Emilia Perez.

Across the four acting categories, non-white performers made up just five of the 24 nominees, or 21%, down from 25% last year and 38% in 2023, and well below the record 67% in 2021.

But although the proportion of non-white nominees fell this year, it was still higher than the average since 2000 (13%) and an improvement on the 2020 list, when every acting nominee was white.

Elsewhere at Sunday night’s awards, Coralie Fargeat missed out on the chance to become only the fourth ever female winner of the Bafta for best director.

She was the sole woman on the list of nominees, for her body horror film The Substance, but lost to Brady Corbet for his epic period drama The Brutalist.

There remain just three female winners of the best director award in Bafta history: Kathryn Bigelow (for The Hurt Locker in 2010), Chloe Zhao (Nomadland in 2021) and Jane Campion (The Power Of The Dog in 2022).

A chart showing the female winners of the Bafta film award for best director
(PA Graphics)

Female directors overlooked this year included Alice Rohrwacher, for the period drama La Chimera; Ellen Kuras, for the biographical epic Lee; and Nora Fingscheidt, for the low-key drama The Outrun.

No women were nominated this year for best cinematography, as was the case in 2024.

In the preceding two years there was only one female on the list of nominees, Mandy Walker in 2023 (Elvis) and Ari Wenger in 2022 (The Power Of The Dog), neither of whom won, meaning this award has only ever been given to a man.

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