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12th Canadian Screen Awards

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12th Canadian Screen Awards
Date26–31 May 2024
LocationCanadian Broadcasting Centre
Hosted byMae Martin
Highlights
Most awardsBlackBerry (film, 14), Little Bird (TV, 13)
Most nominationsBlackBerry (film, 17), Little Bird (TV, 19)
Best Motion PictureBlackBerry
Best Dramatic SeriesLittle Bird
Best Comedy SeriesBria Mack Gets a Life
← 11th · Canadian Screen Awards

The 12th Canadian Screen Awards were presented by the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television to honour achievements in Canadian film, television and digital media production in 2023. They were held at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre in Toronto from 28–31 May 2024, as part of Canadian Screen Week, with highlights of the final gala ceremony broadcast in a CBC Television special on 31 May 2024.[1]

Nominations were announced on 6 March;[2] television drama Little Bird led in overall nominations with 19, while Matt Johnson's film BlackBerry received 17 nominations—becoming the most-nominated film in the history of the ceremony.[3]

Ceremony information

[edit]

Due to venue availability issues in Toronto, the ceremony was delayed from a provisional April scheduling to May 2024. In addition, the ceremonies were held at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre rather than Meridian Hall as in past years.[4] To streamline the event, the ceremony for children's and animated programming was discontinued, with its awards dispersed into the six remaining ceremonies.[4]

In response to criticism over the format of CBC Television's presentation of the 11th Canadian Screen Awards, the Academy announced that a television special focusing upon the final gala would air 31 May. As with the previous year's ceremony, the special was tape delayed and condensed into a one-hour format. Academy CEO Tammy Frick stated that broadcasting the special on the same day as the final gala (as opposed to the Sunday afterward) would help preserve its "energy" and immediacy, while still allowing time to edit out "industry-heavy elements" that may not be interesting to television audiences.[5][4]

The main gala was hosted by comedian Mae Martin.[6] The Canadian Screen Week events were hosted by Sarah Davis (news, entertainment and sports), Andrew Phung (television craft), Keshia Chanté (television program and performance), Anne-Marie Mediwake (documentary, factual, lifestyle, and reality), and Sabine Daniel (cinematic arts).

Category changes

[edit]

Film

[edit]

The Best Lead Performance in a Film and Best Supporting Performance in a Film categories were split into separate categories for comedy and drama films. They were also accompanied by a new award for Best Performance in a Live Action Short Drama. The number of nominees in each acting category remain at eight.[7] The categories for best director, best original and adapted screenplay and the John Dunning Award for best first film are now allowed to name six nominees instead of five if the number of eligible submissions reaches or exceeds nine. A new category was also introduced for Best Sound Design in a Documentary.[7]

Television

[edit]

The award for Best Performance in a Children's or Youth Program or Series were split into separate new lead and supporting awards, and new awards were introduced for best ensemble performance in comedy and drama.[7]

The former category for Best Talk Program or Series, which considered talk and interview programming regardless of its topic and format, was split into distinct new categories: Best Talk Series for entertainment and cultural talk series, and Best Political News Program or Series for news-oriented shows. One-off entertainment talk specials which may formerly have been considered under the old category are now restricted to Best Entertainment News Program or Series. The former category for Best News Special was also split into two separate categories, distinguishing planned news specials about prescheduled events, such as election coverage, from breaking news specials about unforeseen news events.[7]

A new category for Best Comedy Special was introduced, with stand-up comedy specials becoming ineligible for Best Variety or Entertainment Special and Best Performing Arts Program as a result.[7]

Adult animation productions became eligible for Best Comedy Series.[7]

A new category was introduced for Best Picture Editing in Animation.[7]

Digital media

[edit]

The awards for Best Virtual Reality Game and Best Children's Video Game, which existed as distinct submission categories but had not consistently been presented in recent years due to high variability in the number of eligible submissions, were discontinued. All games in those categories will remain eligible for the main Best Video Game category.[7]

A new category was introduced for Best Picture Editing in a Web Program or Series.[7]

Special awards

[edit]

The first special award recipients were announced in March 2024:[8] Several further special awards were announced in early April,[9] with a third round of honorees announced on May 1.[10]

Film

[edit]
Best Motion Picture Best Direction
Best Lead Performance in a Comedy Film Best Lead Performance in a Drama Film
Best Supporting Performance in a Comedy Film Best Supporting Performance in a Drama Film
Best Original Screenplay Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Feature Length Documentary Best Short Documentary
Best Live Action Short Drama Best Performance in a Live Action Short Drama
Best Animated Short John Dunning Best First Feature
Best Art Direction/Production Design Best Cinematography
Best Costume Design Best Editing
Best Sound Editing Best Sound Mixing
Best Original Score Best Original Song
Best Makeup Best Hair
Best Cinematography in a Documentary Best Editing in a Documentary
Best Original Music in a Documentary Best Sound Design in a Documentary
Best Visual Effects Best Casting in a Film
  • Blue ribbon Andy Robinson, Infinity Pool[11]
  • Jeff Bruneel, James Miligan, Tamara Young, Nick Winger and Adam Graves, In Flames
  • Adam Graves, The King Tide
  • Marie-Claude Lafontaine, JF (Jafaz) Ferland and Simon Beaupré, One Summer (Le temps d'un été)
  • Tristan Zerafa, Lou Gatti, Matthew Nayman and Mike Boers, BlackBerry
Golden Screen Award

Television

[edit]

Programs

[edit]
Best Drama Series Best Comedy Series
Animated program or series Documentary program
Children's or youth fiction Children's or youth non-fiction
TV Movie History Documentary Program or Series
Biography or Arts Documentary Program or Series Lifestyle Program or Series
Factual series Reality/Competition Program or Series
Pre-School program or series Sketch comedy program or series
Science or Nature Documentary Program or Series (Rob Stewart Award) Social/Political Documentary Program (Donald Brittain Award)
Comedy special Variety or entertainment special
Talk series Live entertainment special

Actors

[edit]
Lead performance, drama Supporting performance, drama
Lead performance, comedy Supporting performance, comedy
Performance in a television film or miniseries Performance in an animated program or series
Performance in a guest role in a comedy series Performance in a guest role in a drama series
Lead performance in a children's or youth program or series Supporting performance in a children's or youth program or series
Ensemble performance in a comedy series Ensemble performance in a drama series
Ensemble performance in a variety or sketch comedy program or series

News and information

[edit]
National newscast Local newscast
News anchor, national News anchor, local
News reporter, national News reporter, local
News special News or information segment
Entertainment news series Political news series
News or information series News or information program
Host or interviewer, news or information program or series Host, talk show or entertainment news
Host, live entertainment special Host, lifestyle
Host or presenter, factual or reality competition Morning show

Sports

[edit]
Live sporting event coverage Sports analysis or commentary
Sports host Sports play-by-play
Sports feature segment Sports opening
  • Blue ribbon "For All of Us" — TSN – Rob Dunn, Jacob Frenkel, Vince Tremblay, Mike McKay, Cedrik Dessureault[14]
  • "How Ryan Francis is honouring his late grandmother" — Sportsnet – Donnovan Bennett, David Zelikovitz, Sam Nasrawi
  • "Knuckle Hop Arctic Winter Games" — CBC Sports – Ryan Johnston, Monika Platek, Aaron Dutra, Camryn Kern, Devin Heroux
  • "Staring Back" — TSN – Matt Dorman, Dave Naylor, Darren Oliver, Steve Denheyer, Curry Leamen
  • Blue ribbon 109th Grey CupTSN – Matt Dorman, Darren Oliver, Devon Burns, Steve Denheyer, Richard Liani[14]
  • 2023 Calgary Stampede OpenSportsnet – Cindy Giles, Michael Little
  • 2023 Stanley Cup Eastern Conference Semifinals Game 1: "Will Arnett Tease" — Sportsnet – Sean Cleary, James Sharpe, Kevin Fallis, Carson Illidge, Will Arnett
  • "You can say Hockey is for Everyone. Or you can join the fight to ensure that’s true" — Sportsnet – Donnovan Bennett, Sam Nasrawi, Ed Hall, David Zelikovitz
Sports program or series

Craft awards

[edit]
Editorial research Visual research
Make-Up Costume Design
Casting, Fiction Casting, Non-Fiction
Production design/art direction in a fiction program or series Production design/art direction in a non-fiction program or series
Visual effects Hair
  • Blue ribbon Sébastien Chartier, Transplant: "Crete"[15]
  • Lawren Bancroft-Wilson, Liam Karp, Justin Reimer, Dmitry Vinnik, Terry Kalinich, Jeremy Stewart, Vardan Aleksanyan, Natalya MacKinnon, Alexandr Kurdyaev and Sebastian Weber, SkyMed: "Return to Base"
  • Marc Hall, Loïc Surprenant and Juan Manuel Pardo Salamanca, Plan B: "Episode 6"
  • Aaron Wright, Minas Kotsopoulos, Leila White, Michael Bitton, Joel Chambers, Iyi Tubi, Jeffrey King, Daniel Knight and Graham Tucker, Robyn Hood: "Outlaws"

Photography

[edit]
Photography in a comedy series Photography in a documentary program or factual series
Photography in a drama program or series Photography in a lifestyle or reality program or series
Photography in a news or information program, series or segment

Editing

[edit]
Editing in a comedy program or series Editing in a dramatic program or series
Editing in a children's or youth program or series Editing in a documentary program or series
Editing in a factual program or series Editing in a reality or competition program or series
Editing in an animated program or series

Sound

[edit]
Sound in a fiction program or series Sound in a documentary or factual program or series
  • Blue ribbon Paul Lucien Col, Louis Gignac, Evelio Manfred Gay Salinas, Claire Pochon, Anton Fischlin, Simon Meilleur, Éric Med Lagacé and Delphine Measroch, Little Bird: "Love Is All Around"[15]
  • Rob Ainsley, Rachelle Audet, Paul Germann, Martin Gwynn Jones, Jesse Fellows, Davi Aquino, Kevin Schultz and Kevin Jung, Sort Of: "Sort of Hospital Again"
  • David Caporale, Krystin Hunter, John Dykstra, Adam Raley, David Yonson and Marilee Yorston, SurrealEstate: "Trust the Process"
  • Scott Donald, John Laranger, Jill Purdy, Faustine Pelipel, Dan Sexton, Daniel Pellerin, Chris Russell and Evelio Manfred Gay Salinas, The Spencer Sisters: "The Scholar's Snafu"
  • Richard Spence-Thomas, Gary Vaughan, Gary Tompkins and Doug McClement, Richard III (CBC Presents the Stratford Festival)
Sound in a lifestyle, reality or entertainment program or series Sound in an animated program or series
  • Blue ribbon John Diemer, Scott Brachmayer, Rosie Eberhard, Levi Linton, Rob Taylor, Eric Leigh and Alastair Sims, Canada's Drag Race: Canada vs. the World: "Bonjour Hi"[13]
  • David Best, Daniel Hewett, Justin Ladd, Brian Mellersch, Malcom Owen Flood, Simon Paine, Mark Krupka, Sammy Yi, Chandra Bulucon and Lisa Meitin, Canada's Ultimate Challenge: "Carcross, Yukon"
  • John Diemer, Scott Brachmayer, Rosie Eberhard, Eric Leigh, Rob Taylor, Kara MacKinlay, Alastair Sims and Phil Nagy, Drink Masters: "Botanical Bevvies"
  • Mark Krupka, Luke McLean, Brian Gallant and Lisa Meitin, The Amazing Race Canada: "This Is Going to Be a Spicy Leg"
  • Mark Vreeken, Jeff Kozak, Charles-Émile Beaudin and Doug McClement, Juno Awards of 2023
  • Blue ribbon Richard Spence-Thomas, Tim Muirhead, Luke Dante, Katie Pagacz, Kyle Peters, Ryan Ongaro, Patton Rodrigues and Mitch Conners, PAW Patrol: "Aqua Pups Save a Floating Castle"[15]
  • Ryan Araki, Evan Turner, Neil Parfitt, Andrew McDonnell and Richard Spence-Thomas, Super Wish: "The Ballooniverse Pageant / The Way Back Home"
  • Gregorio Gomez, Greg Stewart, Angelo Nicoloyannis, John Franco, Bonnie Lambie and Rick Senechal, Snoopy Presents: One-of-a-Kind Marcie
  • Mike Mancuso, Joe Tetreau, Evan Turner, Ryan Eligh, Patrick Mallan and Matt McKenzie, Pinecone & Pony: "The Sturdy Stone"
  • Ethan Myers, Julian Rudd, Art Mullin, Sebastian Biega, Chris Battaglia and Kevin Chamberlain, Unicorn Academy

Directing

[edit]
Children's or youth Comedy
Documentary or factual series Documentary program
TV Movie Dramatic series
Lifestyle or information program or mini–series Live sporting event
Reality or competition program or series Variety or sketch comedy program or series
Animated program or series Factual

Music

[edit]
Best Original Music, Animation Best Original Music, Comedy
Best Original Music, Drama Best Original Music, Documentary
Best Original Music, Factual, Lifestyle, Reality or Entertainment Best Original Song

Writing

[edit]
Comedy series Drama series
Animated program or series Children's or youth
Documentary Factual program or series
Lifestyle or reality/competition program or series Pre-school program or series
TV Movie Variety or sketch comedy program or series

All-platform awards

[edit]

One major category is currently presented without regard to the distinction between film, television or web media content.

Stunt Coordination
  • Blue ribbon Sean Skene, Dan Skene and Cam Fergus, Shoresy: "Set the Tone"[12]
  • Angelica Lisk-Hann, Kirpa Budwal, Victoria Goodman, Howard Green, Dillon Jagersky, Daniel Lavigne, Greg Leach and Yvette McKoy, Robyn Hood: "Outlaws"
  • Stéphane Lefebvre, Marry F*** Kill
  • Dan Skene, Letterkenny: "Degens"
  • John Stead, Pretty Hard Cases: "Always a Bridesmaid"

Audience awards

[edit]
Cogeco Fund Audience Choice Shaw Rocket Fund Kids' Choice

Digital media

[edit]
Original Program or Series, Fiction Original Program or Series, Non-Fiction
  • Blue ribbon Here & QueerPeter Knegt, Lucius Dechausay, Mercedes Grundy, Chelle Turingan[14]
  • 2022 Reel Asian Awards — Christine Vu, Deanna Wong
  • Being Black in Canada: Friends and Allies — Tamika Forrester, Nazima Walji, Nathaniel Smith, Alicia Lee
  • Farm Crime — Geoff Morrison, Lucy Cameron
  • Indigenous Futures: How These Teens Are Reclaiming Their Joy — Lisa Fender, Lenard Monkman, Angelica Cooper, Jaime McMahon, Sabrina Fabian, Nina Corfu, Sophia Smoke, Janna McGinn, Philip Street, Kevin Nepitabo, Jaison Empson, Bryan Harder, Mia Rodak, Marie McCann, Sally Catto
Lead Performance in a Web Program or Series Supporting Performance in a Web Program or Series
Direction in a Web Program or Series Host in a Web Program or Series
Picture Editing in a Web Program or Series Writing in a Web Program or Series
Immersive Experience, Fiction Immersive Experience, Non-Fiction
Video game Live Production for Social Media
  • Blue ribbon Venba[12]
  • Little Learning Machines
  • Return to Grace
Interactive production

Reception

[edit]

Reviewing the television broadcast, Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail wrote that while it still had significant problems, it had succeeded in being better than the previous year's "utter disaster".[16] He noted a technical snafu which left viewers who were watching the broadcast on the CBC Gem streaming platform unable to hear the sound for the first few minutes, and the fact that the condensed one-hour format had left too many memorable moments from the presentations on the cutting-room floor, but praised Martin as a solid host who "anchored the show with an energetic, sharp mix of self-deprecation and confidence", and noted that the highlights of the broadcast were the heartfelt special award acceptance speeches of Tonya Williams and Denis Villeneuve.[16] While granting that the 2024 awards' scheduling in May was attributable to the last-minute venue change, he also felt that even the typical April scheduling no longer makes sense, and opined that the awards should shift to being presented in February to capitalize on award-season energy, or September to capitalize on the industry activity around the Toronto International Film Festival.[16]

References

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  1. ^ Etan Vlessing, "Canadian Screen Awards Gets New Date, Venue Change". The Hollywood Reporter, February 8, 2024.
  2. ^ Jackson Weaver, "BlackBerry, Sort Of, Little Bird dominate Canadian Screen Award nominations". CBC News, March 6, 2024.
  3. ^ "Matt Johnson's BlackBerry breaks Canadian Screen Awards record with 17 nominations". The Globe and Mail. March 6, 2024. Retrieved March 26, 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Townsend, Kelly (February 8, 2024). "Canadian Screen Awards move to May 31". Playback Online. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
  5. ^ "Organizers say Canadian Screen Awards will again be a pre-taped ceremony". Canadian Press. February 8, 2024. Retrieved February 23, 2024 – via CityNews Toronto.
  6. ^ Etan Vlessing, "Mae Martin to Host Canadian Screen Awards Special". The Hollywood Reporter, February 22, 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Rules and Regulation Change Highlights". Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, August 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d Connie Thiessen, "Marilyn Denis, John Brunton among Canadian Academy ‘Special Award’ recipients". Broadcast Dialogue, March 19, 2024.
  9. ^ a b c Etan Vlessing, "Devery Jacobs, Lamar Johnson to Receive Honorary Canadian Screen Awards". The Hollywood Reporter, April 4, 2024.
  10. ^ a b c d e Connie Thiessen, "Canadian Academy to recognize Blue Ant Media CEO, among others". Broadcast Dialogue, May 1, 2024.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Connie Thiessen, "Canadian Screen Awards winners: Cinematic Arts". Broadcast Dialogue, May 30, 2024.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Connie Thiessen, "Canadian Screen Awards winners: TV Program & Performance". Broadcast Dialogue, May 29, 2024.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Connie Thiessen, "Canadian Screen Awards winners: Documentary, Factual, Lifestyle & Reality". Broadcast Dialogue, May 30, 2024.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Connie Thiessen, "Canadian Screen Awards winners: News, Entertainment & Sports". Broadcast Dialogue, May 28, 2024.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Connie Thiessen, "Canadian Screen Awards winners: Television Craft". Broadcast Dialogue, May 29, 2024.
  16. ^ a b c Barry Hertz, "The 2024 Canadian Screen Awards rebounded from last year’s disaster – once you could actually hear the show". The Globe and Mail, May 31, 2024.