Banff World Media Festival | |
---|---|
Frequency | Annual |
Location(s) | Banff, Alberta, Canada. |
Years active | 45 |
Inaugurated | 1979[1] | as the Banff World Television Festival
Organised by | Jenn Kuzmyk, Executive Director |
Website | https://banffmediafestival.playbackonline.ca/ |
The Banff World Media Festival (formerly known as the Banff World Television Festival) is an international media event held in the Canadian Rockies at the Fairmont Banff Springs Hotel in Banff, Alberta, Canada. The festival is dedicated to world television and digital content and its creation and development, and is owned and operated by Brunico Communications.[2]
As well as honouring excellence in international television, professionals from around the world participate in seminars, master classes, and pitching opportunities. Film directors, screenwriters, and producers from PBS, BBC, NHK, Arte, Channel 4, ABC, Sony Pictures, HBO, CBC, NFB, ICP (Israel Cable Programming), SBS, and many other broadcasters and production companies attend the annual event.[3]
The festival provides a global platform for industry members to discuss and debate, and explore current issues, challenges and trends.[4]
Awards
The festival features an international program competition, the Banff Rockie Awards. Past winners include PBS for The Hobart Shakespeareans and No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, ICP for Aaron Cohen's Debt, BBC and HBO for The Children of Beslan, NHK for Children Full of Life, BBC and WGBH for Bleak House, and Arte for Fellini: I'm a Born Liar.
The awards ceremony also bestows the Sir Peter Ustinov Comedy Award. Past recipients of the award include John Cleese, Dame Edna, Bob Newhart, Martin Short, Tracey Ullman, Kelsey Grammer, Ricky Gervais, Craig Ferguson, Shane Smith, Brent Butt, and Suroosh Alvi. Jan Randall was music director and Composer for the awards from 1995 to 2007.
The Rockie Awards
The Rockies Program Competition
The Rockie Awards is Banff’s flagship program celebrating excellence in television and digital content from around the world. Hundreds of television and digital programs compete for a coveted Rockie Award, presented at a ceremony each year at Banff. With participation from more than 40 countries annually, including an industry jury of more than 350 professionals working in entertainment and media around the world, the Rockie Awards is one of the world’s largest program competitions of its kind.
The Rockies Special Achievement Awards
Each year, prolific members of the media and entertainment industry are recognized for their accomplishments in the past year via the Special Achievement Awards, given out at the Rockie Awards Gala. These accolades are given out at the discretion of the Banff Foundation Board.
Past Special Achievement Award Winners
Company of Distinction
2013 | CBS |
2014 | Lionsgate |
2015 | A+E Networks |
2016 | HBO |
2017 | ABC Television Group (Disney|ABC) |
Variety TV Impact Award
2013 | Julia Louis-Dreyfus |
The Hollywood Reporter Impact Award
2017 | Anthony Anderson |
Sir Peter Ustinov Comedy Award
1992 | John Candy |
1993 | Winston Rekert & Danny Virtue |
1994 | Eugene Levy |
1995 | Tantoo Cardinal |
1996 | Steve Smith |
1997 | Barry Humphries |
1998 | Bob Newhart |
1999 | Martin Short |
2000 | Tracey Ullman |
2001 | Kelsey Grammer |
2002 | John Cleese |
2003 | Rick Mercer |
2006 | Guy A. Lepage |
2008 | Brent Butt |
2009 | Mark McKinney |
2010 | Ricky Gervais |
2011 | James Burrows |
2012 | Chuck Lorre |
2013 | Craig Ferguson |
2014 | Nathan Lane |
2015 | Kathryn Hahn |
2016 | Russell Peters |
Award of Excellence in Digital Innovation
2011 | Netflix |
2012 | |
2013 | Vice Media |
2014 | Electus |
2015 | Amazon Studios |
Lifetime Achievement Award
1988 | Jeremy Isaacs |
1998 | John Mortimer |
2001 | Rock Demers |
2002 | Bernard Pivot |
2003 | David Attenborough |
2004 | James Burrows |
2005 | Peter McGhee |
2006 | Sheila Nevins |
2009 | Trina McQueen |
2010 | William Shatner |
2011 | Ed Asner |
2012 | Larry King |
2013 | Christine Baranski |
2014 | Dan Rather |
Award of Excellence
1982 | Norman Campbell |
1983 | Gregory Peck |
1984 | Dinah Shore |
1985 | Laurence Olivier |
1986 | Lorne Green |
1987 | Ed Asner |
1988 | Peter Ustinov |
1989 | David Suzuki |
1990 | Bea Arthur |
1991 | Walter Cronkite |
1992 | Barbara Frum |
1993 | Peter Jennings |
1994 | William Shatner |
1995 | Frédéric Back |
1996 | Steven Bochco |
1997 | Diane English |
1998 | Don Hewitt |
1999 | David E. Kelley |
2000 | Dick Wolf |
2001 | Norman Jewison |
2002 | Gary David Goldberg |
2003 | David Chase |
2004 | Gordon Pinsent |
2006 | David Shore |
2007 | Carol Mendelsohn |
2008 | Sofia Milos |
2009 | Victor Garber |
2010 | Nigel Lythgoe |
2011 | Eugene Levy |
2014 | Henry Winkler |
2015 | Katheryn Winnick |
2017 | Kenny Ortega |
Canadian Award of Distinction
2006 | Paul Haggis |
2007 | Colm Feore |
2008 | Kim Cattrall |
2009 | Paul Gross |
2010 | Eric McCormack |
2011 | Howie Mandel |
2012 | Jeanne Beker |
2013 | Will Arnett |
2014 | Alan Thicke |
2015 | Gerry Dee |
2016 | Jay Baruchel |
2017 | Just For Laughs |
Showrunner of the Year
2014 | Clyde Phillips | |||
2015 | Jill Soloway | |||
2016 | Damon Lindelof | - | 2017 | John Ridley |
Program of the Year
2013 | NCIS | |||
2014 | Nashville | |||
2016 | Making a Murderer | 2017 | The Handmaid's Tale |
See also
References
- ↑ Barry Turner, ed. (2008). "Festivals". The Screenwriter's Handbook. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 267. ISBN 0312379544. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
- ↑ "Popular TV shows trace origins back to Banff". Rocky Mountain Outlook, June 22, 2017.
- ↑ "CBC Executives at Banff" The Star
- ↑ ARTE Magazine, Issue 39, 23 November 2006, p. 30.
51°09′51″N 115°33′41″W / 51.1641°N 115.5615°W