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Page last updated at 21:03 GMT, Sunday, 26 April 2009 22:03 UK

Harry Hill takes Bafta TV prize

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Watch Harry Hill's acceptance speech at the Bafta ceremony

Harry Hill has been named the UK's best entertainment performer at the Bafta TV Awards for the second year in a row.

Hill beat Jonathan Ross, Stephen Fry and Ant and Dec to the trophy - his third Bafta TV award in total.

"I never thought I'd get three Baftas for a clip show. Ridiculous," he joked. But he lost out in the entertainment show category, where X Factor won.

The Bill won best continuing drama, while Wallander, starring Kenneth Branagh, was named best drama series.

Branagh's award was his first TV Bafta, and came 20 years after he won a film Bafta for Henry V.

KEY BAFTA TV WINNERS
Best actor - Stephen Dillane
Best actress - Anna Maxwell Martin
Best entertainment performance - Harry Hill
Best comedy performance - David Mitchell

He said it was "marvellous" to win, and thanked the BBC for commissioning the programme, based on the detective novels by Swedish author Henning Mankell.

"They took a risk in wondering whether the world would be interested in the troubled life of a melancholy Scandinavian," he said.

Wallander beat Doctor Who, Spooks and Shameless to the award.

The Bill, meanwhile, beat EastEnders, Casualty and Emmerdale to the continuing drama trophy, earning the ITV police show its first Bafta in 25 years.

EastEnders also lost out in the best actress category, where June Brown, who plays Dot Cotton, was the first soap star to be nominated since 1988.

EastEnders stars Barbara Windsor and June Brown at the Bafta TV Awards

The 82-year-old, who has played Dot Cotton (now Branning) since EastEnders' launch in 1985, was cited for a January 2008 episode in which she appeared alone.

But the best actress gong went to Anna Maxwell Martin for her role as a mental health patient in Channel 4's Poppy Shakespeare. She won the same award for Bleak House in 2005.

Stephen Dillane was named best actor for playing a grieving father in The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall, also on Channel 4.

Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse were given the best comedy programme trophy for their sketch show Harry and Paul.

Four-time winner Whitehouse congratulated Enfield, who had never won before. Enfield joked: "This time I made sure he was in the show so I might get at least a touch of it too."

The duo dedicated their award to their late producer Geoffrey Perkins, who died last year.

David Mitchell won best comedy performance for Peep Show, and thanked his comedy partner Robert Webb, who was not nominated.

Jennifer Saunders is "honoured" to receive the Bafta Fellowship with Dawn French

The best sitcom prize went to Channel 4's The IT Crowd, which was chosen above Peep Show, Outnumbered and The Inbetweeners.

Some 48 years after his first Bafta, Sir David Attenborough received the award for best specialist factual for Life in Cold Blood, his series on reptiles and amphibians.

He said the success of the show was down to the animals, adding: "Our thanks of course goes to spitting cobras, axelotls, golden frogs, dwarf chameleons, those happy tortoises."

BBC Four drama Hancock and Joan, about the life of comedian Tony Hancock, led the way with three nominations - up for best single drama, best actor for Ken Stott, best actress for Maxine Peake.

But it lost out in all three categories.

Meanwhile, comedy duo Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders received Bafta's highest honour, the Fellowship.

They were the second double-act to receive the prestigious honour, following Morecambe and Wise, who were honoured in 1999.

The ceremony, hosted by Graham Norton in London, is the most prestigious night in the British TV calendar.



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