Kate Winslet, Ben Whishaw win at BAFTA Television Awards
The Hindu
Kate Winslet won the best actress award for her role in I am Ruth while Whishaw won the best actor honour for his performance in the medical comedy-drama This is Going to Hurt
Kate Winslet and Ben Whishaw were among the winners at the BAFTA Television Awards in London on Sunday night, with the Oscar-winning actress using her acceptance speech to call for action against harmful content on social media.
Winslet was recognised for her portrayal of a mother of a teenager consumed by social media in I am Ruth, a mini-series in which she starred alongside her real-life daughter, Mia Threapleton.
" 'I Am Ruth' was made... for families who feel that they are held hostage by the perils of the online world, for parents who wish they could still communicate with their teenagers but who no longer can," Winslet said.
"And for young people who have become addicted to social media and its darker sides: this does not need to be your life. To people in power and to people who can make change: please, criminalise harmful content. Please eradicate harmful content. We don't want it. We want our children back."
Whishaw won for his portrayal of a doctor working in an obstetrics ward at a London hospital in medical comedy-drama This is Going to Hurt, which is based on former doctor Adam Kay's memoir.
ALSO READ:Kate Winslet hospitalised after slipping on sets of ‘Lee’ in Croatia
Dublin-set Bad Sisters won the drama series categories as well as a supporting actress prize for Anne-Marie Duff. Best supporting actor went to Adeel Akhtar for crime drama Sherwood.

Selected from 9,400 submissions across 37 countries, the 100 photographs on display traverse intimate and political terrains. In MRC Nagar, photographer Swastik Pal captures life in the Sundarbans, where severe climate change has brought humans and wildlife into closer contact. Shane Hynan’s Beneath Beofhod reflects on Ireland’s boglands as sites of memory and restoration, while Mateo Trevisan’s More than the Sun examines the impact of coal-driven industrialisation in the Western Balkans.












