Star of 'I May Destroy You' wins big at BAFTA awards

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Michaela Coel, the star and creator of drama series "I May Destroy You", was the big winner at BAFTA awards, taking home the television awards for the miniseries and leading actress.

The show, which approaches the story of a woman who tries to rebuild her life following an assault with moments of dark humour, had previously received awards from British Academy of Film and Television Arts for directing, editing and writing.

"Not only is Arabella someone who's very close to me, I feel like she represents a lot of women who aren't really seen on television - she's messy and she's not perfect," Coel said tearfully of her character in a post-awards interview.

She paid tribute to Ita O'Brien, the show's intimacy coordinator in charge of making cast and crew feel safe while filming scenes that were intimate in nature.

Many nominees attended the awards in person at the London ceremony, with indoor gatherings now allowed in England following a partial lifting of COVID-19 lockdown rules.

However, others did so online.

Dance Troupe Diversity won the Must See Moment award, voted for by the British public and announced by a virtual audience member, for their performance dedicated to George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter movement on ITV's Britain's Got Talent.

"I have to say thank you to the people that complained, to the people that did put all of that abuse out there online - because you showed the truth, you showed exactly why this performance, this moment, was necessary," Diversity's leader Ashley Banjo said.

BAFTA awarded the thriller Save Me Too, created by and starring Lennie James as a flawed father searching for his missing daughter, with its drama prize.

Paul Mescal, a first-time nominee who starred in Irish drama series Normal People, took the award for leading actor.

The supporting actor prize went to Malachi Kirby for his role in Small Axe - directed by Oscar winner Steve McQueen and which is made up of stories about West Indian immigrants in London in the 1960s-1980s. The show received 15 nominations in all.

Rakie Ayola won the supporting actress BAFTA for her turn in Anthony, a Jimmy McGovern-penned film that imagines the bright future that Anthony Walker, a Black teenager murdered 16 years ago in a racist attack in Liverpool, should have lived.

Ayola played Gee Walker, Anthony's mother.

"Gee Walker, thank you for having the bravery and the strength to ask Jimmy McGovern to write your son's story - to celebrate the person that Anthony Walker should have been, and never was," Ayola said in her acceptance speech.

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