22nd National Television Awards

The 22nd National Television Awards were held at The O2 Arena on 25 January 2017.[1] The awards were hosted by Dermot O'Leary and Scarlett Moffatt.[2]

22nd National Television Awards
Date25 January 2017
LocationThe O2 Arena, London
CountryUnited Kingdom
Presented byDermot O'Leary
Scarlett Moffatt (backstage)
Websitehttp://www.nationaltvawards.com/
Television/radio coverage
NetworkITV
Runtime150 minutes (inc. adverts)
← 2016 · National Television Awards · 2018 →

This was the last time that the National Television Awards would air on a Wednesday.

Performances edit

Awards edit

Category
Presenter(s)
Winner[3] Nominated
"Challenge Show"
Presented by Alesha Dixon and Ashley Banjo
I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! (ITV) Love Island (ITV2)
MasterChef (BBC One)
The Apprentice (BBC One)
The Great British Bake Off (BBC One)
"Drama"
Presented by Kate Richardson-Walsh and Hollie Webb
Casualty (BBC One) Cold Feet (ITV)
Game of Thrones (Sky Atlantic/HBO)
Happy Valley (BBC One)
The Night Manager (BBC One/AMC)
"Entertainment Programme"
Presented by Scarlett Moffatt
Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway (ITV) Celebrity Juice (ITV2)
The Graham Norton Show (BBC One)
The Last Leg (Channel 4)
"Serial Drama Performance"
Presented by Martin Kemp and Roman Kemp
Lacey Turner (Stacey Slater, EastEnders - BBC One) Danny Miller (Aaron Livesy, Emmerdale - ITV)
Jack P. Shepherd (David Platt, Coronation Street - ITV)
Natalie J. Robb (Moira Barton, Emmerdale - ITV)
"Comedy"
Presented by Ken Dodd
Mrs. Brown's Boys (BBC One/RTÉ One) Benidorm (ITV)
Orange is the New Black (Netflix)
The Big Bang Theory (E4/CBS)
"Live Magazine Show"
Presented by Gary Lineker and Alan Shearer
This Morning (ITV) BBC Breakfast (BBC One)
Loose Women (ITV)
Sunday Brunch (Channel 4)
The One Show (BBC One)
"Newcomer"
Presented by Joe Wicks
Faye Brookes (Kate Connor, Coronation Street - ITV) Duncan James (Ryan Knight, Hollyoaks - Channel 4)
Lloyd Everitt (Jez Andrews, Casualty - BBC One)
Tilly Keeper (Louise Mitchell, EastEnders - BBC One)
"Period Drama"
Presented by Michelle Keegan and Tina Moore
Call the Midwife (BBC One) Peaky Blinders (BBC Two)
Poldark (BBC One)
Stranger Things (Netflix)
Victoria (ITV)
"Daytime"
Presented by Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid
The Chase (ITV) Come Dine with Me (Channel 4)
Pointless (BBC One)
The Jeremy Kyle Show (ITV)
"TV Presenter"
Presented by Judge Rinder
Ant & Dec Gary Lineker
James Corden
Mel & Sue
Rylan Clark-Neal
"TV Judge"
Presented by William and Molly
Mary Berry David Walliams
Len Goodman
Nicole Scherzinger
Simon Cowell
"Drama Performance"
Presented by Kris Marshall
Sarah Lancashire (Happy Valley - BBC One) Cillian Murphy (Peaky Blinders - BBC Two)
Jenna Coleman (Victoria - ITV)
Tom Hiddleston (The Night Manager - BBC One)
"Factual Entertainment"
Presented by Danny Dyer
Gogglebox (Channel 4) DIY SOS: The Big Build (BBC One)
Making a Murderer (Netflix)
Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs (ITV)
Ambulance (BBC One)
Tattoo Fixers (E4)
"Serial Drama"
Presented by Penny Lancaster and Ayda Field
Emmerdale (ITV) Coronation Street (ITV)
EastEnders (BBC One)
Hollyoaks (E4/Channel 4)
"Talent Show"
Presented by Emma Willis and Pixie Lott
Strictly Come Dancing (BBC One) Britain's Got Talent (ITV)
The X Factor (ITV)
"Special Recognition"
Presented by Hugh Bonneville
Graham Norton

References edit

  1. ^ "National Television Awards at The O2 arena". Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  2. ^ Haigh, Joshua (25 January 2017). "Scarlett Moffatt shares backstage snap with Dermot O'Leary as she prepares to co-host National Television Award". Daily Mirror. Reach plc. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  3. ^ National Television Awards. "Winners - National Television Awards". nationaltvawards.com.

External links edit