Rosamund Pike and Hiran Abeysekera are among the winners of the BBC Audio Drama Awards 2024.
Pike won best actress for her performance in People Who Knew Me on BBC Sounds, while Abeysekera was named best actor for his performance in BBC Radio 4’s Dear Harry Kane.
The awards, which celebrate outstanding talent across audio drama, were announced at the BBC’s Radio Theatre, London on March 24.
Pike, who played a woman who used 9/11 to fake her own death in People Who Knew Me, said she was "honoured" by the win, adding: "I love the medium because it allows so much freedom to performers and listeners’ imagination."
"Our writer and director Daniella Isaacs said she wanted the show to have ’the intimacy of eavesdropping’, which is why I think People Who Knew Me struck such a powerful chord with listeners. It’s a fantastic story and the way it was engineered allowed actors to freely roam a fluid performance space and interact with each other naturally."
Abeysekera, whose leading role in Life of Pi earned him an Olivier award in 2022, said: "Radio drama is extraordinary and I’m very proud to be a part of it. To say that three out of four radio opportunities that have come my way through the BBC have been stories linked to my home country Sri Lanka, is really special. Thank you for this wonderful honour."
Dear Harry Kane, written by James Fritz, was honoured with the award for best original single drama, with best adaptation presented to Roy Williams for his adaptation of Edwin DuBose Heyward’s novel Bess Loves Porgy.
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Best supporting performance was won by Mark Heap in Kafka’s Dick by Naked Productions, and best debut performance was awarded to Rosalind Eleazar for her role in BBC Scotland’s Hindsight.
The ceremony also honoured audio comedy. Where to, Mate? from BBC Studios Audio was named best sitcom or comedy-drama, while Sarah Keyworth’s Are You a Boy or a Girl won best stand-up comedy.
Graeme Garden was recognised for his outstanding contribution to radio comedy with a lifetime achievement award.
The BBC Audio Drama Awards are now in their 13th year, with previous winners including Miriam Margolyes and John Hurt.
BBC chief content officer Charlotte Moore congratulated the winners and nominees, noting that audio dramas regularly appear in the top 10 most popular on-demand programmes on BBC Sounds.
She described audio drama as "much-loved by our listeners, who tune in for brilliant writing, acting and storytelling, which provides opportunities for escapism, as well as to learn more about the world around them through drama".
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