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The talent at the head of Bafta

Bafta has its glitzy awards ceremony on Sunday, and its chair Jane Lush will be at the helm. Gaby Koppel caught up with the woman who commissioned Strictly.

February 15, 2018 10:29
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By

Gaby Koppel,

GaKoppel

6 min read

As I enter Bafta’s members’ lounge, I do a quick scan but can’t seem to find Jane Lush. She’s been engulfed by a deep purple velvet chair, but the moment she sees me, she struggles to extricate herself from the seat’s designer curves and gives me a warm hug. We worked in the same BBC department for years, and once shared a cab home from an event. So I can’t claim to know her all that well, yet she treats me like an old friend, which is both gratifying and a little bit overwhelming. Let’s not forget, this is the woman who commissioned Strictly Come Dancing, The Apprentice, The Weakest Link, Doctors, Bargain Hunt and Escape to the Country, and some of these programmes are still propping up the BBC’s schedules many years after she left. In other words, she is TV legend and I, by contrast, am a humble production foot soldier. If I wasn’t a teeny bit in awe, I wouldn’t be human.

Added to which, for nearly two years now Lush, 65, has had the “unbelievable honour” of being Chair of Bafta, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, the industry organisation and charity best known for the glitzy awards night that is Britain’s answer to the Oscars, which takes place this year on Sunday. There are actually a host of separate events around the calendar to celebrate amongst other things television programmes, children’s output and games, as well as Scottish and Welsh achievements. But let’s face it, the annual film bash in central London with its plethora of Hollywood stars on the red carpet is The Big One and on the day we meet, it is just over two weeks away. Lush admits that stepping out onto the stage of the Royal Albert Hall to give a speech to an assembled throng of international movie A-list celebrities, which she did for the first time last year is ‘the scariest moment I have had in my whole professional life.”

Overshadowing this year’s event and the whole of our industry, is of course the can of worms opened up by the allegations facing Harvey Weinstein and the consequent #MeToo campaign. As I get home from our meeting, I switch on the radio to hear that Bafta has formally terminated Weinstein’s membership. Though she says she encountered some “pretty seedy” behaviour from “unattractive men much older than me” early in her career, Lush sees television as somewhere women have been able to thrive, and certainly it’s an industry which opened its highest ranks to women decades ago. Though we are still waiting for a female Director General, from her position at the head of Bafta, Lush observes that women don’t face anywhere like the same obstacles in television as they still do in film. But maybe that’s because women like Lush were the game-changers who opened doors.

She is determined to use what’s left of her two-year term to push through an agenda of reform on the back of the current mood, “It’s the biggest sea change in attitudes towards women since the 1960s and 70s, and I want Bafta to be at the forefront of that. Behaviour will change now, because people have been brave enough to speak out.” For years the Academy has been promoting diversity in the broadest sense - by working with young talent through a programme of masterclasses and scholarships — but now one feels the gloves are really off.