TV Baftas 2014: Broadchurch is big winner but BBC misses out Tearful Olivia Colman pays tribute to 'f*****g genius' of ITV show's creator Chris Chibnall One-Minute Read Monday, May 19, 2014 - 11:29am Broadchurch was the biggest winner at last night's Bafta TV Awards, winning best drama series, best leading actress for Olivia Colman and best support actor for David Bradley. Colman ( pictured below with co-star Jodie Whittaker ) gave a tearful acceptance speech at London's Theatre Royal, paying tribute to the "f*****g genius" of the ITV show's creator Chris Chibnall and her co-star David Tennant. It was the actress's third Bafta in just two years. Channel 4's Gogglebox , which films people watching television from their homes, was another winner, as was Sean Harris who won best leading actor for drama series Southcliffe , while Katherine Parkinson and Richard Ayoade won awards for their roles in The IT Crowd . It was a "bad night for the BBC", which lost out in a string of categories, says The Guardian . BBC One won two awards: Sarah Lancashire was named best supporting actress for her role in Last Tango in Halifax and the Radio Times Audience Award went to the 50th anniversary episode of Doctor Who . BBC Three also won two awards, for supernatural drama In the Flesh and sitcom Him & Her: the Wedding . But BBC Two failed to win a single prize, with The Great British Bake-Off and The Fall missing out. Julie Walters ( pictured below ) and presenter Cilla Black were honoured with special Baftas. Walters, who has starred in television shows such as Victoria Wood and Talking Heads and films including Educating Rita , the Harry Potter movies and Billy Elliot , told the audience: "When I told my mother that I wanted to be an actress back in 1969, she said, 'She'll be in the gutter before she's 20.' She was right, but what a gutter!" Serena Davies in the Daily Telegraph says the Baftas "got it right" on Broadchurch , with Colman's award the "most richly deserved" of the three. "This befitted the serial that everyone seemed to be talking about last year; the one that we all cared about." But Davies questions why zombie drama In the Flesh had won over The Great Train Robbery and The Fall , describing it as one of the "surprising wrong choices".  Baftas 2014: the winners in full Leading actress: Olivia Colman, Broadchurch, ITV Leading actor: Sean Harris, Southcliffe, Channel 4 Supporting actress: Sarah Lancashire, Last Tango in Halifax, BBC One Supporting actor: David Bradley, Broadchurch, ITV Drama series: Broadchurch, ITV Situation comedy: Him & Her: The Wedding, BBC Three Reality and constructed factual: Gogglebox, Channel 4 Comedy and comedy entertainment programme: A League of their Own, Sky One Female performance in a comedy: Katherine Parkinson, The IT Crowd Male performance in a comedy: Richard Ayoade, The IT Crowd Entertainment programme: Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, ITV Entertainment performance: Ant and Dec, ITV Sport and live event: The Ashes 2013, Sky Sports Current affairs: Syria: Across The Lines (Dispatches), Channel 4 Mini-series: In The Flesh, BBC Three Single documentary: The Murder Trial, Channel 4 News coverage: ITV News At Ten: Woolwich Attacks Soap: Coronation Street, ITV Specialist factual: David Attenborough's Natural History Museum Alive 3D, Sky 3D International: Breaking Bad, Netflix Single drama: Complicit, Channel 4 Factual series: Bedlam, Channel 4 Features: Long Lost Family, ITV Radio Times Audience Award: Doctor Who: The Day of the Doctor, BBC One Bafta Fellowship: Julie Walters Special Award: Cilla Black  ·  People Bafta TV awards Broadchurch Olivia Colman Julie Walters Cilla Black