Pinned post from 3.27pm on Jul 30, 2023
Go to latestAnd the nominees are...
By
This was published 2 years ago
Thanks for joining us for the 2023 TV Week Logie Awards. I think we’re all in furious agreement that Sam Pang nailed it as host. There we certainly a few surprises (and surprised winners themselves), heartfelt tributes, and a lot of well-deserved recognition.
You can read Karl Quinn‘s take on the night’s events and style editor Damien Woolnough’s expert view of the red carpet fashion. Check out our gallery of all the fabulous outfits below. Goodnight!
From the moment we saw Daryl Somers on stage to present the Gold Logie award it seemed a fait accompli; Sonia Kruger had won the Gold Logie.
Kruger, who is set to co-host Channel Seven’s 20th season of Dancing With The Stars this year alongside Somers, won the top gong at the 63rd annual TV Week Logie Awards.
Kruger is a previous Gold Logie nominee and hosts a suite of shows for Channel Seven including Dancing With The Stars, Big Brother and The Voice. Kruger’s win comes after Channel Seven picked up the Logie broadcast from Channel Nine this year, and the network campaigned hard for their golden girl.
Hamish Blake was the hot favourite to win a third Gold Logie, but in recent days odds had shortened on Kruger.
We’re about to learn who has won the 2023 Gold Logie. According to more than 2000 of you who have voted in our reader poll, it is going to be, once again... Hamish Blake.
Talk about a long time between drinks. Brooke Satchwell has won her second ever TV WEEK Logie Award, winning Most Outstanding Supporting Actress for her role on Foxtel drama, The Twelve.
Satchwell’s first win came way back in 1998, when she picked up the Logie award for Most Popular Talent for her role on Neighbours.
Yes, this is the still the Logies live blog but Australia are doing remarkably well in the final match of this Ashes series, so I thought it was worth shouting out.
After a less than stellar start, Australia are clawing their way into a pretty commanding position and could pull this one off.
For more, check out our Ashes blog.
Of course it takes someone with Sam Neill’s vintage and calibre to stop the Colin from Accounts juggernaut. Neill wins for his role in the courtroom drama The Twelve, and gives a stutter-laden speech expressing his shock, and his appreciation of the show’s ensemble cast.
“I’ve run out of things to say, I’m just so gobsmacked,” Neill says.
It’s Neill’s second Logie, and he walks off very quickly after his short speech. I love Sam Neill (where are my Jurassic Park heads?) but at this stage I’m very glad he kept it so short. We are getting close, folks.
Joking about how long the Logies run is a rite of passage (I’ve already done it once tonight), but I seriously can’t remember a time when the Logies wasn’t happening.
Which brings me to question why, why did we need this performance from Australia’s most famous drummer, G Flip, Australia’s loosest duo Peking Duk, May-A (you’ll know her from Flume’s Say Nothing) and Heartbreak High’s Ayesha Madon (is she seeking revenge on Amy Shark for stealing her Logie?).
It was…fine? Kind of felt liked my high school battle of the bands, and I won’t pretend I didn’t bop along while wondering what year it was, but given it’s so late, and everyone is keen for a hard wrap, perhaps this could’ve been a hard pass. If there’s any upside, Ayesha’s obvious musical talent should place her in good stead to win the Most Popular New Talent at next year’s Logies, which at this rate, will probably start right after this year’s Logies.
Another big win for Colin from Accounts with Patrick Brammall scoring the Logie for outstanding actor.
The show has already picked up the comedy series award, and Brammall’s co-star, co-creator and wife Harriet Dyer has already picked up outstanding actress.
The two had to get special dispensation from the Screen Actors Guild in the US to attend the awards, due to the actors’ strike.
Half of this category’s nominees star on Home and Away (Ada Nicodemou, Emily Symons and Lynne McGranger) and another two came from Fisk (Kitty Flanagan and Julia Zemiro) so the odds were strongly in favour of one of these shows picking up the award.
In the end it was the star of Fisk, Kitty Flanagan who scored the prize.
Flanagan isn’t at the ceremony so she sent Zemiro in her stead to deliver a thank you speech, which ended up meaning Zemiro thanked herself.
Check out this piece from Kerrie O’Brien on the relationship between Flanagan and Zemiro, and how the two went head-to-head for this award.
The award for most outstanding factual or documentary program goes to The Australian Wars, from Blackfella Films, the company that was founded by writer-director-producer Rachel Perkins and producer Darren Dale in 2001 and has gone on to be one of the most prolific producers of First Nations-themed content in the country.
Dale speaks first, and thanks SBS, which has, he says, “championed us telling First Nations stories for over 20 years … you can’t do enough to support us and privilege our stories on screen and make us feel like we are part of Australia’s landscape.”
Then it’s the turn of Perkins, who created and presented the three-part series, the making of which consumed five years of her life.