Samantha Morton dedicates Bafta to children in care
Samantha Morton has dedicated her Bafta Fellowship âto every child in care, or who has been in care and who didnât surviveâ.
The 46-year-old actress and director collected the film awardsâ highest accolade from producer David Heyman, who she worked with on Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them.
Visibly emotional on stage, Morton said: âThis is nothing short of a miracle.
âWhen I first saw Ken Loachâs Kes on a huge telly that was wheeled into my classroom I was forever changed.
âSeeing poverty and people like me on the screen, I recognised myself â representation matters.â
She said she would tell her younger self: âYou matter, donât give up, the stories we tell, they have the power to change peopleâs lives.
âFilm changed my life, it transformed me and it led me here today.
âI dedicate this award to every child in care, or who has been in care and who didnât survive.â
There were also tributes from her Minority Report co-star Tom Cruise, as well as collaborators Susan Lynch, Molly Windsor and Daniel Mays, while Heyman described her as a ârare breed and true artistâ.
Huge congratulations to the wonderful Samantha Morton, who receives the BAFTA Fellowship. đ #EEBAFTAs pic.twitter.com/NfPZgK7Y2j
— BAFTA (@BAFTA) February 18, 2024
In the winnersâ room, she said âmoney is wastedâ in the childrenâs care system.
The actress, who grew up in foster care and made Bafta-winning TV drama The Unloved about a girl growing up in the system, said: âIt costs the taxpayer a huge amount of money to keep a child in care, to take care of them.
âAnd that money is wasted and spent ridiculously.
âI used to say when I was a kid of many childrenâs homes, I used to say, âItâd be great, why donât I just go to some fancy boarding school? At least then I get an educationâ. But that wasnât on the cards.
âTo those kids in care, donât allow the system to drag you down because it can and it will.â
