The BBC'S Wolf Hall leads the pack at this year's BAFTA TV nominations.
The acclaimed historical drama saw nominations for Mark Rylance for Leading Actor, who'll be looking to continue his winning streak this year after film BAFTA and Oscar wins.
The BBC drama is also up for Drama Series and Leading Actress and Supporting Actor for Claire Foy and Adrian Lester, scoring a total of four nods - 10 in total with the combined BAFTA Television and Craft awards.
Close behind is This Is England 90, which ties with Peter Kay's Car Share with three nods apiece.
The Shane Meadows drama is nominated for Mini-Series, Leading Actor for Stephen Graham and Supporting Actress for Chanel Cresswell, and has six nominations in total in combination with the craft awards.
Peter Kay's comedy scored Female and Male Performance in a Comedy Programme for Sian Gibson and Kay, who gets his first nod since 2003, as well as Scripted Comedy.
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Gibson goes up against Catastrophe's Sharon Horgan, Michaela Coel for Chewing Gum and Miranda Hart for Miranda.
For the male equivalent, nominees also include Hugh Bonneville for W1A, Javone Prince for The Javone Prince Show and Toby Jones for Detectorists.
On the drama side, doing well with two nods was drama London Spy, which is up for Leading Actor for Ben Whishaw and Mini-Series. Idris Elba is nominated for Leading Actor for Luther, having also been nominated against Rylance at the film BAFTAs earlier this year.
Sheridan Smith is up for Leading Actress for cancer drama The C-Word, having won alongside Whishaw in their respective categories in 2010. Can they do the double?
All the Supporting Actress nominees are first timers on TV, which includes Michelle Gomez for Doctor Who, Lesley Manville for River and Eleanor Worthington-Cox for The Enfield Haunting.
Sir Ian McKellen also scores his first BAFTA TV nod for Supporting Actor in The Dresser.
For the fifth year in a row, The Great British Bake Off is nominated for Features, while Adele continues her awards streak with her first nod for Adele at the BBC for Entertainment Programme.
Britain's Got Talent got its first nod since 2010 in the Entertainment Programme category, while Amazon scored its first ever BAFTA nomination for Transparent in the International category, having got a Craft nomination last year.
The BAFTA Television Awards take place at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday, May 8. Watch the nominees being announced below:

Sam is a freelance reporter and sub-editor who has a particular interest in movies, TV and music. After completing a journalism Masters at City University, London, Sam joined Digital Spy as a reporter, and has also freelanced for publications such as NME and Screen International. Sam, who also has a degree in Film, can wax lyrical about everything from Lord of the Rings to Love Is Blind, and is equally in his element crossing every 't' and dotting every 'i' as a sub-editor.














