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Dick Van Dyke to be honoured with Bafta's Excellence in TV award

'I appreciate this opportunity to apologise to the members of Bafta for inflicting on them the most atrocisous Cockney accent in the history of cinema' 

Katie Archer
Thursday 20 July 2017 18:17 EDT
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Dick Van Dyke will receive a Bafta award
Dick Van Dyke will receive a Bafta award (Getty Images)

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Dick Van Dyke has been chosen by Bafta to receive a prestigious award for his excellence in television.

The Britannia Award For Excellence In Television will be presented to the 91-year-old actor at the 2017 AMD British Academy Britannia Awards by Bafta Los Angeles.

Mary Poppins star Van Dyke said: "I appreciate this opportunity to apologise to the members of Bafta for inflicting on them the most atrocious Cockney accent in the history of cinema."

The award recognises those whose special talents and appeal have elevated television and Van Dyke's more than seven-decade career has been deemed worthy of the honour.

CEO of Bafta Los Angeles Chantal Rickards said: "We are absolutely thrilled to have the opportunity to honour the iconic Dick Van Dyke at this year's British Academy Britannia Awards.

"We truly are in a golden age of television and we couldn't think of a better way to recognise this than by celebrating someone who was at the forefront of making it the global medium that it has become.

"We look forward to his acceptance speech in whatever accent he chooses on the night. We have no doubt it will be supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!"

Van Dyke's performances have earned him a trophy cabinet of five Emmys, a Tony, a Grammy, the SAG Lifetime Achievement Award, and induction into the Television Hall Of Fame.

His career took off with a Broadway role in musical Bye Bye Birdie in 1961, which he won his Tony Award for, and which was later adapted into a film he also starred in.

The sitcom The Dick Van Dyke Show, which also launched in 1961, solidified his star status and his most memorable film roles included Mary Poppins with Julie Andrews (1964), 1968's Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Dick Tracy (1990) and the Night At The Museum films opposite Ben Stiller.

His hit TV series Diagnosis: Murder ran from 1993 to 2001 and spawned two TV films in 2002.

The awards are Bafta's biggest event outside of the UK and recognise British talent, and international talent with a strong connection to British entertainment.

This year's AMD British Academy Britannia Awards presented by American Airlines will take place on October 27 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles.

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