Logie Awards of 1996

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The 38th Annual TV Week Logie Awards was held on Sunday, April 21, 1996, at the Melbourne Park Function Centre in Melbourne, and broadcast on the Nine Network.[1] The ceremony was hosted by Daryl Somers, and guests included Gloria Reuben and Holly Hunter.[1]

Winners and nominees

The nominees for the 38th Logie Awards were announced in early April 1996. Unlike previous years, there were five nominations in each category. These were then cut to three on the night of the ceremony.[2]

The winners were announced during the awards ceremony on 21 April 1996.[3]

Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface.

Gold Logie

Most Popular Personality on Australian Television
  • Ray Martin for A Current Affair (Nine Network)
    • Dieter Brummer for Home and Away (Seven Network)
    • Melissa George for Home and Away (Seven Network)
    • Lisa McCune for Blue Heelers (Nine Network)
    • Daryl Somers for Hey Hey It's Saturday (Nine Network)

Acting/Presenting

Most Popular Actor Most Popular Actress
Most Outstanding Actor Most Outstanding Actress
Most Popular New Talent Most Popular Light Entertainment Personality
Most Popular Comedy Personality
  • Magda Szubanski for Full Frontal (Seven Network)
    • Andrew Denton for Denton (Seven Network)
    • Tim Ferguson for Don't Forget Your Toothbrush (Nine Network)
    • Jimeoin for Jimeoin (Seven Network)
    • Daryl Somers for Hey Hey It's Saturday (Nine Network)

Most Popular Programs

Most Popular Series Most Popular Drama
  • Police Rescue (ABC)
    • The Man From Snowy River (Nine Network)
    • Fire (Seven Network)
    • Halifax f.p. (Nine Network)
    • Law of the Land (Nine Network)
Most Popular Light Entertainment Program Most Popular Comedy Program
  • Full Frontal (Seven Network)
    • Frontline (ABC)
    • Hey Hey it's Saturday (Nine Network)
    • Jimeoin (Seven Network)
    • Just Kidding (Nine Network)
Most Popular Public Affairs Program Most Popular Lifestyle/Information Program
  • A Current Affair (Nine Network)
Most Popular Sports Coverage Most Popular Children's Program

Most Outstanding Programs

Most Outstanding Achievement in Drama Production
Winner:
Blue Murder (ABC TV)
Most Outstanding Achievement in Public Affairs
Winner:
"Minor Surgery, Major Risk", Four Corners (ABC TV)
Most Outstanding Documentary
Winner:
Untold Desires (SBS TV)


Most Outstanding Achievement in News
Winner:
"Muraroa Protests", National Nine News (Nine Network)
Most Outstanding Achievement in Comedy
Winners:
Frontline (ABC TV)
Most Outstanding Achievement by a Regional Network
Winners:
No Time For Frailty (Prime Television)

Performers

Hall of Fame

After a lifetime in Australian television, Maurie Fields became the 13th inductee and 2nd posthumous inductee into the TV Week Logies Hall of Fame. However, Val Jellay accepted the award on his behalf.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "38th TV Week Logie Awards, 1996". Tvweeklogies.com.au. Archived from the original on 26 January 2014.
  2. ^ "The famous five". TV Week. 6 April 1996. pp. 8–9.
  3. ^ a b "1996 Logie Awards". Australiantelevision.net. Archived from the original on 16 October 2014.

External links

  • Logie Awards of 1996 at IMDb
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