3rd Canadian Comedy Awards

Summary

The 3rd Canadian Comedy Awards, presented by the Canadian Comedy Foundation for Excellence (CCFE), honoured the best live, television, and film comedy of 2001 and was held on 4 April 2002 at The Docks in Toronto, Ontario. The ceremony was hosted by Brent Butt. This was the first year that the ceremony was not televised, and the first year that no special awards were given.

3rd Canadian Comedy Awards
Date4 April 2002 (2002-04-04)
Location
CountryCanada
Presented byCanadian Comedy Foundation for Excellence
Hosted byBrent Butt
Most awardsMade in Canada (4)
Most nominationsTelevision: Made in Canada (8)
Film: Last Wedding and Rare Birds (4)
Websitewww.canadiancomedyawards.org
← 2nd · Canadian Comedy Awards · 4th →

Canadian Comedy Awards, also known as Beavers, were awarded in 19 categories. Winners were picked by members of ACTRA (Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists), the Writers Guild of Canada, the Directors Guild of Canada, and the Comedy Association.

The TV series Made in Canada led with eight nominations followed by the film Last Wedding with five. Made in Canada won four Beavers, two of which went to director Henry Sarwer-Foner. Also winning two Beavers were Janet van de Graaf for best female improviser and best female TV performance in History Bites, Bob Martin for best male improviser and best writing for an episode of Made in Canada, and Rick Mercer for best male TV performance in Made in Canada and writing for This Hour has 22 Minutes.[1]

Ceremony edit

The 3rd Canadian Comedy Awards ceremony was held on 4 April 2002 at The Docks in Toronto, Ontario. It was hosted by Brent Butt,[2] the previous year's winner for best male stand-up.[3] This was the first year the ceremony was not broadcast, due to a lack of sponsorship. As a result, the ceremony was scaled back in what journalist Leatrice Spevack described as a night of "gags over glamour".[2]

While giving his acceptance speech for best comedic play, the base of Doug Morency's Beaver fell off. He quickly remarked, "Obviously, they're not made in Canada".[2]

Winners and nominees edit

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface:[1][2]

Live edit

Best Male Stand-up Best Female Stand-up Best Stand-up Newcomer
Best Male Improviser Best Female Improviser
Best Sketch Troupe or Company Best Improv Troupe or Company
  •   The Gentlemen Callers
  • Birdy Num Num
  • Glyph
  • Reid Along with Browning
  • The Cowards
  •   Slap Happy
  • Cast of Die-Nasty
  • On the Spot
  • Rock-Paper-Scissors
  • Sin City: The Improvised Soap Opera
Best One Person Show Best New Play

Television edit

Best Performance by a Male Best Performance by a Female
Best Direction in a Series Best Direction in a Special or episode
Best Writing in a Series Best Writing in a Special or episode

Film edit

Best Performance by a Male Best Performance by a Female
Best Direction Best Writing

Multiple wins edit

The following people, shows, films, etc. received multiple awards

Awards Person or work
4 Made in Canada

Multiple nominations edit

The following people, shows, films, etc. received multiple nominations

Nominations Person or work
8 Made in Canada
4 Last Wedding
Our Hero
Rare Birds
3 Parsley Days
The Uncles
2\ After Hours
History Bites

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Nominations & Awards Archives". Canadian Comedy Awards. 2002. Archived from the original on 2 August 2018. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d Spevack, Leatrice (6 April 2002). "The Beaver goes to ... a pretty funny show". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail Inc. Archived from the original on 2 August 2018. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Pretty funny awards". The Globe and Mail. Toronto, Ontario: The Globe and Mail Inc. 12 April 2001. Archived from the original on 2 August 2018. Retrieved 23 May 2018.

External links edit

  • Canadian Comedy Awards official website