9th Canadian Comedy Awards – Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Festival and awards ceremony for works of 2007

The 9th Canadian Comedy Awards, presented by the Canadian Comedy Foundation for Excellence (CCFE), honoured the best live, television, film, and Internet comedy of 2007. The ceremony was held on 5 October 2008 in Regina, Saskatchewan. The ceremony was hosted by Alan Park.

Canadian Comedy Awards, also known as Beavers, were awarded in 24 categories. This included the first public-voting categories and the first awards recognizing Internet content. The awards ceremony concluded the five-day Canadian Comedy Awards Festival which showcased performances by over 100 comic artists. A Best of the Fest special was broadcast by The Comedy Network.

For a third consecutive year TV series Corner Gas led the nominations with nine, followed by the film Dark Rising with six. However, neither of these works won a Beaver. Seth Rogen and Michael Cera led the nominations amongst people with three. This Hour Has 22 Minutes won three Beavers followed by a number of artists and projects that received two, including Gavin Crawford, Gerry Dee, Geri Hall, Seth Rogen, and the films Juno and Superbad.[1]

Festival and ceremony[edit]

The 9th Canadian Comedy Awards and Festival ran from 1 to 5 October 2008 in Regina, Saskatchewan.[2] The province and city had provided $200,000 in funding to relocate the festival from London, Ontario.[3] Fourteen shows were held in Regina, showcasing the talents of more than 100 comedic performers. The awards were also sponsored by The Comedy Network[2] which compiled and broadcast the Best of the Fest television special, hosted by Gerry Dee. The awards ceremony was hosted by Alan Park[4] at Casino Regina.[1]

Winners and nominees[edit]

The Awards were expanded from 20 to 24 categories this year, including three public-voting categories: best radio program or clip, best web clip, and Canadian Comedy Person of the Year. Winners of public-voting categories were chosen by Canadian residents through an online poll.[2]

The film Juno had been controversially excluded from Canada’s industry-driven Genie Awards. Although it had a Canadian director, lead actors, crew, and had been filmed in Canada, U.S. financing disqualified it from competition. The Canadian Comedy Awards, however, were artist-driven with a mandate “To recognize and celebrate Canadian achievements in comedy at home and abroad”[5] and awarded the film two Beavers.[6]

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface:[7]

Multimedia[edit]

Live[edit]

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
  • Blue ribbon Jon Dore, Mark Forward, Steve DylanThe Jon Dore Television Show
  • Leo Scherman, Morgan Waters, Andy King, Brooks Gray – Cock’d Gunns
  • Zarqa Nawaz, Rebecca Schechter, Al Rae, Rob Sheridan, Greg Eckler, Paul Mather, Miles Smith – Little Mosque on the Prairie
  • Kevin White, Mark Farrell, Brent Butt, Andrew Carr, Norm Hiscock, Gary Pearson, Dylan Wertz – Corner Gas
  • Pat Thornton – The Owl and the Man
  • Blue ribbon Mark Critch, Gavin Crawford, Gary Pearson, Kyle Tingley, Jennifer Whalen, Albert Howell, Tim McAuliffe, Nathan Fielder, Geri Hall, Andrew Bush, Dean JenkinsonThis Hour Has 22 Minutes, episode 3
  • Rob Sheridan – Little Mosque on the Prairie – episode 213 “Public Access”
  • Graeme Manson – Rent-A-Goalie – episode 5 – “Everybody’s a Fag”
  • David Moses – Robson Arms – season 3, episode 303, “Geeks In Love”
  • Kevin White – Corner Gas – “Bed and Brake Fast”

Film[edit]

Internet[edit]

Special Awards[edit]

Most wins[edit]

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

Most nominations[edit]

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

  1. ^ a b Credited as Ellen Page
  2. ^ “The Waldo Ultimatum” is a sketch by the Imponderables.[8]

References[edit]

External links[edit]