Doctor Foster and Wolf Hall lead Bafta TV award nominations
Wolf Hall has received four nods, while Doctor Foster is up for three gongs.
This year's Bafta TV award nominations have been announced, with Doctor Foster and Wolf Hall leading the way in the prestigious gongs.
Doctor Foster's Suranne Jones and Wolf Hall's Claire Foy have been nominated in the best actress categories, while Idris Elba and Ben Wishall have been tipped for best actor for Luther and The London Spy, respectively.
Wolf Hall received four nominations in total. In addition to Mark Rylance and Foy's best actor and actress nominations, Anton Lesser was recognised in the best supporting actor category.
The historical drama, which depicts Thomas Cromwell's rise to power through Henry VIII's royal court, was also nominated for best drama series, alongside Humans, The Last Panthers and No Offence.
Doctor Foster is tipped in the best actress, best mini-series and audience award categories.
TV favourite The Great British Bake Off received its fifth consecutive nomination. It is nominated in the features category, which it won in 2012 and 2013.
I'm A Celebrity...Get Me Out Of Here!, Goggle Box and The Secret Life of 5 Year Olds have all been nominated for gongs in the Reality and Constructed Factual category.
Dermot O'Leary and last year's leading actress winner Georgina Campbell, who starred in Murdered By My Boyfriend, announced the nominations on Wednesday morning.
Benedict Cumberbatch has once again missed out on a Bafta TV award - this time because he is not eligible.
Sherlock's New Year's Day special, titled The Abominable Bride, aired one day too late to put him in the running again.
The actor has been nominated in the Bafta TV best actor category five times so far without winning, including three times for the hit detective series.
Voting for the Radio Times audience award - the only voted for by the public - has already opened, with a shortlist of six nominated 2015 TV shows, including The Great British Bake Off, Poldark and Humans.
Adele has received her first Bafta nomination, for the TV special Adele At The BBC.
She is up for best entertainment programme alongside Britain's Got Talent, Strictly Come Dancing and the TFI Friday anniversary special.
Leading Actor
Leading Actress
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actress
Best mini-series
Entertainment Programme
Entertainment Performance
Female performance in a comedy programme
Male performance in a comedy programme
Single drama
Drama series
Soap and continuing drama
International
Factual series
Reality and constructed factual
Nominations for the Radio Times audience award:
Current affairs
Comedy and comedy entertainment programme
Scripted comedy
The awards will take place on May 8 at the Royal Festival Hall, hosted by Graham Norton.
Last year's winners included The Graham Norton Show, Sherlock, Happy Valley, Ant and Dec, Coronation Street and Grand Designs.