TEFI


TEFI is an annual award given in the Russian television industry, presented by the Russian Academy of Television. It has been awarded since 1994. TEFI is presented in various sectors, such as television shows, notable people in the television industry, journalists, or channels. The winners are awarded the Orpheus statuette created by Ernst Neizvestny. It can be considered the Russian analogue of the Emmy Awards. The 2002 Edition was postponed to 31 January 2003 due to the Moscow theater hostage crisis.

History of the Award

In April 1994, the Academy of Russian Television was established by several influential broadcasting organizations, effectively replacing television film festivals, the last of which took place in 1993. On, the Academy founded the TEFI Award. Initially, it included three categories for entertainment programs, one for artistic-publicistic programs, five for news and socio-political programs, and others for thematic programs.
In 1998, the "Best Television Film" category was split into "Television Fiction Film/Series" and "Television Documentary Film/Series." The "Publicistic Program" category gave rise to "Talk Show," and "Sports Program" was divided into "Sports Commentator." New categories included "Directing," "Cinematography," and "Producing."
In 2000, "Television Fiction Film/Series" was split into "Television Fiction Film" and "Television Fiction Series." The "Entertainment Program" category became "Television Game" and "Comedy Program," while "Journalistic Investigation" and "Interviewer" were introduced as separate categories. The "Screenwriter" category was added.
The 2002 TEFI Awards were originally scheduled for October 2002 but postponed to January 2003 due to the tragic events in Moscow from October 23–26, 2002.
In 2003, new categories were introduced: "Best Actor in a Television Film/Series," "Best Actress in a Television Film/Series," "Production Design," and "Sound Design." The "Screenwriter," "Directing," and "Cinematography" categories were divided into subcategories for films/series and thematic programs.
In 2004, the "Screenwriter," "Directing," and "Cinematography" categories for films/series were further split into fiction and documentary subcategories. The "History Program" category was separated from "Science Program."
In 2007, Gazprom-Media withdrew from the competition.
In 2008, VGTRK also withdrew. That year, "Sitcom" emerged as a separate category from "Television Fiction Series," while "Producer," "Production Design," and "Sound Design" were divided into subcategories for films/series and thematic programs.
Following the withdrawal of several major TV channels, Vladimir Pozner resigned as president of the Academy of Russian Television, succeeded by Mikhail Shvydkoy.
In 2011, the category "Television Fiction Series" was split into "Television Fiction Series — TV Novel/Telenovela." The "Music Program" category was divided into "Music Program: Classical" and "Music Program: Popular Music," while "Television Game" was split into "Television Game: Intellectual Competition" and "Television Game: Sports Competition."
In 2013, VGTRK withdrew from the Academy of Russian Television, halting its funding and barring its regional channels from participating in TEFI competitions. Subsequently, Channel One Russia announced it would not nominate programs for "TEFI—2013" due to the "absence of major competitors". Mikhail Shvydkoy also resigned as president of the Academy.
On, the Board of Trustees of the Academy of Russian Television decided to suspend the TEFI competition until new rules and regulations could be established.
In December 2013, the Board elected Alexander Akopov as the Academy’s new president and approved the transfer of intellectual property rights for the "TEFI" brand, the "National Television Award TEFI," and the TEFI statuette to the newly formed "Committee of Industrial Television Awards", established on November 15, 2013. The transfer was finalized on April 3, 2014.
On, the national TEFI competition resumed, accepting entries for "TEFI—2014." Categories were renamed with 12 nominations each. Remaining nominations included "Television Film/Series" and acting awards. Voting rules were revised: juries included 20 representatives from each founding organization.
On, leadership changes occurred: Mikhail Shvydkoy became Chairman of the Board, and Maya Kobakhidze was appointed General Director.
In 2016, under "Daytime Broadcast," "Telenovela" and "Sitcom" merged into "Daytime Television Series." The "Evening Prime" category "Television Film/Series" spawned "Television Multi-Episode Comedy/Sitcom." New categories included "Director of a Television Film/Series," while "Entertainment Program" split into "Humorous Program/Show."
The "TEFI—2017" ceremony, initially scheduled for June 27, 2017, was postponed to October 3 after a "computer error" during vote counting necessitated a revote.

Recipients

; News programs
  • Vremya — 2002, 2006, 2007
  • Vesti — 1995, 2001
  • Segodnia — 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2004
  • Vesti with Sergey Brilyov — 2006
  • Nedelia s Mariannoy Maximovskoy — 2008, 2009, 2010
  • News 24 with Mikhail Osokin — 2010
  • Culture News — 2003
; Game shows
; Other
The winners of the competition are awarded a bronze statuette "Orpheus" and a "golden" diploma, the finalists of the competition receive only a "silver" diploma. The prize presented to the winners is a sculpture of a character from ancient Greek mythology, singer and musician Orpheus, who tears his chest and plays on the strings of his soul. The author of the statuette, sculptor Ernst Neizvestny, scaled his two—meter statue of Orpheus, created in 1962, for a new award. The prizes are made in the American workshop of Ernst Neizvestny's student Jeff Blumis. One statuette weighs 8.5 kg, the cost of its manufacture at the beginning of the 2000s was one thousand US dollars.

Criticism

  • The film "The Great Mystery of Water", which won three awards, caused a huge resonance in society, numerous disputes and criticism from representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church, who accused the creators of occult and esoteric content passed off as science, as well as disorientation of believers. Georgy Belodurov noted that most of the academicians involved in the film are academicians of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences. The Commission on Combating Pseudoscience and Falsification of Scientific Research of the Russian Academy of Sciences spoke extremely harshly about the film. The bulletin of the Commission notes:
  • Fyodor Razzakov writes about the award to Andrei Malakhov, Quoting an article from a newspaper Izvestia:
  • Director Oleg Dorman, who was awarded a Special Prize by the Academy of Russian Television in 2010 as part of the TEFI—2010 Award, refused to accept the award, saying:
  • TV journalist Evgeny Kiselyov noted in 2004:
A similar opinion is shared by the television critic Slava Taroshchina. and the award-winning TV journalist Julia Muchnik.
  • In the context of the postponement of the 2017 TEFI Award ceremony from June to October of the same year, Russian journalist Vladimir Kara—Murza Sr. noted: