BAFTA Award for Best British Screenplay
The BAFTA Award for Best British Screenplay was a British Academy Film Award from 1954 to 1967.
1950s
1954
The Young Lovers – George Tabori, Robin Estridge- The Divided Heart – Jack Whittingham
- Doctor in the House – Nicholas Phipps
- Hobson's Choice – David Lean, Norman Spencer, and Wynyard Browne
- The Maggie – William Rose
- Monsieur Ripois – Hugh Mills and René Clément
- The Purple Plain – Eric Ambler
- Romeo and Juliet – Renato Castellani
1955
- The Constant Husband – Sidney Gilliat and Val Valentine
- The Dam Busters – R. C. Sherriff
- The Deep Blue Sea – Terence Rattigan
- Doctor at Sea – Nicholas Phipps and Jack Davies
- The Night My Number Came Up – R. C. Sherriff
- The Prisoner – Bridget Boland
- Touch and Go – William Rose
1956
- The Battle of the River Plate – Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
- The Green Man – Sidney Gilliat and Frank Launder
- Private's Progress – Frank Harvey and John Boulting
- Reach for the Sky – Lewis Gilbert
- Smiley – Moore Raymond and Anthony Kimmins
- Three Men in a Boat – Hubert Gregg and Vernon Harris
- A Town Like Alice – W. P. Lipscomb and Richard Mason
- Yield to the Night – John Cresswell and Joan Henry
1957
- Anastasia – Arthur Laurents
- The Birthday Present – Jack Whittingham
- Hell Drivers – John Kruse and Cy Endfield
- The Man in the Sky – William Rose and John Eldridge
- The Prince and the Showgirl – Terence Rattigan
- The Smallest Show on Earth – William Rose and John Eldridge
- The Story of Esther Costello – Charles Kaufman
- Windom's Way – Jill Craigie
- Woman in a Dressing Gown – Ted Willis
1958
- Bonjour Tristesse - Arthur Laurents
- A Cry from the Streets - Vernon Harris
- Ice Cold in Alex - T. J. Morrison
- Indiscreet - Norman Krasna
- The Inn of the Sixth Happiness - Isobel Lennart
- The Key - Carl Foreman
- The Man Upstairs - Alun Falconer
- A Night To Remember - Eric Ambler
- Violent Playground - James Kennaway
1959
- Blind Date – Ben Barzman and Millard Lampell
- Expresso Bongo – Wolf Mankowitz
- The Horse's Mouth – Alec Guinness
- Look Back in Anger – Nigel Kneale
- No Trees in the Street – Ted Willis
- North West Frontier – Robin Estridge
- Sapphire – Janet Green
- Tiger Bay – John Hawkesworth and Shelley Smith
1960s
1960
The Angry Silence – Bryan Forbes- The Day They Robbed the Bank of England – Howard Clewes
- The Entertainer – John Osborne and Nigel Kneale
- Hell Is a City – Val Guest
- The League of Gentlemen – Bryan Forbes
- The Millionairess – Wolf Mankowitz
- Saturday Night and Sunday Morning – Alan Sillitoe
- A Touch of Larceny – Roger MacDougall, Guy Hamilton, and Ivan Foxwell
- The Trials of Oscar Wilde – Ken Hughes
- Tunes of Glory – James Kennaway
1961
A Taste of Honey – Shelagh Delaney and Tony Richardson
- Flame in the Streets – Ted Willis
- The Guns of Navarone – Carl Foreman
- Victim – Janet Green and John McCormick
- Whistle Down the Wind – Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall
1962
- Billy Budd – Peter Ustinov and DeWitt Bodeen
- A Kind of Loving – Willis Hall and Keith Waterhouse
- Only Two Can Play – Bryan Forbes
- Tiara Tahiti – Geoffrey Cotterell and Ivan Foxwell
- Waltz of the Toreadors – Wolf Mankowitz
1963
- Billy Liar – Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall
- The Servant – Harold Pinter
- This Sporting Life – David Storey
1964
- Becket – Edward Anhalt
- Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb – Stanley Kubrick, Peter George, and Terry Southern
- Séance on a Wet Afternoon – Bryan Forbes
1965
- The Hill – Ray Rigby
- The Ipcress File – Bill Canaway and James Doran
- The Knack...and How to Get It – Charles Wood
1966
- Alfie – Bill Naughton
- It Happened Here – Kevin Brownlow and Andrew Mollo
- The Quiller Memorandum – Harold Pinter
1967
- Accident – Harold Pinter
- The Deadly Affair – Paul Dehn
- Two for the Road – Frederic Raphael