New Zealand comedian Rose Matafeo has spoken out after being nominated in this year's BAFTA TV Awards.
Matafeo's sitcom Starstruck has landed her a nomination for best female performance in a comedy programme.
Matafeo took to Twitter this morning to congratulate the other nominees.
"Congrats to these amazing nominees and thank you for using a clip of me eating chips," she wrote.
— Rose Matafeo (@Rose_Matafeo) March 30, 2022
This is her first BAFTA nomination.
— BAFTA (@BAFTA) March 30, 2022
The show, which was also written by Matafeo, follows 20-something Jessie (played by Matafeo), a millennial living in London, juggling two jobs and navigating the fallout from accidentally sleeping with a movie star.
Co-written by Matafeo, Alice Snedden and Nic Sampson, the second season continues to follow Jessie's story as she navigates her romantic involvement with famous movie star Tom (Nikesh Patel).
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The BAFTA awards recognise and celebrate the very best in television craft and television programmes broadcast in the UK in 2021 and the ceremony will be held on May 8.
Matafeo is among six other females nominated in the category including Sex Education's Aimee Lou Wood and Anjana Vasan from the hit show We Are Lady Parts.
— Rose Matafeo (@Rose_Matafeo) March 24, 2022
Just last month, she sat on Graham Norton's couch, becoming the third ever New Zealander to do so.
On the show, Matafeo seemed fully aware of just how important her newfound platform is.
"This is a very popular show in New Zealand," she told Norton. "We've watched this for many years in New Zealand, we very much like it and we're very happy for me to be representing our country."
In the same month, she also appeared on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert.
During the interview, Colbert admitted to Matafeo that, as she is a New Zealander, he "legally had to ask" if she was a Lord of the Rings fan.
Last December, major US media outlet Variety magazine even praised Matafeo for her role in the sitcom Starstruck.
"It's Matafeo, who also created the series, whose charisma ends up burning up the screen with her effervescent performance," Variety said.