The award's historic roots stem from the
Canadian Film Awards, which were presented for film from 1949 to 1978, and the
ACTRA Awards, which were presented for television from 1972 to 1986. The Academy took over the CFAs in 1978 to create the new Genie Awards, and took over the ACTRAs in 1986 to create the Gemini Awards. The Academy additionally created the
Bijou Awards in 1981 as a new home for CFA specialty categories, such as television films, that had not been retained by the Genie Awards, but presented them only once before discontinuing that program. In April 2012, the Academy announced that it would merge the Geminis and the Genies into a new awards show that would better recognize Canadian accomplishments in film, television, and digital media. On 4 September 2012, the Academy announced that the new ceremony would be known as the Canadian Screen Awards, reflecting the multi-platform nature of the presentation's expanded scope and how Canadians consume media content. The
inaugural ceremony, hosted by comedian
Martin Short and broadcast by
CBC Television, took place on 3 March 2013. Due to the number of awards presented, many of the less prominent awards have been presented at a series of untelevised galas during
Canadian Screen Week, the week leading up to the televised ceremonies. For the
13th Canadian Screen Awards in 2025, the Academy opted to reduce the length of these advance events, which will now be held entirely on the Friday and Saturday immediately before the main gala. Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, the Canadian Screen Awards did not hold an in-person presentation between 2020 and 2022. All ceremonies were held as
virtual events beginning with the
8th Canadian Screen Awards, with the non-televised galas replaced by streaming presentations during Canadian Screen Week, with no television broadcast. The
10th Canadian Screen Awards were originally scheduled to be held at the
TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto, but due to
Omicron variant and restrictions being reimplemented in the province of
Ontario, the presentation was once again held as a virtual event. A television presentation returned, with winners in top categories announced during an hour-long, pre-recorded special on CBC Television hosted by
TallBoyz. In August 2022, the Academy announced that it would discontinue its past practice of presenting gendered awards for film and television actors and actresses; beginning with the
11th Canadian Screen Awards in 2023, gender-neutral awards for Best Performance will be presented, with eight nominees per category instead of five. In 2023, the Academy announced further changes for the
12th Canadian Screen Awards, instituting a new genre separation for best leading and supporting performances in drama and comedy films, and introducing a new category for best performance in a live action short film. No change was introduced in television acting categories, which already feature a genre separation for drama and comedy. At the
12th Canadian Screen Awards, the film
BlackBerry, which documented the rise and fall of the
BlackBerry phone, broke the record for the most nominations for a film in the
history of the Canadian Screen Awards, with 17 nominations. In January 2026, it was announced that the
14th Canadian Screen Awards would be simulcast by CBC Television,
CTV Television Network, and
Global Television Network, in a partnership between the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,
Bell Media, and
Corus Entertainment. It will also be streamed online by
CBC Gem,
Crave, and
StackTV.
Name As of 2026, the Academy has not announced any official nickname, such as "Oscar" for the
Academy Awards. "Pickfords" in honour of actress
Mary Pickford and "Normans" in honour of director
Norman Jewison; and "Gemininies" as a
portmanteau of the awards' former names. At the
4th Canadian Screen Awards in 2016, host
Norm Macdonald called in his opening monologue for the awards to be named the Candys; several presenters and winners followed his lead throughout the evening, referring to the award as "The Candy" in their presentation announcements or acceptance speeches, and John Candy's former
SCTV colleagues
Eugene Levy and
Catherine O'Hara both endorsed Macdonald's proposal in the press room. Macdonald had not sought input from the Academy itself prior to his monologue, although he ran the idea past the ceremony's broadcast producer
Barry Avrich. The show is currently commonly known as the CSAs. == Rules ==