A Hampshire actress could be joining some of Hollywood’s biggest stars and celebrating BAFTA glory tonight.

Rosie Day from Winchester told plays a leading role in Good Night which has been nominated for the best short film at the prestigious awards ceremony.

The 18-year-old made the film last year, and in it plays a 14-year-old girl who, with a friend, venture into London for a night out, but in doing so find themselves well out of their depth.

Directed by Muriel d’Ansembourg, the film has already received recognition at a number of international film festivals.

Rosie, who lives with her parents Julia and Richard in Winchester, got into acting by chance when her older sister was cast in a TV drama, and producers needed a younger girl to play her sibling.

A former Hampshire Collegiate pupil, she said although her career was taking off it was her family who kept her feet on the ground.

Meanwhile, Daniel Day-Lewis is hot favourite to win the Best Actor award.

The star, who has already won a Golden Globe and a Screen Actors Guild award for his performance in the title role of Steven Spielberg's political biopic Lincoln, is also tipped to win an Oscar later this month.

He will be joined at tonight's event, formally known as the EE British Academy Film Awards, by some of Hollywood's biggest names including Jessica Chastain, Anne Hathaway and George Clooney.

Dame Helen Mirren, Hugh Jackman, Javier Bardem and Jennifer Lawrence are also among the stars who will be treading the red carpet at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden for the ceremony, which is being screened by BBC1.

Lincoln leads the field in terms of nominations with 10 in total, with nine each for Les Miserables and Life Of Pi.

Bookmakers William Hill have made Day-Lewis, who plays US President Abraham Lincoln in the film, 1/25 on to win the Bafta and are also predicting success for the Bond film Skyfall.

Two Bond stars - Dame Judi Dench and Javier Bardem - get nods with Skyfall itself nominated for Best British Film.

A spokesman for William Hill said: "Skyfall is arguably the best Bond in 50 years and we think that the British Academy will be tempted to recognise that on Sunday night."

Bardem's performance as Bond villain Raoul Silva in Skyfall has been recognised with a nomination for Supporting Actor along with Day-Lewis' Lincoln co-star Tommy Lee Jones, Alan Arkin, Christoph Waltz and Philip Seymour Hoffman.

Dame Judi is nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role as spy master M in the same film which has eight nominations.

She faces competition from Anne Hathaway who is nominated for her role in the big screen version of Les Miserables.

Also nominated are Amy Adams for The Master, Helen Hunt for The Sessions and another of Lincoln's stars - Sally Field who plays the president's wife.

Dame Helen Mirren is nominated in the Best Actress category for her role in Hitchcock - playing the wife of the film-maker.

She is joined on the shortlist by Amour star Emmanuelle Riva, Jennifer Lawrence who is recognised for Silver Linings Playbook, Rust and Bone's Marion Cotillard and Jessica Chastain for Zero Dark Thirty.

Day-Lewis' Best Actor nomination sees him up against names including Ben Affleck and Hathaway's co-star Hugh Jackman.

The shortlist is completed by Bradley Cooper for Silver Linings Playbook and Joaquin Phoenix for The Master.

Affleck could walk away with two of the night's biggest prizes after he was also nominated for Best Director for his work on Argo - a thriller set during the Iran hostage crisis.

Quentin Tarantino is nominated for Best Director and Original Screenplay for his western Django Unchained.

The shortlist for Best Director is completed by Michael Haneke, Ang Lee and Kathryn Bigelow - meaning Les Miserables' Tom Hooper, who also directed the smash hit The King's Speech, misses out.

The award for best film sees Lincoln and Les Miserables up against Affleck's Argo, Life Of Pi and Zero Dark Thirty - the story of the manhunt for Osama bin Laden.

Les Miserables is also in with a chance to win Outstanding British Film along with Anna Karenina, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Seven Psychopaths and Skyfall.

Skyfall is nominated for Outstanding British Film and Original Music and also picks up nods for Cinematography, Editing, Production Design and Sound.

TV star Dexter Fletcher is nominated for an Outstanding Debut award - with his co-writer Danny King - for their work on Wild Bill.