Blankety Blank
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Blankety Blank | |
---|---|
Genre | Game show |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Starring | Terry Wogan (1979-1983) Les Dawson (1984-1990) Lily Savage (1997-2002) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original channel | BBC One, ITV1 |
Original run | 1979–1990, 1997-2002 |
Blankety Blank was a British game show based on the American game show Match Game. It ran from 1979 to 1990 on the BBC, hosted first by Terry Wogan and then by Les Dawson. In late 1997 a revived version fronted by Lily Savage (in reality Paul O'Grady) was produced by the BBC, and then in 2001 the Lily Savage version migrated to ITV, produced by Thames Television.
Regular members of the celebrity panel on the original BBC show included Kenny Everett, Lorraine Chase, Gareth Hunt, Gary Davies and Cheryl Baker. It was notable for making a running joke out of the poor quality of prizes on offer, particularly once Les Dawson had taken over as host. Dawson affectionately ridiculed the show, producing dialogue such as "There's 50 Blanks, a 100 Blanks and a 150 Blanks..." (the target scores for the prizes) "and for the benefit of anyone who hasn't got an Argos Catalogue, here's some of the rubbish you might be saddled with tonight." On one memorable occasion, the 300 Blanks question was actually a good prize - a trip on Concorde. As the audience, expecting the usual poor prizes, clapped and cheered appreciatively, Les waved them down - "Don't get excited - it goes to the end of the runway and back." Most famously was the consolation prize, the Blankety Blank chequebook and pen, which Les would often deliberately mis-quote as "The Blankety Blank cheque pen and book." This consisted of a cheap-looking silver trophy in the shape of a cheque book. When one contestant had won nothing, Les rolled his eyes and asked her "I bet you wish you'd've stopped at home and watched Crossroads - do you want me to lend you your bus fare home?" Les's brand of humour - lugubrious, world-weary, cutting but never cruel or offensive - was ideally suited to the style of Blankety Blank. Prizes on British game shows of the 1980s seem very poor by modern standards; the Independent Broadcasting Authority restricted the prize values on ITV shows, and prizes on BBC shows were worth even less because the Corporation felt it inappropriate to spend licence payers' money on such things. Dawson was loved by the public partially because he drew attention to the fact, not pretending that the show had "fabulous prizes" as other shows did, but making a joke of it.
A spoof of the game show was shown in 2003 as part of Comic Relief. It took the form of a "lost" episode and starred Peter Serafinowicz as Terry Wogan. The celebrities were Su Pollard, Johnny Rotten, Ruth Madoc, Freddie Starr and Liza Goddard, played by Nick Frost, Matt Lucas, Martin Freeman, David Walliams, Simon Pegg and Sarah Alexander respectively. Stirling Gallacher and Kevin Eldon played the two contestants, while Paul Putner was the star prize of a chauffeur.
The Australian version had the very similar title Blankety Blanks.
[edit] Trivia
Despite Les Dawson's constant criticism of the consolation prize, The Blankety Blank Cheque Book and Pen ("Never mind love, you might have lost, but you'll never be short of something to prop your door open with now...") they are now worth a great deal, as they were never commercially available and only a limited number were made.
When he was host, Terry Wogan had a very peculiar looking stick-like microphone (the Sony ECM-51 which transferred along with the format from the US) which he always referred to as "Wogan's Wand". On one memorable occasion Kenny Everett bent it in half (Wogan, obviously not expecting this, carried on valiantly throughout with it at a 45 degree angle.) In his very first show when he took over from Wogan, Les Dawson broke Wogan's Wand in half across his knee, muttering "Been wanting to do that for years."
In a 1987 edition, Les Dawson's old friend, Roy Barraclough made an appearance on the panel. Les had for many years played opposite Roy when they played a couple of grotesque (and hilariously funny) old ladies, Ada and Cissie. On first seeing Roy, Les looked him up and down, looked puzzled and said, in his "Ada" voice, "I must say you look familiar have you got a sister?" Without even looking up, Roy replied he had no idea what he was talking about!
==Return== Matthew Hadley 21:06, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Blankety Blank returned to our screens as a one off edition as part of the BBC's annual Children In Need telethon in which Terry Wogan reprised his role as the host of the show accompanied by his wand microphone.The contestants were impressionists Jon Culshaw and jan Ravens from Dead Ringers.Matthew Hadley 21:06, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
This Year the show was brought back this time as an interactive version on a DVD disc with Terry once again reprising his role of host and once again being accompanied by his magic wand type of microphone. Note that theme tune to the interactive DVD version of Blankety Blank is not the original theme is a version that was used for the ITV version which was called Lily Savage's Blankety Blank.Matthew Hadley 21:06, 9 December 2006 (UTC)