Crackerjack
(=Co-hosts=) |
(=Co-hosts=) |
Revision as of 23:30, 8 April 2006
Contents |
Host
Hosts included: Leslie Crowther, Ronnie Corbett, Don MacLean, Ed Stewart, Eamonn Andrews, Michael Aspel, Stu Francis
Co-hosts
Hostesses included: Pip Hinton, Julie Dorne-Brown, Sarah Hollamby, Jillian Comber, Leigh Miles, Sally-Ann Triplett and Ling Tai
Broadcast
BBC, 14 September 1955 to 21 December 1984 (c.400 episodes)
Synopsis
A behemoth of children's programming, for nearly three decades Crackerjack pretty much marked the start of the weekend with its mixture of sketches, pop performances and of course its games. Countless different games were played down the years - there were any number of straightforward on-the-buzzer quizzes, alongside other games like the jigsaw-based Jig-Jak and Hangman variant Take A Letter, but the show's signature game was Double Or Drop, devised by original host Eamonn Andrews, in which kids had to answer questions while holding on to an ever-increasing pile of prizes (with cabbages added to the heap for wrong answers). Win or lose, everyone went home with the coveted "Crackerjack pencil".
In the Stu Francis era, the final two contestants would both be teamed up with a celebrity, one male and one female, to play first 'Take A Letter', then a gunge-based game, 'Take A Chance'. Each celebrity would compete against Stu to answer a question correctly, and whoever failed to do so would be gunged - although Stu and the male celebrity were usually gunged anyway! The celebrities brave enough to put themselves through this included Geoff Capes, Russell Grant, Sarah Greene and Suzanne Dando, among many others.
Key moments
To be completed
Catchphrases
Host: It's Friday, it's five to five, and it's Crackerjack.
Studio audience, at the top of their voices: CRACK-KER-JAAAACK!!!
Inventor
BBC producer John Downes
Theme music
A music clip is available from the TV Cream site.
Trivia
The famed Crackerjack pencils were only given to children who actually took part in the games, and they were kept under lock and key so nobody else - even the presenters and crew - could have one. One exception was made in 1961 when the Queen visited the set and was given pencils for Prince Charles and Princess Anne. The pencils were abandoned for a short time in the early 1970s but were subsequently reintroduced, and later on there were Crackerjack pens as well.
Double Or Drop was revived by Blue Peter in 2002. They even played it on Fridays at about 5.15, just like the original.
Web links
Nostalgia Central's Crackerjack page
Pictures
Leslie Crowther & Peter Glaze