New Faces
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== Host == | == Host == | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Leslie Crowther]] (regional pilot) | ||
- | [[Derek Hobson]] (1973- | + | [[Derek Hobson]] (network pilot and 1973-78) |
- | [[Marti Caine]] (1986- | + | [[Marti Caine]] (1986-88) |
== Co-hosts == | == Co-hosts == | ||
- | Regular judges included: [[Ted Ray]], Arthur Askey, Mickie Most, Clifford Davis, Tony Hatch ( | + | Regular judges included: [[Ted Ray]], [[Arthur Askey]], Mickie Most, Clifford Davis, Tony Hatch (1973-78); Nina Myskow, [[Bonnie Langford]] (1986-88) |
== Broadcast == | == Broadcast == | ||
- | ATV for ITV, 7 July 1973 to 2 April 1978 (pilot + | + | ATV (regional), 31 May 1973 (pilot) |
+ | |||
+ | ATV for ITV, 7 July 1973 to 2 April 1978 (pilot + 164 episodes in 6 series) | ||
as ''New Faces of...'' Central for ITV, 19 September 1986 to 3 December 1988 (39 episodes in 3 series) | as ''New Faces of...'' Central for ITV, 19 September 1986 to 3 December 1988 (39 episodes in 3 series) | ||
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The remake hosted by [[Marti Caine]] was set in a large theatre (for the finals at least, it was the Birmingham Hippodrome) and our acts were commented upon by three judges sitting high up in a box, of which Nina Myskow seems to be remembered for being the nastiest towards the acts. The audience decided who won here, as a gigantic lightboard known as ''Spaghetti Junction'' lit up to a varying degree as the audience pushed buttons. The final was live and decided on a home vote, with Marti going round all the ITV regions and the regions giving points on an [[Eurovision Song Contest]] style basis. Excellent! | The remake hosted by [[Marti Caine]] was set in a large theatre (for the finals at least, it was the Birmingham Hippodrome) and our acts were commented upon by three judges sitting high up in a box, of which Nina Myskow seems to be remembered for being the nastiest towards the acts. The audience decided who won here, as a gigantic lightboard known as ''Spaghetti Junction'' lit up to a varying degree as the audience pushed buttons. The final was live and decided on a home vote, with Marti going round all the ITV regions and the regions giving points on an [[Eurovision Song Contest]] style basis. Excellent! | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Champions == | ||
+ | |||
+ | {| | ||
+ | |'''Year'''||'''Winner'''||'''Act''' | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1973||Tom Waite||Singer | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1974||Aiden J. Harvey||Impressionist | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1974-75||[[Marti Caine]]||Comedian | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1975-76||Roger de Courcey||Ventriloquist | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1976-77||Koffee 'n' Kreme||Band | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1977-78||Patti Boulaye||Singer | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1986||Duggie Small||Comedian | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1987||Jimmy Tamley||Ventriloquist | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |1988||Stephen Lee Garden||Singer | ||
+ | |} | ||
== Catchphrases == | == Catchphrases == | ||
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Five and a half of the twelve acts from the 1986 final (one was a double act) appeared in a 2011 BBC documentary, ''Wonderland: I Had the X Factor... 25 Years Ago''. The overall winner, Duggie Small, was absent, though his post-''New Faces'' story had previously been told on the ITV show ''After They Were Famous''. | Five and a half of the twelve acts from the 1986 final (one was a double act) appeared in a 2011 BBC documentary, ''Wonderland: I Had the X Factor... 25 Years Ago''. The overall winner, Duggie Small, was absent, though his post-''New Faces'' story had previously been told on the ITV show ''After They Were Famous''. | ||
- | [http://www. | + | [http://www.tvbrain.info/tv-archive?showname=New+Faces&type=lostshow TV Brain tells us] that many of the ATV episodes have been wiped from the archives with 38 of them surviving. These are the episodes that survived: |
Series 1: Episode 14<br> | Series 1: Episode 14<br> | ||
- | Series 2: Episodes 1 | + | Series 2: Episodes 1 & 13<br> |
- | Series 3: Episodes 1, | + | Series 3: Episodes 1, 39 & 44<br> |
- | Series 4: Episodes 7, 11, 15, 19, 22- | + | Series 4: Episodes 7, 11-12, 15, 19, 22-25 & 28-29<br> |
- | Series 5: Episodes 1, 5, 8, 11, | + | Series 5: Episodes 1, 5, 8, 11, 13-16, 21 & 30<br> |
- | Series 6: Episodes 20-30 | + | Series 6: Episodes 20-30 |
== Web links == | == Web links == | ||
+ | |||
+ | [http://newfacesatv.info/ Show-by-show episode guide from the ATV era] | ||
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Faces Wikipedia entry] | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Faces Wikipedia entry] | ||
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[[Category:Variety]] | [[Category:Variety]] | ||
+ | [[Category:ATV Productions]] | ||
[[Category:Central Productions]] | [[Category:Central Productions]] |
Current revision as of 23:59, 25 July 2023
Contents |
Host
Leslie Crowther (regional pilot)
Derek Hobson (network pilot and 1973-78)
Marti Caine (1986-88)
Co-hosts
Regular judges included: Ted Ray, Arthur Askey, Mickie Most, Clifford Davis, Tony Hatch (1973-78); Nina Myskow, Bonnie Langford (1986-88)
Broadcast
ATV (regional), 31 May 1973 (pilot)
ATV for ITV, 7 July 1973 to 2 April 1978 (pilot + 164 episodes in 6 series)
as New Faces of... Central for ITV, 19 September 1986 to 3 December 1988 (39 episodes in 3 series)
Synopsis
Popular talent show, but unlike the amateur Opportunity Knocks, this one was for smalltime professional acts who already had their Equity cards. It came in two incarnations.
The first, hosted by That's My Dog's Derek Hobson saw a variety of turns being judged by a panel of talent spotters, usually a combination of celebrities and Tony Hatch, who is generally reckoned to have been the original plain-speaking "nasty judge" - nowadays every show has one, but he was arguably the first. (Though not the only one on this show: Mickie Most was also noted for his harsh comments.) The acts were marked out of 100 in various criteria with the highest scores moving on to semi-finals and finals.
The remake hosted by Marti Caine was set in a large theatre (for the finals at least, it was the Birmingham Hippodrome) and our acts were commented upon by three judges sitting high up in a box, of which Nina Myskow seems to be remembered for being the nastiest towards the acts. The audience decided who won here, as a gigantic lightboard known as Spaghetti Junction lit up to a varying degree as the audience pushed buttons. The final was live and decided on a home vote, with Marti going round all the ITV regions and the regions giving points on an Eurovision Song Contest style basis. Excellent!
Champions
Year | Winner | Act |
1973 | Tom Waite | Singer |
1974 | Aiden J. Harvey | Impressionist |
1974-75 | Marti Caine | Comedian |
1975-76 | Roger de Courcey | Ventriloquist |
1976-77 | Koffee 'n' Kreme | Band |
1977-78 | Patti Boulaye | Singer |
1986 | Duggie Small | Comedian |
1987 | Jimmy Tamley | Ventriloquist |
1988 | Stephen Lee Garden | Singer |
Catchphrases
Marti Caine: "Press your buttons...NOW!"
Theme music
You're a Star, Superstar by Carl Wayne from The Move.
The revived Central version was composed by Ed Welch.
Trivia
Acts that were discovered on the show included Victoria Wood, Malandra Burrows (the youngest ever winner), Showaddywaddy, Les Dennis, Lenny Henry, Jim Davidson, Roy Walker, Gary Wilmot, Patti Boulaye and Marti Caine (who later returned to the show as host). The Chuckle Brothers appeared in 1974, but were still sufficiently obscure to be "discovered" for a second time on The Freddie Starr Showcase nine years later. Joe Pasquale was discovered on the late 80s revival.
Regional results presenters for the grand finals on the 80s version included:
Paul Lavers (announcer for the Anglia region)
Richard Whiteley (representing YTV, of course)
Fern Britton (co-presenter alongside Fred Dinenage on the nightly news programme Coast To Coast for TVS)
Peter Lewis (chief announcer and newsreader at LWT)
Five and a half of the twelve acts from the 1986 final (one was a double act) appeared in a 2011 BBC documentary, Wonderland: I Had the X Factor... 25 Years Ago. The overall winner, Duggie Small, was absent, though his post-New Faces story had previously been told on the ITV show After They Were Famous.
TV Brain tells us that many of the ATV episodes have been wiped from the archives with 38 of them surviving. These are the episodes that survived:
Series 1: Episode 14
Series 2: Episodes 1 & 13
Series 3: Episodes 1, 39 & 44
Series 4: Episodes 7, 11-12, 15, 19, 22-25 & 28-29
Series 5: Episodes 1, 5, 8, 11, 13-16, 21 & 30
Series 6: Episodes 20-30
Web links
Show-by-show episode guide from the ATV era