Whose Line is it Anyway?
(→Broadcast) |
m (→Videos) |
||
Line 116: | Line 116: | ||
[http://uk.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=15326C64DEC8AEDF The second episode from Series 4 in full] featuring Josie Lawrence, Paul Merton, Greg Proops and Ryan Stiles. | [http://uk.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=15326C64DEC8AEDF The second episode from Series 4 in full] featuring Josie Lawrence, Paul Merton, Greg Proops and Ryan Stiles. | ||
- | Series 1-8 are available via | + | Series 1-8 are available via [http://www.channel4.com/4od/index.html 4onDemand]. |
== Pictures == | == Pictures == |
Revision as of 23:22, 20 July 2008
Contents |
Host
Co-hosts
Team captains (radio): John Sessions and Stephen Fry
Regular guests (TV): John Sessions, Josie Lawrence, Tony Slattery, Sandi Toksvig, Paul Merton, Caroline Quentin, Mike McShane, Colin Mochrie, Stephen Frost, Ryan Stiles, Greg Proops, Brad Sherwood and Wayne Bradey
Musician (TV): Richard Vranch
Broadcast
BBC Radio 4, 2 January to 6 February 1988 (6 episodes)
Hat Trick Productions for Channel 4, 23 September 1988 to 1999
Synopsis
Now. When we write these entries for this fine A-Z you are reading we need to find some way to 'get into' the show via the introduction. Sometimes we know instinctively what to write but other times we need to make it up as we go along.
Which rather brilliantly leads us into Whose Line Is It Anyway? where Clive Anderson challenges four actors and comedians to make it up as they go along. This show ran for billions of years (well, ten) and yet still effortlessly got laughs all round.
Although purists may argue that it was always funnier in its early days. They may have a point. Whilst Greg Proops, Colin Mochrie, Ryan Styles and Co. did a splendid job, for real hilarity you have some way to go before you can beat the old class of say, John Sessions, Stephen Fry, Josie Lawrence, Tony Slattery, Paul Merton, Sandi Toksvig et al. But maybe that's just us.
Rounds would include things like 'Film and Theatre Styles' where two players would act out a scene given by Clive who would buzz in and instruct the players to suddenly act it out in style of his choosing, from a pool of ideas the audience has shouted out.
And then there's 'Party Quirks', a game where one player is hosting a party and the other three are joining but have a quirk that members of the audience have written down beforehand. The host of the party has to work out what the quirks are.
And then there's the 'Rap', which turned into a 'March' and finally into a 'Hoedown' to finish off the show. These rounds tend to be very funny, especially when Stephen Fry is playing because he hates it and often goes into a random made up poem which doesn't fit the tune at all. You have to see it really.
Clive gives out the points randomly, but whoever 'wins' has the rather dubious honour of reading out the credits in a style of Clive's choosing.
Clever actors, wit and lots of comic interplay between players and Clive make this an almost must-see programme, especially when it's on form.
The programme regularly travelled to America and even spawned an American counterpart hosted by Drew Carey, of The Drew Carey Show no less.
Key moments
Mike McShane and Josie Lawrence making up a musical about a vacuum cleaner on the spur of the moment.
Trivia
Many of the stars in 'Whose Line' are or were members of The Comedy Store Players, a improvisation group formed in October 1985 and featuring the likes of Merton, Lawrence and even Richard Vranch at the piano. They're still performing today.
Over the course of a single taping, games featured on the show were played several times which also meant that there would be more than enough material to choose from.
Because of this approach in production, there were at least two compilation specials at the end of each series featuring some of the unseen footage. However, in the 1997 series, an extra 7 episodes were also broadcast.
Review copies of the DVD contained a clanger - they'd spelt the first word as Who's.
In the pilot (which was broadcast, incidentally), the improvisors were perched on rather unsuitable stools.
Clive Anderson had two buttons for sound effects - a buzzer and a door bell - but often they were wired up to the wrong noises. Each successive generation of his desk re-instated the mistake.
Was it rigged? Apparently not. John Sessions and Josie Lawrence both recall early occasions when producer Dan Patterson would seed ideas for rounds and say "it would be good if you could get this in", but the improvs worried about these suggestions so much they rarely worked.
Why did a BBC Radio show transfer to Channel 4? A tape had been sent to the relevant department head at the BBC, and there it lay. In the meantime, the producers had been talking to one of their original contestants - Jimmy Mulville - whose newly-founded Hat Trick Productions were keen on the idea. When the BBC came round to possibly offering a pilot show, even though it was really a "radio idea", they were told "Thanks, but Channel 4 have offered us a 13 part series and we start filming next week."
Catchphrases
"And I'll just add up the points from that round..."
"And the winner gets to read out the closing credits in a style of my choosing..."
"This is me, Clive Anderson, saying goodnight. Goodnight."
Inventor
Dan Patterson and Mark Leveson
Merchandise
'The Best Of...' video release
See also
Mock the Week, created by the same devisors.
Web links
Videos
The first episode from Series 4 in full featuring Stephen Frost, Tony Slattery, Steve Steen and Jim Sweeney.
The second episode from Series 4 in full featuring Josie Lawrence, Paul Merton, Greg Proops and Ryan Stiles.
Series 1-8 are available via 4onDemand.