I've Got a Secret
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== Broadcast == | == Broadcast == | ||
- | Associated-Rediffusion for ITV, 1956 | + | Associated-Rediffusion for ITV, 5 January to ?, 1956 |
BBC1, 1986? | BBC1, 1986? | ||
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Panel of celebs are goaded on by O'Connor to try and identify an obscure claim to fame that a member of the public has. A clue was given at the start to get them going in the right direction, and there was a "look away now" moment if you didn't want to know the answer. | Panel of celebs are goaded on by O'Connor to try and identify an obscure claim to fame that a member of the public has. A clue was given at the start to get them going in the right direction, and there was a "look away now" moment if you didn't want to know the answer. | ||
- | Similar to [[What's My Line?]], we vaguely recall that a 'No' reply meant that the questioning passed on to the next celebrity - or maybe they had 30 seconds each? | + | Similar to [[What's My Line?]], we vaguely recall that a 'No' reply meant that the questioning passed on to the next celebrity - or maybe they had 30 seconds each? Either way, in the original 1950s version at least, the contestant won a crisp pound note each time the questioning passed from one panellist to another, up to a maximum of eight pounds (i.e. twice round the panel). |
== Key moments == | == Key moments == |
Revision as of 14:01, 5 October 2008
Contents |
Host
Ben Lyon (50s)
Tom O'Connor (80s)
Broadcast
Associated-Rediffusion for ITV, 5 January to ?, 1956
BBC1, 1986?
Synopsis
Panel of celebs are goaded on by O'Connor to try and identify an obscure claim to fame that a member of the public has. A clue was given at the start to get them going in the right direction, and there was a "look away now" moment if you didn't want to know the answer.
Similar to What's My Line?, we vaguely recall that a 'No' reply meant that the questioning passed on to the next celebrity - or maybe they had 30 seconds each? Either way, in the original 1950s version at least, the contestant won a crisp pound note each time the questioning passed from one panellist to another, up to a maximum of eight pounds (i.e. twice round the panel).
Key moments
One guest was the man who acted as a telegraph operator during WWII, and became the first person in Britain to know that the Germans had surrendered.
Inventor
Based on a 1950s US game show, an early entry in the Mark Goodson-Bill Todman canon, though actually invented by Allen Sherman (of "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh" novelty hit fame).