This Is Your Life (UK TV series)
This is Your Life | |
---|---|
Title card of 2007 revival. | |
Genre |
Documentary Biography |
Presented by |
Eamonn Andrews (1955–1964, 1969–1987) Michael Aspel (1987–2003) Trevor McDonald (2007) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 43 |
No. of episodes | 1,130 |
Production | |
Running time | 30–60 minutes |
Production company(s) |
BBC Productions (1955–1964) Thames Television (1969–2003) Click TV (2007) Ralph Edwards Productions (2007) STV Productions (2007) ITV Productions (2007) TIYL Productions (2007) |
Distributor |
Fremantle Media ITV Studios STV Group plc |
Release | |
Original network |
BBC One (29 July 1955 – 30 April 1964, 2 November 1994 – 8 August 2003) ITV (19 November 1969 – 20 July 1994, 2 June 2007) |
Original release | 1955–1964, 1969–2003, 2007 |
Chronology | |
Related shows |
American version New Zealand version Australian version |
This is Your Life is a British biographical television documentary, based on the 1952 American show of the same title. It was hosted by Eamonn Andrews from 1955 until 1964, and then from 1969 until his death in 1987 aged 64. Michael Aspel then took up the role of host until the show ended in 2003. It returned in 2007 as a one-off special presented by Trevor McDonald, which to date was its most recent airing.
In the show the host surprises a special guest, before taking them through their life with the assistance of the 'big red book'. Both celebrities and non-celebrities have been 'victims' of the show. The show was originally broadcast live, and over its run it has alternated between being broadcast on the BBC and on ITV.
The surprise element was a very important part of the show; if the guest heard about the project beforehand, it would be cancelled.
History
The British version of the show was launched in 1955 on the BBC and was first presented by Ralph Edwards to the first "victim", Eamonn Andrews, who was the presenter from the second show. The scriptwriter for the first 35 episodes was Gale Pedrick.[1] It ended in 1964 when Andrews moved to Associated British Corporation, but it was revived on ITV (produced by Thames Television) in 1969.
The only other occasion during Andrews' presentational run where he was not the presenter was in 1974 when he was the subject a second time, and the show was presented by David Nixon. Michael Aspel (himself, a "victim" in 1980) became presenter after Andrews died in 1987. The show returned to the BBC in 1994 but was still produced independently by Thames Television. The programme was discontinued again in 2003.
At first, the show was always broadcast live; later, programmes were sometimes pre-recorded. Live broadcasts ended in 1983 when boxer Alan Minter could not stop swearing during his appearance; also newspapers were able to find out which star was to be featured and ratings dropped as people no longer watched it just to see who was on that week.
The show returned in June 2007 on ITV for a one-off-special programme hosted by Sir Trevor McDonald with guest Simon Cowell. The new edition was co-produced by ITV Productions, STV Productions, TIYL Productions, Click TV and Ralph Edwards Productions.
Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway featured a return of This is Your Life to celebrate Ant & Dec's 25 years together, quizzing them on their 25 years as part of "Ant vs Dec" in episode 6 of Series 11. Michael Aspel returned as host alongside Ashley Roberts.
Guests
Lynn Redgrave, in December 1996, was caught while taking her bow in her one-woman show on stage at the Haymarket Theatre, the only time the Redgrave clan was seen together on stage at the same time. Bob Hope and Dudley Moore have been the only subjects of two-part editions of the programme, in 1970 and 1987 respectively. Both were broadcast over two weeks. Clive Mantle's profile included a post-credits sequence where he thanked the audience for coming.
Footballer Danny Blanchflower turned down the "red book" in February 1961. Author Richard Gordon (of Doctor in the House fame) was asked in 1974 and, like Bill Oddie (of The Goodies) in 2001, he initially turned it down, but changed his mind and appeared on the show. Actor Richard Beckinsale was a feature on the show shortly after his 31st birthday, eight months before his death.
Hattie Jacques appeared in 1963 and featured her husband John Le Mesurier who had helped set up the surprise. However, much to her extreme discomfort, she was at the time living separately from Le Mesurier with her younger lover John Schofield.[2]
In 1996, the Sunday Mirror reported that a planned show for Cockney comedy actor Arthur Mullard was pulled after researchers contacted his eldest son. The same report featured claims that Mullard had terrorised his family and had sexually abused his daughter for many years.[3]
The series originally included non-celebrities who had done extraordinary things in their lives. In later years, following a persistent criticism of only deeming celebrities worthy of being featured on the show, non-celebrities were featured again. These included businesspeople, military personnel, the clergy and those that had performed outstanding community or charity service but who were not well known to the general public. Examples include: paramedic Allan Norman; Group Captain Leonard Cheshire; Cromer lifeboatman Henry "Shrimp" Davies; Colonel Tod Sweeney; Mary Ward, community nurse to the boat people of the canals; Chay Blyth; Sir Nicholas Winton; Group Captain Sir Douglas Bader; and Sir Fitzroy Maclean. The series never profiled serving politicians, although retired politicians were occasionally featured, e.g. Lord Brabourne.
Forty-two celebrities have appeared on the show twice — including Honor Blackman, Dora Bryan, Bob Monkhouse and Eamonn Andrews himself.
David Butler was 17 when he became the youngest ever subject of This is Your Life. He was surprised by Eamonn Andrews in the headmaster's study of Hemel Hempstead Grammar School. David lost both his legs and a hand when, aged 11, he found an unexploded bomb on Ivinghoe Beacon.
When snooker player Stephen Hendry was surprised with the red book in 1990, aged 21, he remarked that he had "hardly had a life".
Theme music
The theme tune used from 1969 was called 'Gala Performance' and was composed by Laurie Johnson for KPM.
Transmissions
BBC1
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 29 July 1955 | 6 May 1956 | 15 |
2 | 1 October 1956 | 27 May 1957 | 19 |
3 | 30 September 1957 | 5 May 1958 | 31 |
4 | 29 September 1958 | 11 May 1959 | 33 |
5 | 31 August 1959 | 28 March 1960 | 31 |
6 | 19 September 1960 | 8 May 1961 | 34 |
7 | 2 October 1961 | 7 May 1962 | 32 |
8 | 2 October 1962 | 14 May 1963 | 31 |
9 | 3 October 1963 | 30 April 1964 | 30 |
ITV
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
10 | 19 November 1969 | 27 May 1970 | 26 |
11 | 18 November 1970 | 12 May 1971 | 26 |
12 | 17 November 1971 | 10 May 1972 | 26 |
13 | 15 November 1972 | 9 May 1973 | 26 |
14 | 21 November 1973 | 15 May 1974 | 27 |
15 | 10 October 1974 | 7 May 1975 | 27 |
16 | 12 November 1975 | 5 May 1976 | 26 |
17 | 27 October 1976 | 27 April 1977 | 27 |
18 | 23 November 1977 | 31 May 1978 | 27 |
19 | 25 October 1978 | 3 May 1979 | 27 |
20 | 28 November 1979 | 21 May 1980 | 26 |
21 | 15 October 1980 | 15 April 1981 | 26 |
22 | 13 October 1981 | 31 March 1982 | 26 |
23 | 20 October 1982 | 13 April 1983 | 26 |
24 | 26 October 1983 | 18 April 1984 | 26 |
25 | 7 November 1984 | 8 May 1985 | 27 |
26 | 16 October 1985 | 30 April 1986 | 26 |
27 | 15 October 1986 | 8 April 1987 | 26 |
28 | 14 October 1987 | 20 January 1988 | 7 |
29 | 19 October 1988 | 1 March 1989 | 20 |
30 | 25 October 1989 | 7 May 1990 | 27 |
31 | 17 October 1990 | 17 April 1991 | 26 |
32 | 16 October 1991 | 15 April 1992 | 26 |
33 | 30 September 1992 | 21 April 1993 | 30 |
34 | 12 January 1994 | 20 July 1994 | 26 |
BBC1
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
35 | 2 November 1994 | 17 May 1995 | 28 |
36 | 6 September 1995 | 6 March 1996 | 27 |
37 | 20 September 1996 | 24 March 1997 | 26 |
38 | 1 September 1997 | 23 February 1998 | 26 |
39 | 7 September 1998 | 1 March 1999 | 26 |
40 | 1 November 1999 | 29 May 2000 | 28 |
41 | 9 November 2000 | 7 June 2001 | 26 |
42 | 17 October 2001 | 23 May 2002 | 26 |
43 | 2 January 2003 | 8 August 2003 | 25 |
Special
- 2 June 2007 (ITV)
References
- ↑ "Mr Gale Pedrick". The Times. 24 February 1970. p. 10. Retrieved 29 August 2014. (subscription required)
- ↑ "Hattie Jacques". www.bigredbook.info.
- ↑ Woodward, Ian (May 12, 1996). "ARTHUR MULLARD WAS THE COCKNEY COMIC MILLIONS LOVED ...AND A MONSTER WHO RAPED HIS DAUGHTER AT 13; 'Behind his TV smile lurked an evil pervert who made me his sex slave, drove my mum to suicide and destroyed my life'". www.thefreelibrary.com. Sunday Mirror. Retrieved 2017-01-23.
External links
- This is Your Life on IMDb .
- A celebration of This Is Your Life
- Guest and series list (web.archive.org)