Treasure Hunt (UK game show)

Treasure Hunt
Title logo from Series 4 (1986).
Created by Jacques Antoine
Presented by Kenneth Kendall
(1982–1989)

Dermot Murnaghan
(2002–2003)
Starring Anneka Rice (1982–1988)
Annabel Croft (1989)
Suzi Perry (2002–2003)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 9
No. of episodes 101 (including 9 specials)
Production
Running time 60 minutes (including adverts)
Production company(s) Chatsworth Television
(1982-1989, 2002-2003)

Thames Television
(1985 & 1988)
Release
Original network Channel 4 (1982–1989)
ITV (1985 & 1988)
BBC Two (2002–2003)
Picture format 4:3 (1982–1989)
16:9 (2002–2003)
Original release 28 December 1982 (1982-12-28) – 2 August 2003 (2003-08-02)
Chronology
Related shows Interceptor (1989-1990)
Challenge Anneka
(1989-1995, 2006-2007)

The Crystal Maze
(1990–1995, 2016, 2017-Present)
Fort Boyard
(1998–2001, 2003)
External links
Website

Treasure Hunt was a UK game show, based on the format of the French show La Chasse au Trésor, created by Jacques Antoine. It appeared on Channel 4 between 28 December 1982 and 18 May 1989 and was revived by BBC Two between 16 December 2002 and 2 August 2003.

The game

A team of two contestants in the studio had to use a library of maps and reference materials to solve up to five clues, and communicate instructions via a radio link to a skyrunner who had the use of a helicopter. Although viewers could see the skyrunner, the contestants could not, and all communication between them was by sound only. The contestants were given the first clue for free, the solving of which would lead to the location of the second clue and so on until a trinket or other significant object was found by solving the final clue. The contestants won a higher cash prize each time they solved a clue correctly. This was all done against the clock. Even once the contestants had solved the final clue, the skyrunner still had to confirm they were correct, by reaching the final target. On a few occasions, the contestants solved all five clues with time to spare, in which case, a bonus clue was given to the contestants. This typically resulted in their winning a bottle of champagne.

The skyrunner and helicopter did not have freedom to fly and land anywhere they wished. Although the pilot could to an extent request permission from airspace authorities to fly off-course, as happened on occasions, landings needed to be agreed in advance with landowners of a suitable location near the clue. On occasions the helicopter would land in a clearly marked out area, especially at public places. Kenneth Kendall always stressed that he did not know the clues and locations in advance, and any help that he gave the contestants was from his own knowledge. According to a "making of Treasure Hunt" programme, Anneka Rice was confined to the hotel on the day that the cameraman, video recordist and helicopter pilot undertook a rehearsal (typically the day before the programme was recorded), so she had no advance knowledge of the locations. This did not stop her carrying out research about the general area in order to have a stock of facts to fill in any silences that might arise while the contestants were thinking.

Presenters and crew

Anneka Rice filming at Hatton Locks in 1984

In the original version, the presenter was former BBC newsreader Kenneth Kendall and the "skyrunner" was broadcaster Anneka Rice. In the first series, Kendall was joined briefly in the studio for the handover of the first clue by the original clue-setter, Ann Meo. She would later rejoin the contestants if they had been successful in finding the treasure to offer her congratulations. If they had been unsuccessful, she would be heard as a voiceover explaining where they had gone wrong. From the second series onwards, this role was expanded, another studio-based person acted as adjudicator, giving the contestants tips on how they were doing against the scheduled time, and providing additional information about the locations visited. In series 2, this was Annette Lynton ("Nettie") and from series 3 onwards, TV-am weather girl Wincey Willis. In 1988, Rice left to have a baby, and her place was taken by tennis player Annabel Croft. In this series, the set was revamped due to a move to Thames Television's facilities (the original studios were at Trilion in Soho, London, and then Limehouse Studios on Canary Wharf in Docklands, East London which was later earmarked for demolition to make way for One Canada Square), and Willis was promoted to sharing main billing with Kendall. Croft was billed as "Guest Skyrunner" for the first episode of the series, and it was stated at the time that Rice would return after giving birth, but it turned out to be the show's final series and the "Guest Skyrunner" credit was dropped.

In the BBC's 2002-2003 version, newsreader Dermot Murnaghan presented, the "skyrunner" was Suzi Perry, and there was no adjudicator. Advances in broadcasting technology meant that this new version could come from a much greater range of locations; however, the new version was short-lived.

Keith Thompson of Castle Air Charters was the usual helicopter pilot in both versions, though for overseas editions a local pilot was often used. There was always a "chase" helicopter which relayed radio signals back to London and, although this could never be used tactically by the contestants, it was not hidden from the viewers. This communications helicopter had dark green with gold stripe livery, registration G-SPEY. The two crews would sometimes fly in formation to generate exciting footage. During 1 episode, G-SPEY was utilised to film pictures instead of Graham in G-BHXU; Keith was required to land on a submarine in Plymouth Sound, and footage from a second cameraman in G-SPEY was used to show his landing.[1]

Both helicopters were usually Bell 206 JetRangers; the helicopter usually used by the skyrunner was registration G-BHXU (which crash landed at sea in 1995 due to engine/gearbox failure).

A feature was made of the camaraderie between the female presenter and the male recording and flight crews. Shots from the rear as the presenter ran from clue to clue in a jump-suit were satirised on Spitting Image. Cameraman Graham reaching in front of the camera to wipe away rain, sea spray, etc. with a cloth also became a well-known image from the series.

In 1985, the cameraman, Graham Berry, was awarded a BAFTA for his contribution to the series.

The contestants would win a cash prize of £500

Broadcasts

When first shown on Channel 4 on 28 December 1982, Treasure Hunt was one of the earliest major series on the then-new channel. The unusual format earned extra publicity for both the programme and the channel, which was striving to justify itself with new and different programming.

The 19821989 series were repeated on terrestrial television several times, and during the 1990s appeared on the Challenge satellite and cable channel, as well as Sky Travel. The first episode was repeated on 30 October 2007 on the digital channel More4 as part of Channel 4's 25th anniversary celebrations. This was a one-off and there are no current plans to repeat the TV show.

On 21 November 2013, Challenge announced that they re-acquired the first two series. The first episode was repeated again on 28 December 2013 as part of Challenge's First Ever Episodes weekend. Challenge have confirmed that the re-run of series 1 and 2 would air on Saturdays and Sundays from 8 February 2014. The Saturday episode was screened at 6pm and the Sunday episode aired at 5pm (times varied afterwards).

The original run of the first series was watched by up to 900,000 viewers; however, by the mid-1980s, ratings were some of the highest for Channel 4 at around seven million.

Two charity editions of the show were produced, one locally in the London area for the Thames Television telethon in 1985 and another broadcast across the UK as part of the ITV network's Telethon '88. The show was also featured in an edition of the BBC children's aspiration show Jim'll Fix It, in which a young viewer joined Anneka Rice in the famous helicopter over the county of Surrey for a scaled down version of the show, in the Paul Daniels Magic Show (BBC) and in The Krypton Factor (Granada for ITV).

For all the UK series, the programme was a Chatsworth Television independent production in association with Tele Union Paris.

Spin-offs

An eponymous board game based on the show was published in the UK. It involved moving pieces around a map of England and Wales.

There was also a computer game released for some home computer formats in 1986, including for the BBC Micro, published by Macsen Software. This game featured very basic graphic layout and was text-driven, and had the options of four different locations to find clues in.

A one-off Welsh language version, Helfa Drysor (Welsh for "Treasure Hunt"), was produced for S4C in 1985.[2]

BBC Three Counties Radio aired Treasure Quest each Sunday from 9 am to 12 noon. Andy Gelder was in the studio and varying assistants in the radio car help two contestants to solve clues over the three-hour period. This format has now changed to a Saturday morning hosted by Jonathan Vernon-Smith, sharing with BBC Radio Northampton, with two runners running simultaneously in the two radio areas during the same programme.

BBC Radio Norfolk began their own version of Treasure Quest in 2008, on Sunday mornings from 9 am to 12 noon. David Whiteley presents in the studio, with Sophie Little in the radio car. On 6 September 2009, Wincey Willis stood in for the then clue hunter Becky Betts, and on 14 February 2010, Anneka Rice took part in the programme, appearing at the fifth clue location, Norwich Castle, and then teaming up with Betts to find the treasure.[3][4][5]

On London's talk station LBC, presenter James O'Brien hosted The Treasure Hunt on Wednesday lunchtimes as part of his weekday show. In this format, callers rang in and requested things they had been trying to get hold of, hoping that other listeners had the required items. Although otherwise unrelated to the original concept, the programme opened with the Treasure Hunt television series theme tune, and in August 2007, Anneka Rice recorded a voice-over lead-in for it.

Transmissions

Original series

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
16 January 198310 March 198311
212 January 198422 March 198412
33 January 198514 March 1985
42 January 198620 March 198613
512 February 198714 May 198714
618 February 198819 May 1988
716 February 198918 May 1989

Revived series

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
816 December 200220 December 20025
914 April 20032 August 200310

Specials

DateEntitle
28 December 1982Christmas Special
17 March 1983Series 1 Highlights
5 January 1984Christmas Special
29 March 1984Series 2 Highlights
27 December 1984Christmas Special
5 April 1985Series Finale Special
30 October 1985ITV Telethon Special
27 December 1985Christmas Special
29 May 1988ITV Telethon Special

List of episodes

1982–1989 version

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
128 December 198210 March 198311
Episode 1Indonesia Bali
Episode 2Scotland Speyside
Episode 3England Suffolk
Episode 4Wales Powys
Episode 5Scotland Lothian
Episode 6England Wiltshire
Episode 7England London
Episode 8Scotland Isle of Mull
Episode 9England Gloucestershire
Episode 10England Lake District
Episode 11 Singapore
25 January 198422 March 198412
Episode 1France Burgundy
Episode 2England Kent
Episode 3Guernsey Guernsey
Episode 4England North Yorkshire
Episode 5England Birmingham
Episode 6Spain Majorca
Episode 7 Northern Ireland
Episode 8England Cambridgeshire
Episode 9England Cornwall
Episode 10 Malta
Episode 11Wales Gwynedd
Episode 12England Merseyside
327 December 198414 March 198512
Episode 1 Israel
Episode 2England Warwickshire
Episode 3Wales South Glamorgan
Episode 4England Norfolk
Episode 5France French Riviera
Episode 6England West Sussex
Episode 7England Somerset
Episode 8England Shropshire
Episode 9Greece Corfu
Episode 10Scotland Ayrshire
Episode 11England Isle of Wight
Episode 12England Derbyshire
427 December 198520 March 198613
Episode 1United States Florida
Episode 2Wales Clwyd
Episode 3England Oxfordshire
Episode 4England Surrey
Episode 5England Lake District
Episode 6England Bedfordshire
Episode 7England Devon
Episode 8Scotland Stirlingshire
Episode 9England Dorset
Episode 10England North Yorkshire
Episode 11England Nottinghamshire
Episode 12Wales Pembrokeshire
Episode 13England Cheshire
512 February 198714 May 198714
Episode 1  Switzerland
Episode 2Jersey Jersey
Episode 3England Cornwall
Episode 4England Hampshire
Episode 5England Wiltshire
Episode 6England Hertfordshire
Episode 7 Isle of Man
Episode 8England Buckinghamshire
Episode 9England Lancashire
Episode 10Wales Gwynedd
Episode 11England Northumberland
Episode 12England Kent
Episode 13Scotland West Highlands
Episode 14England North Yorkshire
618 February 198819 May 198814
Episode 1Australia Sydney
Episode 2England Suffolk
Episode 3England Lincolnshire
Episode4England West Sussex
Episode 5England West Yorkshire
Episode 6England Buckinghamshire
Episode 7Scotland Scottish Borders
Episode 8England Wiltshire
Episode 9England Staffordshire
Episode 10England Devon
Episode 11England Cotswolds
Episode 12Republic of Ireland County Kerry
Episode 13England County Durham
Episode 14Wales Clwyd
716 February 198918 May 198914
Episode 1 New Zealand
Episode 2England Worcestershire
Episode 3England Devon
Episode 4England Lake District
Episode 5England West Berkshire
Episode 6Scotland Perthshire
Episode 7England East Sussex
Episode 8England Buckinghamshire
Episode 9England Shropshire
Episode 10England Humberside
Episode 11England Somerset
Episode 12Wales Gwent
Episode 13England South Lancashire
Episode 14England Derbyshire

2002–2003 version

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
816 December 200220 December 20025
Episode 1England Folkestone, Kent
Episode 2England Canterbury, Kent
Episode 3England The Weald, Kent
Episode 4England Dover, Kent
Episode 5England West Kent, UK
914 April 20032 August 200310
Episode 1United States San Francisco
Episode 2Mexico Mexico City
Episode 3New Zealand Rotorua
Episode 4Australia Alice Springs
Episode 5Australia Melbourne
Episode 6United States Arizona
Episode 7Australia Tasmania
Episode 8United States New Orleans
Episode 9New Zealand Christchurch
Episode 10Australia Gold Coast

References

  1. YouTube, Series 4 episode 7
  2. UKGameshows.com - URL accessed 1 March 2007.
  3. "In pictures: Treasure Quest 06/09/2009". BBC Online. 7 September 2009. Retrieved 7 September 2009.
  4. "In pictures: Treasure Quest 14/02/2010". BBC Online. 15 February 2010. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  5. "Anneka turns up in Treasure Hunt take-off". guardian.co.uk. 16 February 2010. Retrieved 16 February 2010.
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