Face the Music
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The show was originally produced in London, but moved to Manchester in 1971. | The show was originally produced in London, but moved to Manchester in 1971. | ||
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+ | Following Joseph Cooper's death in 2001, an edition of the original series (from around 1971) was shown on BBC2 as a tribute. The panellists on that show were Richard Baker, Joyce Grenfell and Robin Ray, while the special guest was the composer William Walton. It was nice to see the show again after such a long time, but rather sad to note that Baker was the only surviving participant since the original transmission. | ||
== Theme music == | == Theme music == |
Revision as of 23:48, 17 February 2010
Contents |
Host
Joseph Cooper (1966-84)
John Sergeant (2007)
Broadcast
BBC2 / BBC1, pilot 26 December 1966, series 3 August 1967 to 1 September 1979, 3 April 1983 to 16 December 1984
BBC4, 1 July 2007
Synopsis
Gentle classical music based quiz, an adpatation for TV of the radio format Call the Tune. Three celebrities would try and identify classical music pieces disguised in some way.
About halfway through, a musical guest would be brought in and they faced a set of questions of their own, usually intended to provoke some anecdotes from their own career.
The most memorable round was the Dummy Keyboard where Cooper played on a silent piano and our celebs were challenged to identify the piece of music merely from the hand movements of the host playing the rattling keys. Cooper reported in his autobiography that when people couldn't remember his name, they would often refer to him as "Mr. Dummy Keyboard". Other rounds included Funny Opera in which visual footage of one opera was played along with audio from another, the panellists having to identify both, and Hidden Melody, a showcase for Joseph Cooper's improvisational skills as he performed a famous piece in the style of another composer.
David Attenborough, Patrick Moore, Richard Baker, Bernard Levin, Michael Bentine, Joyce Grenfell and Robin Ray were regulars.
The programme returned in 2007 for what the BBC were keen to stress was a pilot episode rather than an intentional one-off, with the dummy keyboard now played in a non-scoring round by one of the contestants.
Inventor
Walter Todds
Trivia
The show was originally produced in London, but moved to Manchester in 1971.
Following Joseph Cooper's death in 2001, an edition of the original series (from around 1971) was shown on BBC2 as a tribute. The panellists on that show were Richard Baker, Joyce Grenfell and Robin Ray, while the special guest was the composer William Walton. It was nice to see the show again after such a long time, but rather sad to note that Baker was the only surviving participant since the original transmission.
Theme music
The Popular Song from William Walton's Façade suite.
In the 2007 version, a reworking of Edward Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance March No.1, arranged by Hugo de Chaire.