Bamber Gascoigne

Contents

Shows

The Auction Game (devisor)

Connoisseur

University Challenge (1962-1987)

Biography

The friendly face of academia, Bamber Gascoigne is best known as the original host of University Challenge. Famously, his dedication to the job was such that he painstakingly verified all the questions himself, and re-wrote them if they didn't come up to his exacting standards. He also presented the 1977 landmark documentary series The Christians and has written lots of books, including several on printmaking and a single-volume encyclopedia of British history, as well as huge amounts for his own History World website. He also presented a series of programmes on the Great Moguls in the early 1990's.

Trivia

His name is an anagram of "Organise BBC game".

One of the episodes of The Young Ones was named after him. In that episode, "Bambi", Griff Rhys Jones portrayed him in a spoof match between Scumbag College and Footlights College, Oxbridge.

Mark Gatiss (The League of Gentlemen) played Bamber in the 2006 film Starter for Ten.

Back in the 1950s/60s, Bamber was quite the playwright. His most famous work was the hugely successful musical revue Share My Lettuce which featured rising stars Kenneth Williams and Maggie Smith. In 1967 his play Leda Had a Little Swan was officially banned by the Lord Chamberlain, an event which was (in a small way) a catalyst for the abolition of theatrical censorship the following year.

He was also the original host of Granada's film review show Cinema which ran for eleven years - though he only did the first three months.

Among the book's other merits, the preface to his 1993 Encyclopedia of Britain is an interesting attempt to define that ubiquitous yet fuzzily-understood quizzing term, "general knowledge".

While we're on the subject, the entry for Gazza in the Encyclopedia of Britain notes that one effect of the footballer's tears at the 1990 World Cup was that "suddenly everyone in Britain could spell the name Gascoigne".

In 1979, Bamber was the witness to the burial of the "golden hare" jewel that was the prize in Kit Williams' national treasure hunt, Masquerade. As a result Bamber was for a couple of years inundated with pleas for help (politely rejected), bribes (returned) and at least one stranger turning up on his doorstep claiming to be a long lost relative in an attempt to wheedle the hare's whereabouts from him.

When University Challenge was revived in 1994, Bamber was invited to host it again. Although he was tempted, he eventually turned it down, partly because he was undertaking a major writing project at the time and partly because he felt that, after 25 years of painstakingly checking and rewriting questions for every single show, he could not go through it all again. Although his style of hosting was very different to Jeremy Paxman's (ie Bamber was highly efficient, yet at the same time always kind and courteous), he has always said in interviews that he feels that Paxman's more aggressive style actually fits in very neatly with the modern age.

Books / CDs

How to Identify Prints

Encyclopedia of Britain

Milestones in Colour Printing 1450-1850

Share My Lettuce - Original Cast Recording

Web links

HistoryWorld website

Internet Movie Database entry

Wikipedia entry

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