Many a Slip

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Pianist: [[Steve Race]]
Pianist: [[Steve Race]]
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Regulars: [[Isobel Barnett|Lady Isobel Barnett]], Eleanor Summerfield, later Gillian Reynolds, [[David Nixon]], Richard Murdoch, Tim Rice, [[Lance Percival]]
== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==

Revision as of 17:29, 8 June 2006

Contents

Host

Roy Plomley

Co-hosts

Pianist: Steve Race

Regulars: Lady Isobel Barnett, Eleanor Summerfield, later Gillian Reynolds, David Nixon, Richard Murdoch, Tim Rice, Lance Percival

Broadcast

BBC Home Service/Radio 2/Radio 4, 1964 to 1979

Synopsis

Panel game where teams of Ladies vs. Gentlemen had to identify a number of mistakes in a series of passages read out by the host. The mistakes might be factual or grammatical. Ladies usually consisted of Lady Isobel Barnett (later Gillian Reynolds) and Eleanor Summerfield. The boys were usually David Nixon (replaced after his death by Lance Percival for the final 1979 series) and Richard Murdoch (later, Tim Rice).

One round concerned a memory test, where a short poem or jokey story was read out, then returned to later in the show with various facts changed which the team had to spot and correct. Another common round - often a quickfire round towards the end of the programme - featured a wonky typewriter, where the teams Occasionally, a round concerned sound effects (animal noises and the like) which the teams could get a bonus point for providing an impersionation of the correct noise.

About half-way through each show Steve Race, the "Musical Mistakes Man", challenged the teams to spot errors in musical pieces he played on the piano, either playing wrong notes to light classical or easy listening songs, or giving inaccurate factual statements about the pieces or composers in question.

Teams got 1 point for buzzing at the correct point when a mistake had been made, and another point for correcting the mistake. If you buzzed and/or answered wrongly, the points went over to the other team automatically. Very occasionally, if a team spotted a mistake that was correct but not intentionally wrong they would get 3 points. Many of the passages used complicated or arcane-sounding words, a few of which were completely made-up by the question writer Ian Messiter and were often referred to as Messiterisms.

The show was very fast-moving, with scores of over 100 not uncommon, and the lead frequently changed hands during the programme. Obviously, the team with the most points at the end won.

Inventor

Ian Messiter, who also wrote the passages.

Trivia

The title comes from the English phrase "Many a slip twixt cup and lip" (i.e. people make mistakes when they're drunk).

Plomley and Race hosted the programme throughout the 14 years on air.

Web links

Episode guide - compiled by the Global British Comedy Collaborative

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