Tell the Truth

(Broadcast)
(Trivia: rw)
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<div class="image">[[File:Tellthetruthlogo.jpg|300px]]</div>
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== Host ==
== Host ==
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[[MacDonald Hobley]] (original host)
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[[MacDonald Hobley]] (1957-8)
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[[David Jacobs]]
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[[David Jacobs]] (1959)
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[[Shaw Taylor]]
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[[Shaw Taylor]] (1961)
[[Graeme Garden]] (1983-5)
[[Graeme Garden]] (1983-5)
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== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
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ATV (credited as "ATV by arrangement with Goodson and Todman and CBS") for ITV, 17 September 1957 to 22 June 1959
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ATV (credited as "ATV by arrangement with Goodson and Todman and CBS") for ITV, 17 September 1957 to 6 September 1961 (76 episodes in 3 series)
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Goodson-Todman in association with LWT for Channel 4, 17 April 1983 to 6 September 1985  
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LWT in association with Goodson-Todman Productions and Talbot Television for Channel 4, 17 April 1983 to 22 November 1985 (51 episodes in 4 series)
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TVS for ITV, 11 April 1989 to 14 September 1990
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TVS in association with Mark Goodson Productions and Talbot Television for ITV, 11 April 1989 to 26 October 1990 (92 episodes in 3 series)
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Once the person telling the truth has been revealed, and has talked more on the subject, another three appear claiming something different, and the show continues in the same vein. In the end game, the four impostors come back, as one of them has a different secret. Each is individually questioned by a different celebrity, who decides whether or not he/she is telling the truth, and the truth-teller is revealed - usually leaving a gobsmacked celebrity, who would never have believed that he/she was the genuine article!
Once the person telling the truth has been revealed, and has talked more on the subject, another three appear claiming something different, and the show continues in the same vein. In the end game, the four impostors come back, as one of them has a different secret. Each is individually questioned by a different celebrity, who decides whether or not he/she is telling the truth, and the truth-teller is revealed - usually leaving a gobsmacked celebrity, who would never have believed that he/she was the genuine article!
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<div class="image">[[File:Tellthetruthgame.jpg|400px]]''Which one is the REAL Superman? I hope it's not contestant No. 3''</div>
== Catchphrases ==
== Catchphrases ==
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Among the most regular guest panellists in the 1980's/90's version were [[Chris Tarrant]], Claire Rayner, [[Bob Carolgees]], [[Christopher Biggins]], The Reverend Roger Royle, [[Bill Tidy]], Beverley Anderson and Judi Spiers.
Among the most regular guest panellists in the 1980's/90's version were [[Chris Tarrant]], Claire Rayner, [[Bob Carolgees]], [[Christopher Biggins]], The Reverend Roger Royle, [[Bill Tidy]], Beverley Anderson and Judi Spiers.
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Among the notable contestants who appeared in the later series was Richard Crane (during the Garden-era), who would later host [[Survival Challenge]] for the BBC - his claim to fame being that he ran the Himalayas. Another (during the Dinenage-era this time) was the World War II telegraph operator, who was the first person to receive the news that the Germans had surrendered in 1945. He had previously appeared on [[I've Got a Secret]].
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We also saw the late, great Ivy Benson, the bandleader: all four panellists guessed correctly when it came to identifying her. There was also a man who was the loudest snorer in Britain: while he and the other three contestants were being questioned, much was made of how his wife put up with it. The answer was that she was a bit deaf in one ear.
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Oh, and let's not forget the Dinenage-hosted edition in which the contestant in the final game was a knife-thrower. He duly demonstrated his act, with the inevitable twist that his assistant/target was unavailable, so Dinenage, much to his ill-concealed consternation, was forced to fulfill said role. Anyway, all went well and Dinenage survived the scary experience, but it left him drained and with little to say for himself at the end - and that took some doing.
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The LWT series seems to be the only version to have all of its episodes survive from the archives as all of the episodes from the ATV series have been wiped and all the episodes from the TVS series are bought by Disney, with an amount of paperwork missing, meaning they can't be repeated.
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== Web links ==
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[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tell_the_Truth_(UK_game_show) Wikipedia entry]
== See also ==
== See also ==
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[[Category:Panel Game]]
[[Category:Panel Game]]
[[Category:Lying]]
[[Category:Lying]]
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[[Category:ATV Productions]]
[[Category:Channel 4 Programmes]]
[[Category:Channel 4 Programmes]]
[[Category:LWT Productions]]
[[Category:LWT Productions]]
[[Category:TVS Productions]]
[[Category:TVS Productions]]

Revision as of 22:22, 22 March 2019

Contents

Host

MacDonald Hobley (1957-8)

David Jacobs (1959)

Shaw Taylor (1961)

Graeme Garden (1983-5)

Fred Dinenage (1989-90)

Co-hosts

Voiceover:
Robin Houston (1983-5)
Malcolm Brown (1989-90)

Broadcast

ATV (credited as "ATV by arrangement with Goodson and Todman and CBS") for ITV, 17 September 1957 to 6 September 1961 (76 episodes in 3 series)

LWT in association with Goodson-Todman Productions and Talbot Television for Channel 4, 17 April 1983 to 22 November 1985 (51 episodes in 4 series)

TVS in association with Mark Goodson Productions and Talbot Television for ITV, 11 April 1989 to 26 October 1990 (92 episodes in 3 series)

Synopsis

Four celebrities with some time on their hands and three nobodies. Ah, but which nobody is the somebody and can you spot the bad acting?

Yes, that's Tell the Truth! Four celebs come to play by asking questions of the three protagonists. One of the protagonists has a secret which they would like to reveal to the world. The two actors also share that secret except they don't and the celebs try to work out who the real one is.

Once the person telling the truth has been revealed, and has talked more on the subject, another three appear claiming something different, and the show continues in the same vein. In the end game, the four impostors come back, as one of them has a different secret. Each is individually questioned by a different celebrity, who decides whether or not he/she is telling the truth, and the truth-teller is revealed - usually leaving a gobsmacked celebrity, who would never have believed that he/she was the genuine article!

Which one is the REAL Superman? I hope it's not contestant No. 3

Catchphrases

(At the beginning of the show): "Number One, what is your name, please?" This was repeated with Number Two and Number Three, and when all three had claimed to be a certain person: "Only one of these people is the real (whoever) and has sworn to tell the truth (or, before the break, "....And in Part Two, we'll find out which one has sworn to tell the truth").

"It's 'make your mind up' time for our panel - and for you at home - is it Number One - or Number Two - or could it be Number Three?"

"Right, team - there's an envelope in front of you all with a sworn statement inside it - open it up - I'll read it to you..."

"Will the real (whoever) please...stand up?" or, "...Now let's find out who's right and who's wrong as I ask the real (whoever) to please...stand up?"

(Fred Dinenage, if a contestant was prevented from answering a question by the 'time's up' buzzer): "We shall never know!"

Inventor

Based on a Goodson-Todman format created by Bob Stewart.

Trivia

Among the most regular guest panellists in the 1980's/90's version were Chris Tarrant, Claire Rayner, Bob Carolgees, Christopher Biggins, The Reverend Roger Royle, Bill Tidy, Beverley Anderson and Judi Spiers.

Among the notable contestants who appeared in the later series was Richard Crane (during the Garden-era), who would later host Survival Challenge for the BBC - his claim to fame being that he ran the Himalayas. Another (during the Dinenage-era this time) was the World War II telegraph operator, who was the first person to receive the news that the Germans had surrendered in 1945. He had previously appeared on I've Got a Secret.

We also saw the late, great Ivy Benson, the bandleader: all four panellists guessed correctly when it came to identifying her. There was also a man who was the loudest snorer in Britain: while he and the other three contestants were being questioned, much was made of how his wife put up with it. The answer was that she was a bit deaf in one ear.

Oh, and let's not forget the Dinenage-hosted edition in which the contestant in the final game was a knife-thrower. He duly demonstrated his act, with the inevitable twist that his assistant/target was unavailable, so Dinenage, much to his ill-concealed consternation, was forced to fulfill said role. Anyway, all went well and Dinenage survived the scary experience, but it left him drained and with little to say for himself at the end - and that took some doing.

The LWT series seems to be the only version to have all of its episodes survive from the archives as all of the episodes from the ATV series have been wiped and all the episodes from the TVS series are bought by Disney, with an amount of paperwork missing, meaning they can't be repeated.

Web links

Wikipedia entry

See also

Odd One In, a 2010 reworking of the same idea.

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