Top of the Form

(Per extensive checking on Genome)
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== Host ==
== Host ==
-
Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, Lionel Gamlin, Richard Dimbleby (early hosts)
+
Wynford Vaughan Thomas (spring 1948, semi-finals in 1964)
-
John Ellison and [[Robert MacDermot]]
+
Richard Dimbleby (autumn 1948)
-
Later hosted or co-hosted by: [[Kenneth Horne]], John Edmunds, John Dunn, Tim Gudgin (1965-86), [[Bob Holness]] (1974-6), [[Paddy Feeny]] (1976-86)
+
Lionel Gamlin (autumn 1948 - 1949)
 +
 
 +
[[Robert MacDermot]] (1949 - 1964 second round)
 +
 
 +
John Ellison (1950 - 1973)
 +
 
 +
[[Kenneth Horne]] (1964 final - 1966)
 +
 
 +
[[Tim Gudgin]] (1967 - 1986)
 +
 
 +
[[Bob Holness]] (1974 - 1976)
 +
 
 +
Paddy Feeney (7 episodes in 1977, 1979 - 1986)
 +
 
 +
John Anthony (1978)
 +
 
 +
(Main UK series only: see [[Top of the Form#Trivia|Trivia]] for overseas and special editions)
Scorekeepers included: Joan Clark
Scorekeepers included: Joan Clark
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== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
-
BBC Light Programme, 1 May 1948 to 1967
+
Light Programme (later Radio 2) 1 May 1948 - 26 December 1969 (342 episodes in 23 series + 14 specials)
-
BBC Television, 25 April 1953 and 27 February 1954 (specials)
+
BBC Television, 25 April 1953 and 27 February 1954 (2 episodes)
-
BBC Radio 2, 1967-70 (sometimes simulcast on Radio 1)
+
Radio 4, 26 September 1970 - 1 December 1986 (255 episodes in 17 series + 3 specials)
-
BBC Radio 4, 1970-86
+
as ''Around Europe with Top of the Form'', 18 April - 23 May 1950 (5 episodes)
 +
as ''Scandinavian Top of the Form'', 12 May - 23 June 1951 (7 episodes)
</div>
</div>
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"Marching Strings" by Marshall Ross, performed by Ray Martin and His Concert Orchestra. Emerson, Lake and Palmer's recording of Aaron Copeland's "Fanfare For The Common Man" was used for the last few series.
"Marching Strings" by Marshall Ross, performed by Ray Martin and His Concert Orchestra. Emerson, Lake and Palmer's recording of Aaron Copeland's "Fanfare For The Common Man" was used for the last few series.
 +
 +
==Champions==
 +
 +
1948 The Royal High School, Edinburgh (Boys)<br>
 +
1949 The Academy, Elgin (Boys)<br>
 +
1950 Robert Gordon's College, Aberdeen (Boys)<br>
 +
1951 Morgan Academy, Dundee (Boys)<br>
 +
1952 The School for Girls, Bangor<br>
 +
1954 Grove Park School, Wrexham (Boys)<br>
 +
1955 Newtown High School (Boys)<br>
 +
1956 Sutton Coldfield Grammar School for Girls<br>
 +
1957 Wycombe High School (Girls)<br>
 +
1960 The Grove Park Grammar School for Girls, Wrexham<br>
 +
1961 Archbishop Holgate's Grammar School, York (Boys)<br>
 +
1962 Hull Grammar School (Boys)<br>
 +
1963 Cambridgeshire High School for Boys, Cambridge<br>
 +
1970 Wyggeston Boys' School, Leicester<br>
 +
1971 Cheadle Hulme School, Cheshire<br>
 +
1972 County Girls Grammar School, Newbury<br>
 +
1975 King William's College, Isle of Man<br>
 +
1976 Macclesfield County High School for Girls
 +
 +
''This incomplete list has been constructed from ''Radio Times'' billings. Can you help to complete it? Let us know.''
== Trivia ==
== Trivia ==
 +
 +
The show was generally billed as "Round the British Isles with ''Top of the Form''" until 1960.
 +
 +
The first series only had competitors from London schools, and girls' schools didn't appear until the 1949 series.
 +
 +
Questions were set by Tom Williams (1948-61), Dennis Yates (1962-63), Roy Smith (1964-79), Paul Livesey (1979-84), Nigel Richardson (1980-86), Paddy Feeney (1981-84), David Self (1985-86).
Long-serving co-host Tim Gudgin was best known as the bloke that read out the Full Time scores on ''Grandstand''.
Long-serving co-host Tim Gudgin was best known as the bloke that read out the Full Time scores on ''Grandstand''.
A former contestant on the show was the actor Hugh Grant who represented Latymer Upper School.
A former contestant on the show was the actor Hugh Grant who represented Latymer Upper School.
 +
 +
Many BBC light entertainment producers cut their teeth on this show. Some - such as Paul Mayhew Archer, John Fawcett Wilson, and Geoffrey Perkins - went on to make many radio classics. We've no idea what happened to the 1978 producer, Griff Rhys Jones.
Former producer Paul Mayhew-Archer recalls that when an increasingly irate technician was trying to get the Post Office telecommunication lines to work, it wasn't realised that, while the lines weren't working to his eyes, the pupils in the Kent school hall could easily hear him swearing like a docker.
Former producer Paul Mayhew-Archer recalls that when an increasingly irate technician was trying to get the Post Office telecommunication lines to work, it wasn't realised that, while the lines weren't working to his eyes, the pupils in the Kent school hall could easily hear him swearing like a docker.
 +
 +
=== Special editions ===
 +
 +
''Top of the Form'' was more than an annual knockout tournament. Many special editions and short series took place under the show's banner.
 +
 +
* Scotland versus France (28 December 1948)
 +
* ''Around Europe With Top of the Form'' (5 episodes, 18 April - 23 May 1950): John Ellison and David Lloyd James hosted challenge matches between teams from the UK and the Continent.
 +
* ''Scandinavian Top of the Form'' (7 episodes, 12 May - 23 June 1951): Robert MacDermot and Wynford Vaughan Thomas hosted; these matches went to Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark.
 +
* England versus Germany (21 January 1952)
 +
* BBC-tv editions (25 April 1953 and 27 February 1954): presented by David Lloyd James and Robert MacDermot (see also: [[Television Top of the Form]])
 +
* ''Top of the Form for Canada Day'' (1 July 1953): Reid Forsee from the CBC joins John Ellison
 +
* Champions versus British Overseas Army on the Rhine (10 January 1955)
 +
* Finalists versus continental schools (16 and 23 January 1956; 14 and 21 January 1957; 2 and 9 January 1960)
 +
* ''Anglo-Swedish Schools Quiz'' (28 May 1962): Folke Olhagen of Swedish broadcasters SR and John Ellison
 +
* Television winners vs Sound winners (29 December 1962; 29 December 1963)
 +
* ''Top of the Form First Class Challenge'' (4 episodes, 28 December 1969 - 3 February 1973): John Ellison and Patrick Maguire. A co-production with Radio Telefis &Eacute;irean, against the winners of their ''First Class'' programme.
== Merchandise ==
== Merchandise ==
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[[Category:Academic Quiz]]
[[Category:Academic Quiz]]
[[Category:Long-Running]]
[[Category:Long-Running]]
 +
[[Category:Returning Host]]
[[Category:Radio]]
[[Category:Radio]]

Revision as of 11:34, 22 November 2014

Contents

Host

Wynford Vaughan Thomas (spring 1948, semi-finals in 1964)

Richard Dimbleby (autumn 1948)

Lionel Gamlin (autumn 1948 - 1949)

Robert MacDermot (1949 - 1964 second round)

John Ellison (1950 - 1973)

Kenneth Horne (1964 final - 1966)

Tim Gudgin (1967 - 1986)

Bob Holness (1974 - 1976)

Paddy Feeney (7 episodes in 1977, 1979 - 1986)

John Anthony (1978)

(Main UK series only: see Trivia for overseas and special editions)

Scorekeepers included: Joan Clark

Broadcast

Light Programme (later Radio 2) 1 May 1948 - 26 December 1969 (342 episodes in 23 series + 14 specials)

BBC Television, 25 April 1953 and 27 February 1954 (2 episodes)

Radio 4, 26 September 1970 - 1 December 1986 (255 episodes in 17 series + 3 specials)

as Around Europe with Top of the Form, 18 April - 23 May 1950 (5 episodes)

as Scandinavian Top of the Form, 12 May - 23 June 1951 (7 episodes)

Synopsis

Legendary long-running contest between two secondary (read: grammar) schools.

Each series was run in a knockout format with the curious feature that both teams would answer questions from their own school, with the two locations linked by telephone lines. A different question master asked the questions in each site, with the action constantly bobbing back and forth between the teams throughout the programme.

Teams would consist of four players from different school years, with two marks for a correct answer and (for some rounds) one mark on offer if it was passed over to your opposite number in the other team.

Most of the appeal lay in seeing the pupils give well-meaning but misguided answers to basic questions, such as the girl who thought that "soft soap" was a type of detergent rather than flattery. In of themselves, the questions give an excellent indication of the knowledge currency of the day. For instance, a 1961 round on "recent words and phrases" asked the pupils for the definitions of such cutting-edge concepts as a photo finish, a barbecue, an astronaut, a cover girl, a documentary, denier, fellow travellers (Communist sympathisers) and apartheid.

It transferred to television as, logically enough, Television Top of the Form.

Theme music

"Marching Strings" by Marshall Ross, performed by Ray Martin and His Concert Orchestra. Emerson, Lake and Palmer's recording of Aaron Copeland's "Fanfare For The Common Man" was used for the last few series.

Champions

1948 The Royal High School, Edinburgh (Boys)
1949 The Academy, Elgin (Boys)
1950 Robert Gordon's College, Aberdeen (Boys)
1951 Morgan Academy, Dundee (Boys)
1952 The School for Girls, Bangor
1954 Grove Park School, Wrexham (Boys)
1955 Newtown High School (Boys)
1956 Sutton Coldfield Grammar School for Girls
1957 Wycombe High School (Girls)
1960 The Grove Park Grammar School for Girls, Wrexham
1961 Archbishop Holgate's Grammar School, York (Boys)
1962 Hull Grammar School (Boys)
1963 Cambridgeshire High School for Boys, Cambridge
1970 Wyggeston Boys' School, Leicester
1971 Cheadle Hulme School, Cheshire
1972 County Girls Grammar School, Newbury
1975 King William's College, Isle of Man
1976 Macclesfield County High School for Girls

This incomplete list has been constructed from Radio Times billings. Can you help to complete it? Let us know.

Trivia

The show was generally billed as "Round the British Isles with Top of the Form" until 1960.

The first series only had competitors from London schools, and girls' schools didn't appear until the 1949 series.

Questions were set by Tom Williams (1948-61), Dennis Yates (1962-63), Roy Smith (1964-79), Paul Livesey (1979-84), Nigel Richardson (1980-86), Paddy Feeney (1981-84), David Self (1985-86).

Long-serving co-host Tim Gudgin was best known as the bloke that read out the Full Time scores on Grandstand.

A former contestant on the show was the actor Hugh Grant who represented Latymer Upper School.

Many BBC light entertainment producers cut their teeth on this show. Some - such as Paul Mayhew Archer, John Fawcett Wilson, and Geoffrey Perkins - went on to make many radio classics. We've no idea what happened to the 1978 producer, Griff Rhys Jones.

Former producer Paul Mayhew-Archer recalls that when an increasingly irate technician was trying to get the Post Office telecommunication lines to work, it wasn't realised that, while the lines weren't working to his eyes, the pupils in the Kent school hall could easily hear him swearing like a docker.

Special editions

Top of the Form was more than an annual knockout tournament. Many special editions and short series took place under the show's banner.

  • Scotland versus France (28 December 1948)
  • Around Europe With Top of the Form (5 episodes, 18 April - 23 May 1950): John Ellison and David Lloyd James hosted challenge matches between teams from the UK and the Continent.
  • Scandinavian Top of the Form (7 episodes, 12 May - 23 June 1951): Robert MacDermot and Wynford Vaughan Thomas hosted; these matches went to Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark.
  • England versus Germany (21 January 1952)
  • BBC-tv editions (25 April 1953 and 27 February 1954): presented by David Lloyd James and Robert MacDermot (see also: Television Top of the Form)
  • Top of the Form for Canada Day (1 July 1953): Reid Forsee from the CBC joins John Ellison
  • Champions versus British Overseas Army on the Rhine (10 January 1955)
  • Finalists versus continental schools (16 and 23 January 1956; 14 and 21 January 1957; 2 and 9 January 1960)
  • Anglo-Swedish Schools Quiz (28 May 1962): Folke Olhagen of Swedish broadcasters SR and John Ellison
  • Television winners vs Sound winners (29 December 1962; 29 December 1963)
  • Top of the Form First Class Challenge (4 episodes, 28 December 1969 - 3 February 1973): John Ellison and Patrick Maguire. A co-production with Radio Telefis Éirean, against the winners of their First Class programme.

Merchandise

Many quiz books were published.

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