Guess My Story

(Host)
 
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== Co-hosts==
== Co-hosts==
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Resident panelists: Helen Cherry, Pat Kirkwood and Michael Pertwee
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Resident panelists: Michael Pertwee (all series), Helen Cherry (1953-4), Pat Kirkwood (1953-4), Eunice Gayson (1954-5), Jack Train (1954), Rikki Fulton (1955), Elizabeth Allan (1955)
== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
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BBC-tv, 3 December 1953 to 1955
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BBC-tv, 30 July 1953 to 19 June 1955 (37 episodes in 3 series)
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== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
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Game in which the panellists were asked to work out the identity of someone in the news from a series of clues.
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Game in which someone with a connection to a recent news story was brought on and the panellists were asked to work out who they were, very much in the manner of [[What's My Line?]]. The similarity is of course not coincidental as this was one of many (and indeed one of the more successful) attempts to recreate the success of ''Line''.
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''To be completed''
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== Inventor ==
== Inventor ==
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Unknown
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According to ''The Guardian'', 29 July 1953: "The inventor of the game is Mr William Taylor, a local government official, of Southwark."
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==Trivia==
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Two days later, ''The Guardian'' reviewed the first broadcast, their un-named Radio Critic's view being summed up in the headline "New TV Game Dull, But Inoffensive".
[[Category:Panel Game]]
[[Category:Panel Game]]
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[[Category:News]]

Current revision as of 08:19, 20 September 2020

Contents

Host

Peter West

Co-hosts

Resident panelists: Michael Pertwee (all series), Helen Cherry (1953-4), Pat Kirkwood (1953-4), Eunice Gayson (1954-5), Jack Train (1954), Rikki Fulton (1955), Elizabeth Allan (1955)

Broadcast

BBC-tv, 30 July 1953 to 19 June 1955 (37 episodes in 3 series)

Synopsis

Game in which someone with a connection to a recent news story was brought on and the panellists were asked to work out who they were, very much in the manner of What's My Line?. The similarity is of course not coincidental as this was one of many (and indeed one of the more successful) attempts to recreate the success of Line.

Inventor

According to The Guardian, 29 July 1953: "The inventor of the game is Mr William Taylor, a local government official, of Southwark."

Trivia

Two days later, The Guardian reviewed the first broadcast, their un-named Radio Critic's view being summed up in the headline "New TV Game Dull, But Inoffensive".

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