Connections (1)
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Noted for a set that looked quite hi-tech and very eighties. Quite cool actually. | Noted for a set that looked quite hi-tech and very eighties. Quite cool actually. | ||
- | The quiz always seemed to work better with student, rather than adult, contestants, and Sue Robbie was always the best presenter - somehow, neither Richard Madeley nor Simon Potter (Madeley in particular) ever seemed quite right for it. | + | The quiz always seemed to work better with student, rather than adult, contestants, and Sue Robbie was always the best presenter - somehow, neither Richard Madeley nor Simon Potter (Madeley in particular) ever seemed quite right for it. It was certainly no bad thing that Madeley only lasted one series on the show! |
== Key moments == | == Key moments == |
Revision as of 22:35, 14 November 2009
Contents |
Host
Sue Robbie (original host)
Co-hosts
Marian Chanter (with Richard Madeley)
Voiceover: Charles Foster
Broadcast
Granada for ITV, 1985-90
Later series co-produced by Action Time
Synopsis
Typical quiz in the ITV summer-replacement-for-Blockbusters-in-the-afternoon style. This one was rather more entertaining and enjoyable than the rest - admittedly not quite as good or long-running as Blockbusters, but certainly a decent enough show. Two contestants (initially teens, adults in later series) buzz on a question, earn points, reveal picture, try and spot connection, win bonus. (This round was called 'Connect The Clue'). Also, in the Sue Robbie and Richard Madeley eras at least, there was a 'Find The Figure' round, in which a correct answer revealed either a number or a mathematical symbol: the sum went in a clockwise direction around the board, ending with an 'equals' sign, and the contestants had to buzz in to give the answer to the sum, which was concealed behind the centre square. Madeley used to claim that he hated that round, because he had apparently struggled with his maths exams - as if we really wanted to know!
The winner went through to an end game ('Link The Letters') where they'd be given 45 seconds (represented by 45 lights beneath the game board that would gradually light up) they'd try an answer eight questions. If they got one right then one of the screens would reveal a letter (the first letter of the answer). After the eight questions whatever time they had left the contestant would use to try and find the mystery eight letter word, arranged clockwise, much more difficult with some of the letters missing and without knowing where the word started. They did change this in a later version of the show by having the eight letters arranged in circular form, but still without revealing where it actually started. Scarily. During the Sue Robbie era, the winners stayed on with the chance to play up to four 'Link The Letters' games to win prizes of increasing value, the top one usually being a worldwide holiday (rather like the Gold Runs on Blockbusters). During the Madeley- and Potter-eras, the game usually only served to increase the contestants' scores, rather than win them prizes.
During the Simon Potter era, the end game (by then known as 'The Final Connection') involved being given the first and last of eight pictures (normally of famous people) on the board, then, with the help of up to three clues, having to identify the next picture in the sequence, which would have a connection of some sort (such as a shared surname) with the pictures before and after it. (One example was: Tony Hancock; Sheila Hancock; John Thaw and so on until the final one, which was Sid James).
Noted for a set that looked quite hi-tech and very eighties. Quite cool actually.
The quiz always seemed to work better with student, rather than adult, contestants, and Sue Robbie was always the best presenter - somehow, neither Richard Madeley nor Simon Potter (Madeley in particular) ever seemed quite right for it. It was certainly no bad thing that Madeley only lasted one series on the show!
Key moments
Good, tense end game.
During one of the Sue Robbie series, the first two pictures on the board in the 'Connect The Clue' round were 'Sue Robbie' and 'Throwing a punch'. When asked to find the connection, the teenage contestant responded, "They all have trouble in nightclubs!" Sue was not impressed and answered, "You cheeky thing - no, that's not our connection!" before moving swiftly onto the next question. (The actual connection was 'Names of puppets', 'Sue' being as in Soo from 'The Sooty Show).
Catchphrases
(Sue Robbie): "Hello - and a very warm welcome from all the 'Connections' team!"
"What's the connection?"
"Well done - you've made the connection!" or "Found the figure!" or "Linked the letters!" - depending obviously on the round concerned.
(If neither contestant managed to find the connection), "...So I'll have to ask Charles to tell us the connection!"
(Before the 'Link The Letters' round): "You've got fifty seconds in which to do it - keep your eye on the board - and your connection time starts...now!" (Simon Potter came out with a similar catchphrase, namely: "Your 'Connections' clock starts...now!")
"Let's see if you're right!"
"Charles - don't keep us in suspense - tell us what he/she's won!"
(Richard Madeley, when reading out a question as the 'time's up' buzzer sounded): "I've started....so I'll stop!"
Trivia
Host Sue Robbie also did Saturday Morning show TX with Tony Slattery and was last seen doing insurance adverts with Bill Dod (of Timekeepers and Aldi fame). Another notable point about Sue was that she was one of the first female quiz hosts to present on her own, since up until the mid-1980's, the quiz host role was almost entirely male-dominated. She was soon to be followed by the likes of Debbie Greenwood (First Class), Angela Rippon (Masterteam and What's My Line?), Penelope Keith (also What's My Line?) and Sarah Kennedy (Busman's Holiday), among others.
Marian Chanter co-hosted in the year following her success on The Krypton Factor. She presented the part of the show in which she was somewhere in the UK associated with a famous person and she would give clues related to that person in order for viewers to write in with the answer and win one of 5 prizes, which may have been the 'Connections' goody-bags that contestants were also given. Marian did an excellent job in this slot, which was one of the few good points of an otherwise substandard series.
During the Sue Robbie-era, all contestants were given a 'Connections Camera' and the money that they won went to a charity of their choice. During the Richard Madeley-era, the contestants won a 'goody-bag', and the 'money for charity' arrangement continued. When Simon Potter took over, losing contestants would get a mini-TV and the winners would play for money in the end game - initially £1,000, later £400.
John Huntley, the producer for early series of the show was also a presenter and producer of Granada Reports at the same time. He later became head of news at Granada before leaving the company in 1992.
Originally produced at Granada's own digs in Quay Street, Manchester, later series were recorded at a studio in Kearsley (between Bolton and Manchester).
Bizarrely, a US pilot was shot for this in 2006.
Theme music
Composed by Bill Connor