University Challenge (partially lost episodes of British quiz show; 1962-1987)

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Universitychallengeitv1.jpg

The show's logo in the 1960s.

Status: Partially Lost

University Challenge is a long-running British quiz television show. It was originally broadcast on ITV from 1962 to 1987, and currently airs on BBC Two from 1994 to the present day. The premise involves two teams consisting of four students representing British universities, who answer complex quiz questions to outscore outscore their opponents within a knockout tournament. While the BBC episodes survive intact, many ITV episodes from 1962 to 1971 no longer exist within any known archives.

Background

University Challenge was conceptualised from Granada Television, an ITV franchise, whose officials believed a British adaptation of American quiz show College Bowl could prove viable.[1][2] With its first episode having aired on 21st September 1962, the format has seldom changed.[3][4][2] Two teams, both consisting of four students representing a single university, aim to outscore the other by successfully answer quiz questions.[3][2] Initially, a "Starter for Ten" round commences, where one must buzz-in to answer the question read out by the host, scoring ten points for their team if they are correct.[5][3][2] Players are forbidden to confer with one another during this round, but can prematurely answer before the host has finished reading the question to quickly earn the ten points.[5][3] However, an incorrect answer during an interruption will result in their team losing five points.[5][3]

For every starter question successfully answered, the team will answer three bonus questions centred around a given topic.[5][3] This time, the team can confer with each other, with every correct answer worth five points.[5][3] This repeats for the episode's with a few starter and bonus questions also being Picture or Music rounds, where the teams will see or hear their clues respectively.[5][3] Whichever team scores the most once the gong is heard moves onto to the next round.[3][2][5] Each series consists of a knockout tournament, with teams competing for the University Challenge trophy.[2][3]

All episodes of ITV's University Challenge were hosted by Bamber Gascoigne.[3][2] The ITV show proved a ratings success in its early years, with it peaking at around 12 million viewers.[3] However, the show suffered a ratings fall in the mid-1980s as it received a negative reputation of being "snobbish".[2] This, combined with ill-fated format changes like the introduction of Pass the Baton led to the show's cancellation in 1987 after attracting an average of only 1 million viewers per episode.[3][2] Nevertheless, it would return in 1994, being produced by Granada Television (now Lifted Entertainment, ITV Studios' unscripted production division) for BBC Two with Jeremy Paxman as host.[3] Under Paxman, the show has again developed generated high ratings for an evening quiz show.[2] Paxman is set to be replaced by Amol Rajan in autumn 2023 as the former battles with Parkinson's disease.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25] To date, University Challenge is the longest-running British quiz show, and is also considered "TV's toughest quiz show".[2][4][1][3]

Availability

According to Kaleidoscope, all BBC episodes of University Challenge have been preserved, in addition to every episode of the original ITV from 1981 onwards.[26] In total, 992 ITV episodes were produced; thanks to Granada Television's archiving policy at the time to allow Granada Television shows to be sold to overseas broadcasters extensively and also enabled programmes to be repeated in the future, which saw the near-full preservation of shows like Coronation Street, over half the episodes remain intact.[27][3][26] However, the majority of episodes from the show's first ten series no longer exist within any known archives, having most likely been accidentally wiped.[26] Aside from these, the 1975 Christmas special, and three consecutive episodes in 1980 are also missing.[26] Further, an episode recorded in 1975 featuring a University of Manchester team deliberately throwing their match to protest over-representation of Cambridge and Oxford teams on the show, is also missing from the archives.[28][29] Kaleidoscope states that in total, over 340 episodes are missing.[26]

Gallery

Videos

Surviving fragment of an early episode featuring Leeds University vs University of Manchester.

Surviving audio track of Series 1, Episode 6, featuring London School of Economics vs Edinburgh University.

University Challenge at 60 documentary.

See Also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Archived Manchester Evening News detailing how University Challenge was conceptualised. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 British Film Institute summarising University Challenge and its return in 1994. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 UK Game Shows detailing the concept and history of University Challenge. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  4. 4.0 4.1 The New Statesman noting that following the first episode on 21st September 1962, University Challenge has become Britain's longest-running quiz show. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Blanchflower summarising the rules of University Challenge. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  6. Sky News reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  7. BBC News reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  8. Variety reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  9. Royal Television Society reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  10. Rolling Stone reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  11. The Evening Standard reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  12. i reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  13. The Scotsman reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  14. Digital Spy reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  15. Daily Mirror reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  16. The Daily Express reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  17. Deadline reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  18. City A.M. reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  19. Virgin Radio UK reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  20. The Daily Telegraph reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  21. HuffPost UK reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  22. The Times reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  23. RTÉ reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  24. The Guardian reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  25. The Sun reporting on Amol Rajan replacing Jeremy Paxman as host in autumn 2023. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 26.4 Kaleidoscope listing the missing episodes of University Challenge. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  27. Missing Believed Wiped noting Granada Television's archiving policy which preserved many of its shows. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  28. Manchester Evening News detailing the University of Manchester protest in a 1975 episode. Retrieved 8th Oct '22
  29. Missing Episodes discussing the lost 1975 University of Manchester episode. Retrieved 8th Oct '22