The Big Time (TV series)

The Big Time
GenreDocumentary
Directed by
  • First run (1976–1981):
    • Ian Sharp
    • Patricia Houlihan
    • Nick Handel
    • Henry Murray
    • Pieter Morpurgo
  • Second run (1982–1987):
    • Ruth Jackson
    • Patricia Houlihan
    • Nick Handel
    • Tony Salmon
    • John Bird
    • Terence O'Reilly
Presented by
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes33
Production
Executive producers
  • Esther Rantzen (1976–1981)
  • Nick Handel (1982–1987)
Producers
  • Esther Rantzen (1976–1981)
  • Various (1982–1987)
Running time50 minutes
Original release
NetworkBBC 1
Release28 October 1976 (1976-10-28) –
17 June 1987 (1987-06-17)
Related
  • In at the Deep End
  • Jobs for the Boys
  • Jobs for the Girls
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview)

The Big Time was a British documentary and reality television series made by the BBC, consisting of 15 original episodes which ran from 1976 to 1980. A revised, extended repeat of episode 12 was broadcast in 1981.[1]

Devised and produced by Esther Rantzen and narrated initially by Rantzen but later by John Pitman, Paul Heiney and Norma Shepherd, each programme followed a member of the public placed in the limelight as a result of their skill and documenting how they fared. Their progress was filmed and sundry professionals in their fields advised the amateur as they progressed.

Some of the exploits included an amateur musician conducting an orchestra at the Fairfield Halls; a housewife becoming a TV presenter; a cookery competition winner becoming head chef for the day at The Dorchester hotel and preparing a banquet lunch for former Prime Minister Edward Heath; an amateur wrestler taking on professional John Naylor on a bill at the Albert Hall on 26 March 1980 (the amateur was given the stage name 'Rip Rawlinson'); a model entering the Miss United Kingdom beauty contest; an amateur footballer (Lol Cottrell) being trained by Liverpool player Tommy Smith to take part in the latter's testimonial game; a young gymnast who became a circus trapeze artist; an amateur singer getting the chance to record a single. The latter 'discovered' the singer Sheena Easton (with a follow-up Big Time special episode airing a year later, after she achieved stardom) and the edition featuring the amateur chef is credited as terminating the television career of the TV chef Fanny Cradock, who criticised the amateur's choice of menu.[2]

When the series ended, the BBC commissioned In at the Deep End, which followed the same format only using two presenters, Chris Serle and erstwhile The Big Time reporter Paul Heiney (former reporters on Rantzen's That's Life!), as they undertook various tasks as complete beginners in professional roles.

Further versions of the format followed, when Hale and Pace (comedians Gareth Hale and Norman Pace) presented a short-lived series Jobs for the Boys on BBC TV in 1997, where they undertook professional tasks as complete amateurs. The four episodes featured the pair attempting to become professional polo players, dress designers, producers of a TV commercial and an effort to write Britain's 1998 Eurovision Song Contest entry.[3] This format followed 1995's Jobs for the Girls, when Birds of a Feather stars Pauline Quirke and Linda Robson undertook four similar tasks.[4]

  1. ^ "The Big Time". BBC Genome. 16 April 1981. p. 50.
  2. ^ Ellis, Clive (18 December 2007). "Fanny Cradock – a Christmas cracker". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 15 May 2014.
  3. ^ "Jobs for the Boys". BBC Genome. 16 November 1997. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  4. ^ "Jobs for the Girls". BBC Genome. 16 February 1995. p. 90.

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