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Showing posts with label Swap Shop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Swap Shop. Show all posts

27 October 2009

Keith Chegwin And Maggie Philbin

As health workers pelted Mrs Thatcher's car with eggs, Keith Chegwin ("Cheggers") and Maggie Philbin, the Posh and Becks of 1982, prepared for their wedding...

From the Daily Mirror, 3/9/1982:

For millions of youngsters, it will be the marriage of the year when their TV favourites Keith Chegwin and Maggie Philbin wed tomorrow.

The former "Swap Shop" assistants had only one worry about the great day... the smartness of the parish church in Little Stretton, Leicestershire, where Maggie grew up and was determined to marry.

But the villagers rallied round. "They have been fantastic," said Maggie.

"The church garden has been weeded, the grass cut, and even the old stone floor scrubbed."

Sweet!

I remember Keith on Multi-Coloured Swap Shop and Saturday Superstore. And then there was Cheggers Plays Pop - which ran all the way from 1978 to 1986...

Meanwhile...

Of the egg chuckers, who pelted the PM's car when she visited Aberdeen University medical school, Mrs T said: "It's a pity they have nothing better to do."

Like Keith Chegwin and Maggie Philbin?

From the Sunday People, 5/9/1982:

"Swap Shop" sweethearts Keith Chegwin and Maggie Philbin will soon be saying "I do" again.

For their wedding yesterday was recorded by a film crew for broadcast next month in a new children's TV show called "Saturday Superstore".

Maggie and Keith, who will both be on the new BBC show, fell for each other while presenting "Swap Shop".

And yesterday they were the stars in a white wedding at the tiny parish church in Little Stretton, Leicestershire, Maggie's home village.

DJ Tony Blackburn and TV personality John Craven turned up to join the hundreds of fans who beseiged the church.

The bride and groom even started the day by helping Tony Blackburn in an on-the-spot radio special.

Keith, who arrived at the church half an hour early, said: "It really got to me."

After the ceremony he admitted: "It was a tremendous emotional experience. I was so nervous that I even fluffed my lines towards the end."

Maggie, who turned up in a Rolls ten minutes late, said: "It was all right until I got into the car, then it really hit me. And I felt the tears coming when I entered the church and saw Keith standing there."

Mike Reid of Saturday Superstore - the start of a glittering new BBC Saturday morning children's telly era in 1982.


19 March 2009

Swap Shop Or Tiswas? That Was The Question...

Up until a couple of months ago, many of you wouldn't have seen "Tiswas" because it wasn't fully networked...

A page from the first Look-In magazine of the 1980s - Tiswas was becoming more widespread. However the Look-In ITV programmes listings revealed that a few channels, including Tyne Tees, were still lacking the show!

The marvellous Tiswasonline site history of the series notes...

Tiswas (series 7, 1980 - 1981)

When the subject of Tiswas is brought up, it is this series that is used to define the show. The opening titles, the bucket of baked beans over Sally, the "REAL Trevor MacDoughnut", the cartoon festooned studio set, this is the definitive image Tiswas has, or rather, what nostalgic clip show compilers tend to use to illustrate the impact it had on television.

The 1981-2 season was a little different, with several notables absent (the "adult" version of Tiswas, OTT, was in preparation for 1982) but the show still had many loyal viewers - as did its BBC rival Swap Shop.

On 3/10/1981, the Sun asked:

KIDS! Are you a Swap Shop Swot or a Tiswas Terror?

The Saturday morning battle to win the hearts and minds of Britain's kids starts again today.

Swap Shop (BBC 1, 9.30) returns after a six-month break to compete with Tiswas (ITV, 10.30).

Tiswas, which returned to the screens four weeks ago, has a head start. But Swap Shoppers who do not go for Tiswas's rough-and-tumble pie-throwing pandemonium will be switching back to Noel Edmunds and his team of phone-in funsters.

Is there a typical Tiswas kid, a terror who never stops looning about and does not mind a dousing with a bucket of water?

Are Swap Shop watchers swots? Are they studious, mature children who need more to grab their attention than the Phantom Flan Flinger?

We asked the kids of Britain what they thought of the Saturday morning battle for their time.

Reproduced below are a few of those views...

Brother and sister Dirk and Sandra Brusse of West London, are Tiswas fans. Dirk, seven, says: "I like the songs and the pop groups."

Sandra, eight, says: "I like it when they play Pass The Pie, it's just like pass the parcel. Only whoever gets it throws it at the person next to them. I'd like to play that."

Keith Elsender, nine, of Slatyford, Newcastle, says: "It's about time Swap Shop made some changes. I don't like Tiswas either because they make fools of children. We're not as silly as grown-ups like to think."

Benjamin Pitts, six, from Selly Oak, Birmingham, says: "I'm cartoon crazy and you get the best cartoons on Swap Shop."

Kylie Nurse, nine, of Bristol, says: "Tiswas is very, very funny, with all the pies flying about. My dad has it on and he won't let us watch the other one. But I wouldn't watch it anyway. Sally James is much more interesting than Noel Edmunds."

Rebecca Surtees, nine, of Newscastle upon Tyne says: "I haven't watched Tiswas because I've been told it's stupid. Swap Shop has its faults, like those silly phone-ins. But the rest is quite interesting. I wish people who run television would ask children what they like before deciding what we should see."

Richard Wyatt, of Bristol, says: "My gran calls Tiswas dirty. But I don't care because it makes me laugh."

And what about me, your humble purveyor of 1980s bloggie goodies? Well, I never really liked Swap Shop. I found it rather staid and middle class. Tiswas was better, but I was never really a Chris Tarrant fan for some reason. However, Sally James was a different matter! 'Phwoar!' was the very non-PC expression I used to describe Miss James back in the Tiswas era.

The delectable Miss Sally James in 1982.


Fabulous 1981 Tiswas clip, featuring the Rubik's Cube maestro Patrick Bossert, Aneka of "Japanese Boy" fame and Sally James. Look out for the coffee ad in "Telly Selly Time"!