Brain of Britain
Brain of Britain logo
Other names
  • What Do You know?
  • Brain of Brains
  • Top Brain
GenreGeneral knowledge quiz
Running time30 minutes
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Language(s)English
Home station
Hosted by
Recording studio
Original release
  • 2 August 1953 (1953-08-02) (as part of What Do You Know?)
  • 14 January 1968 (as a programme in its own right.)
No. of series71
Opening themeEine kleine Nachtmusik
Websitewww.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001r1c4

Brain of Britain is a BBC radio general knowledge quiz, broadcast on BBC Radio 4.

History

It began as a slot in What Do You Know? in 1953. The main part of the show was the "Brain of Britain" quiz itself, originally called "Ask Me Another". There were also several other quizzes on the show, most of which were eventually sidelined to allow "Brain of Britain" a longer running time, though the popular write-in competition "Beat the Brains" is still played as part of Brain of Britain today. It became a programme in its own right in 1968.

It was chaired by Franklin Engelmann until his death in 1972.

Format

Four contestants compete on each programme, in alphabetical order by surname. To begin the competition, the first contestant is asked a question; a correct answer within 10 seconds awards one point and control for the next question. An incorrect answer at any point ends the contestant's turn, and the question is offered to the others in a toss-up via silent buzzer. Regardless of who answers correctly, control then passes to the contestant after the one who initially missed it. If a contestant correctly answers five questions in a row, one bonus point is awarded and control passes to the next contestant. Each contestant is also asked one question based on a sound clip.

The contestant with the most points at the end of the programme wins. If there is a tie for high score, the contestant with the most bonus points (for five-in-a-row and correct answers on questions missed by others) is the winner. If the tied contestants are still level in this respect, the first to answer a toss-up question correctly wins.

The competition is normally split into a series of 12 heats, with the winners of these heats and the four highest scoring runners-up entering the four semi-finals. The winners of these semi-finals make it to the grand final, and the winner of the grand final becomes champion. In the 2015 contest, the fifth highest scoring runner-up qualified after the death of one of the heat winners.[1] In the 2016 contest, five runners-up ended with the same high score. To decide which four went through to the semi-finals, a play-off took place that was not broadcast.[2]

The show also features "Beat The Brains," a segment in which two questions submitted by a listener (or, in the Grand Final, the previous series' winner) are read. The submitter wins a book token if the contestants are unable to answer at least one question. The submitter is "awarded" the consolation prize of a round of applause from the audience if both questions are answered correctly. At one point, the prize was a Brain of Britain quiz book, but was replaced by the book token when the book was out of print.

Host

Brain of Britain was hosted by Robert Robinson for most of its life, although during his illness the 2004 series was hosted by Russell Davies. Peter Snow took over the role in 2007, also due to the illness of Robinson, dispensing with Robinson's trademark style of addressing contestants by their honorific and surname (e.g. 'Mr Blenkinsop'), preferring to use their given names. Robinson was reinstated for the autumn 2008 series, and formality returned to the proceedings; Davies hosted the show again in 2009, with the intention that Robinson would again return when his health permitted. Robinson formally retired from the show in 2010, and died in August 2011, and Davies continues as host.

Question creation

Until 2007, all questions were set by one individual, who was present (but silent) during recordings. The host would consult the setter, traditionally known by a pseudonym, to adjudicate when an answer was imprecise. For many years Ian Gillies fulfilled the role, taking the name Mycroft (from Mycroft Holmes, older and wiser brother of Sherlock). After his death in April 2002, the new question setter was Kevin Ashman, who has the distinction of winning both Brain of Britain and Mastermind. He chose to be known as Jorkins, a character in Dickens' David Copperfield. From the 2007 series a team of setters was engaged, as is the practice in most other quiz shows.

Theme music

For much of its life the theme music of Brain of Britain was the opening of the fourth movement of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, but in a 'modernised' version by Waldo de los Ríos. This choice was the subject of frequent complaints from classical music fans (with whom the show was popular) and presenter Robert Robinson described it on air as "Mozart plus sacrilege". The theme was changed to a more conventional version in the early 1990s.

Championship

Every three years, the three most recent champions and the highest scoring runner-up among the three recent finals compete for the Brain of Brains title, most recently held in 2018 and won by John Beynon. Every nine years, the three most recent Brain of Brains winners compete for the Top Brain title; Mark Grant was the most recent winner in 2018.

Record score

The record individual score on a programme is 38 by Kevin Ashman (who went on to become six times World Quizzing Champion, also holds the record for the highest ever score on Mastermind, became Brain of Britain question setter and one of the Eggheads) in 1996. The record individual score in a final is 35, achieved by Peter Barlow (1981), Peter Bates (1984) and Kevin Ashman (1996).

Broadcast

Brain of Britain was also broadcast on BBC World Service for many years; in fact, American talk show host David Letterman was a fan of the show, and invited 1993 winner Geoffrey Colton to appear on his talk show. However, some World Service broadcasts had cuts in them to fit the show as well as a news bulletin into the time slot, resulting in some apparent rules irregularities (for example, a contestant would be asked a question and give a correct answer, and then the next question would go to another contestant without it being the first contestant's fifth consecutive correct answer).

Series champions

Year Winner Host
1954David Martin DakinFranklin Engelmann
1955Arthur Maddocks
1956Anthony Carr[note 1][note 2][3][4]
1957Rosemary Watson
1958David Keys
1959Dr Reginald Webster[note 1]
1960Patrick Bowing
1961Irene Thomas[note 1]
1962Henry Button
1963Ian Barton
1964Ian Gillies[note 1][note 2]
1965Bob Crampsey
1966Richard Best
1967Julian Loring
1968Ralph Raby[note 1]
1969T. D. Thomson
1970Ian Matheson[note 1]
1971Fred Morgan
1972 Aubrey Lawrence
Engelmann/Ian Gillies[note 3][5]
1973Glyn CourtRobert Robinson
1974Roger Pritchard[note 1][note 2]
1975Winifred Lawson
1976Thomas Dyer[note 1]
1977Martin Gostelow
1978James Nesbitt[note 1]
1979Arthur Gerard
1980Tim Paxton
1981Peter Barlow[note 1][note 2]
1982John Pusey
1983Sue Marshall
1984Peter Bates
1985Richard Fife[note 1]
1986Stephen Gore
1987Ian Sutton
1988Paul Monaghan
1989Barbara Thompson[note 4]
1990Jim Eccleson
1991Chris Wright
1992Mike Billson[note 1]
1993Geoffrey Colton[note 1]
1994Ian Wynn-Mackenzie
1995Ian Kinloch
1996Kevin Ashman[note 1][note 2]
1997Daphne Fowler
1998Guy Herbert
1999Leslie Duncalf[note 1]
2000Mike Smith-Rawnsley
2001Tom Corfe
2002David Jones
2003David Stedman
2004Alan Bennett[note 1]Robinson/Russell Davies
2005Christopher HughesRobert Robinson
2006Pat Gibson
2007Mark Bytheway[note 1][note 2]Peter Snow
2009Geoff ThomasRobert Robinson
2010Ian Bayley[note 1]Russell Davies
2011Dr. Iwan Thomas
2012Ray Ward
2013Barry Simmons
2014Mark Grant[note 1][note 2]
2015Nigel Jones
2016Mike Clark
2017John Beynon[note 1]
2018Clive Dunning
2019David Stainer[note 1]
2020Graham Barker
2021Karl Whelan
2022Sarah Trevarthen
2023Dan Adler
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Also won the 3-yearly competition to find the "Brain of Brains".
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Also won the 9-yearly competition to find the "Top Brain".
  3. Gillies chaired the 1972 final after Engelmann died mid-series.
  4. Glen Binnie, who finished second to Barbara Thompson in 1989, won Brain of Brains 1989 as Ms Thompson was unavailable for the Brain of Brains recording.

References

  1. "Semi-Final 1, 2015". Brain of Britain. Season 62. 23 March 2015.
  2. "Semi-Final 4, 2016". Brain of Britain. Season 63. 25 April 2016.
  3. Carr was the youngest ever winner being 18 years old at the time.
  4. "BBC Wales website". Archived from the original on 29 October 2008. Retrieved 18 September 2008.
  5. "Ian Gillies". The Independent. 18 April 2002.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.