Mr and Mrs (TV series)
Mr and Mrs | |
---|---|
Also known as | The All-New Mr. and Mrs. Show (1995–96) |
Created by | Roy Ward Dickson |
Presented by | Phillip Schofield Fern Britton Alan Taylor Derek Batey Norman Vaughan Nino Firetto Julian Clary |
Starring | (1995–96) Stacey Young (1999) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 2 (UK Living version) 1 (Carlton version) |
No. of episodes | 52 (UK Living version) 6 (Carlton version) |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes (inc. adverts) |
Production companies | HTV (1972–1976) Border (1972–1988) HTV West for UK Living (1995–96) Action Time in association with Carlton (1999) |
Distributor | ITV Studios |
Release | |
Original network | TWW (1965–1967) ITV (1967–1988, 1999) UK Living (1995–96) |
Picture format | 4:3 |
Original release | 23 February 1965 2 July 1999 | –
Chronology | |
Related shows | All Star Mr & Mrs The Newlywed Game Tattletales |
External links | |
Website |
Mr and Mrs is a British television show that aired on ITV, hosted most familiarly by Derek Batey and was based on the Canadian game show of the same name.
History[]
Each couple attempted to match each other's answers to six questions concerning their love life. The couple would switch roles after the first three questions. For each set of three questions, one spouse would attempt to predict how their spouse, seated behind a window and wearing headphones, would answer those questions. Any couple that successfully matched answers to all six questions would win a jackpot prize.
The series was unusual in that versions were made by more than one ITV region: Alan Taylor hosted the HTV version, Derek Batey hosted the version produced by Border and Norman Vaughan hosted a version made by Anglia. The first version for TWW began in 1964, with the Border version following in 1967. The Anglia version ran for one year (1969) across the ITV network, but it was not until 1972 that the series was regularly networked, with hosts Batey and Taylor alternating each week. In 1976 the Border version alone was transmitted nationally, and remained part of the daytime scheduling until 1988.
There was also a local version of the programme that was produced by Tyne Tees in 1976, this went out on Sunday afternoons during the summer and autumn of that year. Tyne Tees had previously provided colour production facilities for Border in the early 1970s to produce their version as the latter had not yet upgraded to colour production.
It was then aired on UK Living and regionally on HTV hosted by Nino Firetto entitled The All-New Mr. and Mrs. Show and then back on the ITV network in 1999 hosted by Julian Clary.
The show was revived in 2008 as a celebrity game show entitled All Star Mr & Mrs, hosted by Phillip Schofield, originally with Fern Britton.
Transmissions[]
UK Living version[]
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 8 January 1995 | ?? | 52 |
Carlton version[]
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 19 March 1999 | 2 July 1999 | 6 |
International versions[]
The show originated in Canada in 1963. The Canadian version was produced at CFTO-TV in Toronto and ran on the CTV network for 780 episodes, and was hosted by Peter Parker. Roy Ward Dickson was the show's creator.[1]
The British version originated in Wales in 1964 as a Welsh language only programme in the same format entitled Sion a Sian, Sion a Siân or Siôn a Siân ("John and Jane") where it continued until 2003 presented by Ieuan Rhys. It was first broadcast on TWW, then HTV and finally S4C. The series was revived in 2012, presented by Stifyn Parri and Heledd Cynwal. That year saw Sion a Sian feature its first gay couple.[2]
Country | Local name | Host(s) | Network | Year aired |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canada | Mr and Mrs | Peter Parker | CTV | 1963–1965 |
Russia | Ты и я Ty i ya |
Tigran Keosayan and Alyona Khmelnitskaya | Rossiya 1 | August 29, 2009 – December 26, 2010 |
Wales | Sion a Sian | IB Gruffudd (1964–1967) Day Jones (1971–1987) Ieuan Rhys (????–????) Stifyn Parri and Heledd Cynwal (2012) |
TWW HTV S4C |
1964–2003 2012 |
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Roy Ward Dickson: "Mr. and Mrs."
- ^ "Cwpwl hoyw ar Sion a Siân" (in Welsh). golwg360. 31 March 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
3. : Independent Broadcasting Authority Annual Report and Accounts, 1976-1977, page 22 and 93.
External links[]
- 1960s British game shows
- 1970s British game shows
- 1980s British game shows
- 1990s British game shows
- 1965 British television series debuts
- 1999 British television series endings
- British game shows
- ITV game shows
- Television series by ITV Studios
- English-language television shows
- Television shows produced by Border Television
- British television series revived after cancellation
- Game show stubs