Antiques Roadshow
1 9 7 9 - Current (UK)
Few would have predicted that Antiques
Roadshow would draw bigger audiences in some regions than
Coronation Street - but it did. The BBCs Sunday teatime show in
which silver-haired Arthur Negus was the main expert looking at
ordinary people's treasures was a slow but steady hit, and Arthur
became a favourite uncle until he retired from the show in 1983.
Negus once dropped someone's treasured
clock. The 500-strong audience and crew froze in shock as it shattered
on the floor. The owner forgave Arthur instantly: "Never mind Mr
Negus. It'll give me something to do in the evenings putting it
together". Arthur Negus finished hosting the show in 1983 and passed
away in April 1985.
There have been spectacular finds,
including a Ming Dynasty temple bell worth £30,000 and a Victorian
painting dumped in a garden shed but valued at £100,000. In 1988 an
old teapot brought on the show by a Merseyside grandmother ended up
fetching £14,300 at auction and buying its owner a council house. But
all the experts were stumped by one wooden object which was finally
identified as a wooden leg made for a bull!
There has been one unfortunate mistake.
In 1987 resident expert David Mason told a Cambridge couple that their
painting was by Swedish artist Bruno Liljefors and worth £50,000.
Sotheby's confirmed it, but then realised that the genuine article was
in a collection in Sweden and this was a fake.
American public broadcaster PBS created a
US version of the show in 1997. The American version is produced by
WGBH in Boston, Massachusetts. Local versions have also been produced
in Canada, Sweden, Australia and the Netherlands.
Michael Aspel announced his retirement
from the program in 2007, with newsreader Fiona Bruce expected to
replace him.
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