Bruce Forsyth's Big Night
1 9 7 8 (UK)
1978 was not Bruce Forsyth's year.
Since 1971 he had dominated popular television in The Generation
Game which he'd made a Saturday night institution. But he made the
mistake of thinking that he was bigger than the game and believed that
his West End production The Travelling Music Show would take
him triumphantly to Broadway. It folded in just four months.
When Michael Grade at LWT offered
Bruce £15,000 a week for two hours of peak viewing-time on Saturday
nights in a show whose budgets would be a massive £250,000, he needed
little persuasion. But Bruce Forsyth's Big Night turned out to
be Bruce Forsyth's Big Nightmare.
Despite a decent new game, 'The
Pyramid Game' hosted by Grade look-alike Steve Jones, despite the
presence of Bruce's sidekick Anthea Redfern, despite the revival of
Jimmy Edwards' brilliant comic family The Glums and Charlie
Drake's Worker, and despite the fact that Cannon and Ball
recorded six sketches, were billed but didn't appear - the big
audiences shrank fast.
The press attacked the formerly
bumptious Bruce for the show's failure. Bruce bit back, claiming it
was everyone else's fault and, anyway, the only thing you can believe
in the newspapers is the date. By 1980 he had moved on to Play
Your Cards Right. He had kept his big chin up
and had some new ginger hair on. And didn't he do well.
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