翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Adulteress (1973 film)
・ The Adulteress (novel)
・ The Adulterous Woman
・ The Adults
・ The Adults (album)
・ The Advanced Visualizer
・ The Advancement of Learning
・ The Advantage
・ The Advantage (album)
・ The Advent
・ The Advent (magazine)
・ The Adventure
・ The Adventure Babies
・ The Adventure Begins (disambiguation)
・ The Adventure Company
The Adventure Game
・ The Adventure of Archaeology
・ The Adventure of Black Peter
・ The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton
・ The Adventure of Doctor Kircheisen
・ The Adventure of English
・ The Adventure of Faustus Bidgood
・ The Adventure of Foulkes Rath
・ The Adventure of Henry Baskerville and a Dog
・ The Adventure of Iron Pussy
・ The Adventure of Little Ralph
・ The Adventure of Mr. Philip Collins
・ The Adventure of Rock
・ The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother
・ The Adventure of Shoscombe Old Place


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

The Adventure Game : ウィキペディア英語版
The Adventure Game

''The Adventure Game'' was a game show, aimed at children but with an adult following, which was originally broadcast on UK television channels BBC1 and BBC2 between 24 May 1980 and 18 February 1986. The story in each show was that the two celebrity contestants and a member of the public had travelled by space ship to the planet Arg. Their overall task varied with each series. For example, the team might be charged with finding a crystal needed to power their ship to return to Earth. The programme is often considered to have been a forerunner of ''The Crystal Maze''.
The programme came about because Patrick Dowling (who also introduced episodes of series 2) had an interest in Dungeons and Dragons and wanted to televise a show that would capture the mood. The programme also has a similar sci-fi feel to the work of Douglas Adams, who was asked by Patrick to write the show, hadn't he already agreed to write a TV series of his own radio show ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy''. The first two series were written and produced by Dowling and directed by Ian Oliver, who wrote and produced the final two series after Dowling had retired from the BBC.
==The characters==
Arg was inhabited by shapeshifting dragons known as Argonds. As a reference to this, most proper nouns in the programme, including ''Argond'', were anagrams of the word ''dragon''. To avoid scaring contestants, within a few minutes before they arrive all Argonds shifted form, mostly to human.
Notable characters within the game included:
* The ''Rangdo'', who was the ruler of planet Arg and referred to as 'Uncle' by the other Argonds. In the first series, his human form was played by Ian Messiter, who appeared as an old professor in a velvet jacket, but in later series he became one of the few Argonds not to appear as a dragon. In series 2 and 3, he became an aspidistra atop an elegant plant stand; he could move around the room and roared and shook when he was angry (the Rangdo was controlled by Kenny Baker, who was also responsible for R2-D2). Any human meeting the Rangdo had immediately to placate him with a bow or curtsey while uttering the phrase "Gronda!, Gronda!". In the last series, the Rangdo changed into a teapot instead, spouting steam when displeased.
* ''Darong'' (series 1, played by BBC newsreader Moira Stuart).
* ''Gnoard'' (series 1 - 3, played by Charmian Gradwell), whose job it was to explain the initial stages of the game to the contestants.
* ''Dorgan'' (series 4, played by Sarah Lam), who took over from Gnoard in the final season.
* ''Gandor'' (series 1 - 4, played by Chris Leaver), an ancient, half-deaf butler who took the contestants through most of the puzzles and refereed the Vortex and Drogna games. He could only hear when he was wearing his spectacles, which he continually (and conveniently) misplaced.
* ''Rongad'' (series 3 & 4, played by Bill Homewood), because he was Australian, spoke English backwards and could only understand the contestants if they did the same. His Australian accent was a mild clue to help the contestants realise he was speaking backwards. Noted for habitually singing ''Waltzing Matilda'' in reverse, and exclamations of "Doog yrev!" when the contestants did well.
* ''Angord'' (series 4, actor unknown) was an Argond who never seemed to turn into a human. He always misbehaved when Gandor and Dorgan were checking over the puzzles.
* Lesley Judd, known as ''the Mole'' (series 2), who pretended to be one of the regular contestants but was actually working against them. She had been a genuine contestant in the first series.
The look of the characters in Argond form was quite different in each of the series:
* Series 1: they looked like dragons, and each was rather distinct
* Series 2: they didn't look much like dragons, but were furry, with no tails and mask-like faces, and primarily differed in colour
* Series 3 & 4: they returned to looking like dragons, with ruffs, and were almost identical to each other
Notable contestants included Keith Chegwin, Sue Cook, astronomer Heather Couper, John Craven, Paul Darrow, Noel Edmonds, Sarah Greene, Bonnie Langford, James Burke and Richard Stilgoe.
The credits for the series listed the human characters as being played by Argonds, rather than the other way round.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Adventure Game」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.