翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Big Swindle
・ The Big Switch Off
・ The Big T.N.T. Show
・ The Big Takeover
・ The Big Tall Wish
・ The Big Tease
・ The Big Test
・ The Big Texan Steak Ranch
・ The Big Thinker
・ The Big Three (English band)
・ The Big Three Killed My Baby
・ The Big Thrill
・ The Big Throwdown
・ The Big Time
・ The Big Time (album)
The Big Time (TV series)
・ The Big Timer
・ The Big To-Do
・ The Big Toe Radio Show
・ The Big Town
・ The Big Town (1925 film)
・ The Big Town (1987 film)
・ The Big Town All Stars
・ The Big Trail
・ The Big Trail (1931 film)
・ The Big Tree of Bunlahy
・ The Big Tree Plant
・ The Big Tree, Rockport
・ The Big Trees
・ The Big U


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 Big Time (TV series) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Big Time (TV series)

''The Big Time'' was a British documentary and reality television series made by the BBC, which ran from 1976 to 1980.
Devised and produced by Esther Rantzen and narrated initially by Rantzen but later by John Pitman, each programme followed a member of the public placed in the limelight as a result of their skill and documenting how they fared. Their progress was filmed and sundry professionals in their fields advised the amateur as they progressed.
Some of the exploits included an amateur musician conducting an orchestra at the Fairfield Hall; a housewife becoming a TV presenter; a cookery competition winner becoming head chef for the day at The Dorchester hotel and preparing a banquet lunch for former Prime Minister Edward Heath; an amateur wrestler taking on professional John Naylor on a bill at the Albert Hall on 26 March 1980 (the amateur was given the stage name 'Rip Rawlinson'); a model entering the Miss United Kingdom beauty contest; an amateur footballer (Lol Cottrell) being trained by Liverpool legend Tommy Smith to take part in the latter's testimonial game; a young gymnast who became a circus trapeze artist; an amateur singer getting the chance to record a single. The latter 'discovered' the singer Sheena Easton and the edition featuring the amateur chef is credited as terminating the television career of the TV chef Fanny Cradock, who criticised the amateur's choice of menu.
When the series ended, the BBC commissioned ''In at the Deep End'', which followed the same format only using two celebrities, Chris Serle and Paul Heiney (former reporters on Rantzen's ''That's Life!''), as they undertook various tasks as complete beginners in professional roles. Challenges included Serle taking part in a ballroom dancing competition and becoming a snooker player partnering World champion Steve Davis in a mixed-doubles event and Heiney becoming a chef at Langhan's Brasserie, a dress designer for a catwalk show, a celebrity hairdresser (where he cut Jilly Cooper's hair), directing Bananarama's video for "A Trick of the Night" and an actor in a Michael Caine movie.
==The Gwen Troake incident==
In 1976, a housewife in Devon, Gwen Troake, won a competition called "Cook of the Realm", leading to ''The Big Time'' inviting her to organise a banquet to be attended by Edward Heath, Earl Mountbatten of Burma and other VIPs. The BBC filmed the result as part of ''The Big Time'', and asked Fanny Cradock, by then a tax exile in Ireland, to act as one of a number of experts giving Troake advice on her menu.
The result brought the end of Fanny Cradock's television career.〔 Mrs Troake went through her menu of seafood cocktail, duckling with bramble sauce and coffee cream dessert. Fanny, grimacing and acting as if on the verge of retching, claimed not to know what a bramble was, told Troake that her menu was too rich, and, though she accepted that the dessert was delicious, insisted that it was not suitable, declaring: "Yes, dear, but you're among professionals now."
She suggested that Mrs Troake use a small pastry boat filled with a fruit sorbet and covered with spun sugar, decorated with an orange slice and a cherry through a cocktail stick, giving the dish the look of a small boat, which Fanny thought would be suitable for the naval guests. In the event, the dessert was a disaster and could not be served properly. Robert Morley had also been consulted on the menu and said he felt that Mrs Troake's original coffee pudding was perfect.
When the dessert failed to impress, the public were annoyed that Fanny Cradock had seemingly ruined Mrs Troake's special day. Fanny wrote a letter of apology to Mrs Troake, but the BBC terminated her contract two weeks after the programme was broadcast. She never presented a cookery programme again on the BBC. (Mrs Troake, by contrast, published ''A Country Cookbook'' the following year.〔London, McDonald and Jane's ISBN 0-354-08513-1〕) Speaking about the incident in 1999, Rantzen described Cradock as "hell on wheels", and that she had "reduced this poor little lady () to nothing".

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 Big Time (TV series)」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.