Название: Antiques Roadshow: 40 Years of Great Finds
Автор: Paul Atterbury
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Старинная литература: прочее
isbn: 9780008267650
isbn:
A HARD-WORKING PROGRAMME
The Roadshow’s core values have never changed. All objects, and their owners, are treated equally, regardless of the value. On the day, the team may assess and discuss between 7,000 and 12,000 objects, of which around fifty will be filmed and the experts will see everyone who comes in to the location before the entry deadline, which is usually 4.30pm. After that, everyone who has made it into the location before the deadline will be seen, and so the experts have a long day, usually starting at around 9am and finishing at any time between 5pm and 7pm, depending on the numbers present. The actual filming starts at 9.30am and finishes at 7pm. There can be no previewing of the objects, because there is no way of knowing in advance what the public are going to bring in. There is no ‘B’ team to deal with the less valuable or interesting objects. There is only one team, and it sees everything and everybody. When it comes to the filming, there are no rehearsals or run-throughs. Every item is filmed as live, but these live conversations will be edited into the items that are included in the transmitted programme. Finally, the Roadshow is not only a flagship programme for the BBC, but is also a major public event and a classic example of traditional public service broadcasting.
During its forty years, five people have presented the Roadshow. The first series was introduced by Bruce Parker, a familiar journalist and presenter for BBC South. For the second and third series he was replaced by Angela Rippon, then a nationally known news presenter, keen to develop her career in new directions. For series four, in 1981, Hugh Scully took the helm – a presenter much closer in both interests and experience to the world of art and antiques – and he was to remain the face of the Roadshow until 2000. Above all else, he appreciated the Roadshow’s special quality: ‘It is a programme that has maintained its freshness without having to make any drastic changes, purely because of the unpredictable nature of the event.’ Michael Aspel, who took over the presenter’s baton from Hugh, agreed. ‘Having spent many years on programmes where every moment of the recording is planned, it is very exciting to approach a day on the Roadshow with absolutely no idea of what is going to happen. The people and their objects make the programme, and we react accordingly.’ In 2008, Fiona Bruce took the helm, and she has been at the heart of the Roadshow ever since. Famous for her hands-on approach, Fiona also loves the programme’s particular quality: ‘It’s all spontaneous and entirely unpredictable.’
Fiona Bruce has been presenting the Roadshow since 2008.
Outdoor Roadshows started in the late 1990s, and since then scenes like this have come to define the modern programme.
THE ATTRIBUTES OF A ROADSHOW EXPERT
From that small band of experts recruited for that pilot programme in Hereford has grown a remarkable team of knowledgeable and enthusiastic men and women drawn from all areas of the world of art and antiques. An expert on the Roadshow has to possess several attributes. Knowledge, and the ability to present that knowledge in an accessible manner is key, but they also have to be great team players and always ready to share their knowledge. They must have great patience and be willing to talk for hours to owners about their objects, not all of which will be very exciting. In short, they should like people and enjoy engaging with them. They must remain friendly and enthusiastic throughout a long and sometime challenging day, often with very few breaks. Most importantly, they have to be ambassadors for the programme and the BBC. At most Roadshows there will be a team of twenty to twenty-five experts on duty, covering all the disciplines, but the make-up of the team will vary from show to show.
Today, the Roadshow has around fifty-six experts in the team, but this number has never been consistent. In the days when more programmes were filmed for each series, the team reached over eighty to ensure that every discipline could be fully represented at each event. In the current team there is one expert, David Battie, who was present at that first Hereford programme, but many others joined soon after. Indeed, the Roadshow is remarkable for the longevity of its experts, with well over half the team having served twenty years or more. At the same time, new experts join each year, usually recruited either by the production team or by experts who sometimes act as informal talent scouts.
MOVING WITH THE TIMES
During its long life, the Roadshow has had three executive producers: Robin Drake; Christopher Lewis; and Simon Shaw. Longevity has also been a feature of the programme’s production team, with many working on the show for years. Making the Roadshow is an immensely complex process, and planning can take months or even years. Every show is dependent upon the great skills of the production, technical and support teams.
There have been changes during the last forty years, but these have generally been introduced in a gentle and unobtrusive way. Most obvious are the titles. Having been changed or developed every few years, these have now gone through several versions. For the first few years, the theme music was an electronic version of Bach’s Third Brandenberg Concerto, but this was replaced by the now globally familiar tune, a specially commissioned piece written by Paul Reade and Tim Gibson. The most important change has been a gradual shift in emphasis away from the antiques and their values towards the owners and their stories. This is partly reflective of significant changes in the world of antiques itself, as the interest in traditional antiques diminishes, replaced by new enthusiasms for more modern items. The Roadshow has now entertained more than two generations of viewers, and the tastes of the modern viewer are not the same as those who watched the programme in the late 1970s and 1980s. In its own leisurely way, the Antiques Roadshow has had to move with the times.
‘I was very lucky to be able to film something so important at a relatively early stage in my Roadshow career. It is still one of the best things I have ever seen.’
Paul Atterbury
Near the end of a busy day in October 1996 at the Embassy Centre in Skegness, Lincolnshire, Paul Atterbury had taken a break from his table to have a cup of tea in the Centre’s restaurant. As he sat down, one of the show’s receptionists came over to him clutching a shopping basket in which lay a silver-mounted bottle. For Paul, it was a moment of magic, as he knew at once that he was looking at a long-lost treasure designed by the great Victorian architect, William Burges.
Paul rushed back to the hall to show the bottle to his friend, colleague and fellow Victorian enthusiast David Battie, and they agreed at once that it had to be filmed. Schedules, which at that point in the day were full as usual, were rearranged and, unusually, it was agreed that Paul and David should film it together, in conversation with the owner.
WILLIAM BURGES
A bizarre and eccentric figure, William Burges (1827–1881), was one of the greatest architect/designers of the latter part of the Victorian period. Drawing inspiration from many sources – including High Gothic and Tudor styles, French illuminated manuscripts, the Middle East and various worlds of myth and fantasy – Burges created extraordinary buildings and interiors, along with furniture, metalwork, jewellery and wallpapers. His great friend and major client was John Crichton-Stuart, the 3rd Marquess of Bute, and then one of the richest men in Britain, for whom he created Castell Coch near Cardiff, and extravagantly rebuilt Cardiff Castle. Burges was a consummate colourist and his legacy is a Victorian vision of magnificent splendour and richness.
Burges is known to СКАЧАТЬ