Surprise Surprise is a British light entertainment television programme for ITV that originally ran from 6 May 1984 to 26 December 2001 and hosted by Cilla Black, before returning from 21 October 2012 to 26 July 2015 with Holly Willoughby as host. On 17 June 2016, ITV announced that the show had been cancelled and would not return for 2017.[1]
Surprise Surprise | |
---|---|
Also known as | Cilla's Surprise Surprise! |
Genre | Light entertainment |
Presented by | Cilla Black (1984–2001, 2003) Holly Willoughby (2012–2015) |
Starring | Christopher Biggins (1984) Bob Carolgees (1985–1995) Gordon Burns (1986–1991) Tessa Sanderson (1990–1992) Kian Egan (2012) Dave Berry (2012–2015) Marvin Humes (2013–2015) Mark Wright (2013–2015) Michael Underwood (2014–2015) Peter Andre (2014–2015) Matt Johnson (2015) |
Narrated by | Robin Houston (1984–2001) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 14 (Original) 4 (Revival) |
No. of episodes | 128 (Original: inc. 9 specials) 23 (Revival: inc. 3 specials) |
Production | |
Production location | The London Studios |
Running time | 60 minutes (inc. adverts) |
Production companies | LWT (1984–2001) ITV Studios (2012–2015) |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 6 May 1984 26 December 2001 | –
Release | 21 October 2012 26 December 2015 | –
Related | |
Jim'll Fix It Keith Lemon's LemonAid OMG! Jedward's Dream Factory |
Format
editThe show was hosted by Cilla Black, and filmed in front of a studio audience. Its premise involved surprising members of the public with long-held wishes, setting up tricks to fool members of the public, making prank calls to people and reuniting guests with long-lost loved ones. Black was initially assisted by Christopher Biggins, but more famously for eight series by Bob Carolgees, famous for his glove puppetry act Spit the Dog (who previously appeared in the first series with a puppet ferrett), with Gordon Burns and Tessa Sanderson as roving reporters. Other featured acts were "Cilla-grams," where Black would perform a song in a musical sketch relevant to the surprise a person was receiving (Example: a soldier was celebrating his 21st birthday, so the featuring song Black sang was "Celebration" by Kool & The Gang).
The concept of the first series had been to film surprising and often unusual moments similar to those previously seen on Game for a Laugh. This included a phone game that used viewers numbers and answering questions to try and form a winning line. Others included dancing and sporting events, and there were surprise reunions between family members. The popularity of this element of the show led executive producer Alan Boyd to change the format slightly so that all items in subsequent series involved surprises, rather than just being surprising. Although including many pre-filmed inserts, the first series and some early episodes of the second series were televised live in their entirety, but thereafter all episodes were pre-recorded.
From 1984 to 1988, the show was broadcast on Sunday evenings. From 1989 to 1992, the show moved to Fridays, before returning to the Sunday evening timeslot from 1993 to 1996. The final series of the original run in 1997 was broadcast on Friday evenings. Between 1998 and 2001, a one-off special episode was produced per year which aired on Mother's Day from 1998 until 2000, and then at Christmas for 2001.
Over the years, the show had many special guests, some of whom appeared live, including Neil Diamond. Many variety acts were also featured on the show. The Spice Girls made their live debut on an episode in 1996.
Revival
editIn March 2012, it was announced that Holly Willoughby would host a revamped one-off episode of Surprise Surprise for ITV, although a full series was later announced.[2] The series had six hour-long episodes, with episode 1 airing on 21 October 2012.[3] A second series followed this in 2013, a third in 2014 and a fourth in 2015.
In the show, Willoughby is joined by various locations reporters, these have included Marvin Humes, Mark Wright, Dave Berry, Peter Andre and Matt Johnson.
In one 2013 episode, Cilla Black made a surprise appearance on the show, singing a bit of the original theme as the show went to commercials (after Holly made the comment that the producers just wouldn't let her sing the song).
Final episodes
editThe last series hosted by Holly Willoughby aired on ITV1 between 21 June 2015 and 26 July 2015.
ITV never made an official announcement confirming the series had been axed, but another series of the show has not been produced since 2015. Holly Willoughby called for the show to return for another series in 2017.[4]
A previously unbroadcast episode of the show, hosted by Cilla Black that featured appearances from Irish boyband Westlife and singer Gareth Gates, which was originally produced in 2003 to celebrate the series' 20th anniversary, was broadcast on ITV3 on 27 December 2015, four months after Black's death. It wasn't originally broadcast in 2003 due to Black's departure from ITV that year.[5]
Theme songs
editCilla Black introduced and closed each show by singing a theme song. The theme song from series one to eight was written by Kate Robbins and was often imitated by Black impersonators, beginning "The more the world is changing, the more it stays the same...". The track was included on Black's 1985 album Surprisingly Cilla, and as a single through Towerbell Records. A new song was written from series nine in 1992, until the show's conclusion in 2001, and the 2003 birthday special: "Reaching out, holding hands, reliving memories... Life is full, full of surprises...And the nicest surprise in my life is you!"
Around 2022-23, the song enjoyed a resurgence on the social media app TikTok.
The revived series updated its theme for 2013. This theme uses a remixed instrumental version of the chorus from Black's original song "Surprise, Surprise".
Transmissions
editSeries
edit- Original
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 6 May 1984 | 10 June 1984 | 6 |
2 | 14 October 1984 | 2 December 1984 | 8 |
3 | 19 January 1986 | 9 March 1986 | 8 |
4 | 18 January 1987 | 15 March 1987 | 9 |
5 | 10 January 1988 | 6 March 1988 | 9 |
6 | 6 January 1989 | 3 March 1989 | 9 |
7 | 16 February 1990 | 20 April 1990 | 9 |
8 | 22 February 1991 | 26 April 1991 | 10 |
9 | 3 April 1992 | 29 May 1992 | 9 |
10 | 25 April 1993 | 4 July 1993 | 10 |
11 | 10 April 1994 | 19 June 1994 | 11 |
12 | 23 April 1995 | 2 July 1995 | 10 |
13 | 31 March 1996 | 2 June 1996 | 10 |
14 | 4 July 1997 | 5 September 1997 | 10 |
- Revival
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 21 October 2012 | 25 November 2012 | 6 |
2 | 15 September 2013 | 1 December 2013 | 10 |
3 | 22 October 2014 | 17 December 2014 | 7 |
4 | 21 June 2015 | 26 July 2015 | 6 |
Specials
edit- Original
Original Air date | Special |
---|---|
23 December 1984 | Christmas special |
22 December 1985 | Christmas special |
28 December 1986 | Christmas special |
27 December 1987 | Christmas special |
24, 25, 26 March 1989 | Searchline Specials |
13 April 1990 | Searchline Special |
22 June 1997 | Surprise Surprise...in Australia |
22 March 1998 | Mother's Day special |
14 March 1999 | Mother's Day special |
2 April 2000 | Mother's Day special |
26 December 2001 | Christmas special |
27 December 2015 | Anniversary Special (from 2003) |
- Revival
Airdate | Special |
---|---|
18 December 2013 | Christmas special |
30 March 2014 | Mother's Day special |
21 December 2014 | Christmas special |
26 December 2015 | Christmas special |
Awards
editYear | Group | Award | Result | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | National Television Awards | Most Popular Entertainment Programme | Nominated | [6][7][8] |
2015 | Nominated | [9] |
International versions
editCountry | Title | Broadcaster | Presenter | Premiere | Finale |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Germany | Surprise! Die Bruce Darnell Show | ProSieben | Bruce Darnell | 2 December 2021 | 23 December 2021 |
Italy | Carràmba! Che sorpresa (1995–98; 2002) Carràmba! Che fortuna (1998–2001; 2008–09) |
Rai 1 | Raffaella Carrà | 21 December 1995 | 6 January 2009 |
Netherlands | Surpriseshow (1988–2008) Surprise, Surprise (2014–15) |
Nederland 1 (1988–89) RTL 4 (1990–2001; 2008) Talpa (2006) SBS 6 (2014–15) |
Henny Huisman (1988–2001; 2006) Robert ten Brink (2008) Henny Huisman, Do and Airen Mylene (2014–15) |
1988 2006 2008 2014 |
2001 2006 2008 2015 |
Poland | Surprise, Surprise | Polsat | Wojciech Błach and Stefano Terrazzino | 12 March 2016[a] | 2 September 2016[b] |
Romania | Surprize, Surprize | TVR 1 | Andreea Marin and Gabriel Coveșanu | 1999 | 2008 |
Spain | Sorpresa ¡Sorpresa! | Antena 3 | Isabel Gemio (1996–98; 2007) Concha Velasco (1999) |
8 May 1996 | January 2007 |
Ukraine | Сюрприз, Сюрприз! | STB | Masha Efrosinina | 1 September 2017 | 1 December 2017 |
United States | Surprise, Surprise, Surprise[10] | CBS | Kathie Lee Gifford | May 14, 1999 (Special) | |
Surprise with Jenny McCarthy | NBC | Jenny McCarthy | Non-broadcast pilot |
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ Colin Daniels (10 October 2012). "Holly Willoughby's 'Surprise Surprise' revamp airdate confirmed by ITV". Digital Spy.
- ^ "Willoughby to host 'Surprise Surprise'". Digital Spy. 15 March 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
- ^ "'Surprise Surprise' return date confirmed". Digital Spy. 10 October 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
- ^ "'Surprise! Holly Willoughby wants to bring back Surprise Surprise'". Digital Spy. 14 April 2017. Retrieved 19 August 2024.
- ^ "Surprise Surprise - previously unaired show: Split from Cilla Black has died - TV Forum".
- ^ "National Television Awards 2014 nominees revealed: Voting opens". Digital Spy. 16 September 2013. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
- ^ "National Television Awards 2014 voting opens: The full longlist". Digital Spy. 17 September 2013. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
- ^ "2014 Vote – The National Television Awards". Nationaltvawards.com. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
- ^ "NTAs 2015: Which TV stars are nominated?". Digital Spy. 13 October 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
- ^ "Granada, LMNO Eye 'Surprise'". 24 January 1999. Retrieved 11 June 2020.