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词条 New Faces
释义

  1. Original series: 1973–1978

     Series 1-6 Winners 

  2. Revived version

     1986 final  1987 final  1988 final 

  3. Famous winners and contestants

  4. Other winners and contestants

  5. Transmissions

     ATV  Central 

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Other uses}}{{Infobox television
| show_name = New Faces
| image =
| show_name_2 = New Faces of... (1986–88)
| genre = Talent show
| presenter = Leslie Crowther (ATV)
Derek Hobson (ATV)
Marti Caine (Central)
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| num_series = 6 (ATV)
3 (Central)
| num_episodes = 167 (ATV)
39 (Central)
| location = Birmingham Hippodrome (Central)
| runtime = 60 minutes (Central)
| company = ATV (1973–78)
Central (1986–88)
| distributor = ITV Studios
| channel = ITV
| picture_format = 3
| first_run = {{start date|1973|5|31|df=yes}}
| first_aired = {{start date|1973|9|29|df=yes}}
| last_aired = {{end date|1988|12|3|df=yes}}
| related = Opportunity Knocks
}}

New Faces was a British television talent show that aired in the 1970s and 1980s. It has been hosted by Leslie Crowther (original pilot), Derek Hobson and Marti Caine. It was produced by ATV for the ITV network.

Original series: 1973–1978

The show first aired as a pilot on the ATV network on 31 May 1973[1] with host Leslie Crowther and a judging panel consisting of Noele Gordon, Tony Hatch, Clive James and John Smith assessing performances from ten acts looking for a break in show business. Welsh singer Jennifer Jones won the show that also featured a man who blew up a hot water bottle until it burst followed by a few choruses of "Spanish Eyes."[2]

A further pilot aired on 7 July 1973, with new host Derek Hobson and a full series followed from 29 September 1973 to 2 April 1978. It was recorded at the ATV Centre in Birmingham. The show was noted for its theme tune, "You're a Star!", performed by singer Carl Wayne, formerly of The Move, and it was eventually released, becoming a minor hit.[3]

Winners occasionally went on to greater success in television entertainment, like Lenny Henry the 1975 competition winner. Many top entertainers began their careers with a performance on this programme. The acts were evaluated by a panel of experts, including Tony Hatch, Mickie Most, Clifford Davis, Arthur Askey, Ted Ray, Ed Stewart, Jack Parnell, Alan A. Freeman, Muriel Young, Lonnie Donegan, Lionel Blair, Ingrid Pitt, Shaw Taylor, Terry Wogan and Noel Edmonds.

Four judges would make up the panel each week. Contestants received marks out of ten from the four judges in three categories such as "presentation", "content" and "star quality" – The "star quality" category was later replaced by "entertainment value". The highest score any act could attain was thus 120 points. Patti Boulaye was the only act who ever attained the maximum mark, doing so in the programme's final season. Les Dennis received 119 points, with only Tony Hatch giving him less than three perfect '10's'. Arthur Askey was on the same panel and started singing "Tony is a spoilsport" when Hatch awarded Dennis 9 as his final score.

Series 1-6 Winners

Charlie James

Female vocalist.

SeriesDateArtist(s)Act
Pilot7 Jul 1973Trevor ChanceVocalist (in the style of Jack Jones)
129 Dec 1973Tom WaiteVocalist
26 Jul 1974Aiden J. HarveyImpressionist
327 Jul 1975Marti CaineComedian
431 Jul 1976Roger de CourceyVentriloquist
52 Apr 1977Koffee and KremeVocal Duo
62 Apr 1978Patti BoulayeVocalist

Revived version

The series was revived by Central for three series between 1986 and 1988, presented by past winner, Marti Caine. Her catchphrase was bellowed at the voting studio audience: "Press your buttons... NOW!". The show also featured a panel of experts including the journalist Nina Myskow, who often made critical comments. In this incarnation, the home audience decided who won by sending in postcards (phone voting was soon introduced by BBC rival Bob Says Opportunity Knocks), though, the audience did vote for its favourite act using a gigantic lightboard known as Spaghetti Junction lighting up to a varying degree as they pushed their buttons.

1986 final

Keygold|border=darkgray}} Winnersilver|border=darkgray}} Runner-up#D9A821|border=darkgray}} Third place
OrderFinishedArtist(s)Act
place=11st overall in panellists' voteDuggie SmallComedian
27 pointsWalker & CadmanComedians
35 pointsBilly PearceComedian
40 pointsWayne DentonClub singer
522 pointsJulie A. ScottSoprano
656 points (public phone-in winner)Gary Lovini17-year-old violinist
743 pointsJames StoneSoul singer
8Pauline HannahImpressionist
9Freddy PhilipsSinger/comedian
10Scott Randele
11Maggie Dee
12High Jinks

Note: The James Stone who appeared in this final is the same one who appeared in the Britain's Got Talent semi-finals of 2008.

1987 final

Keygold|border=darkgray}} Winnersilver|border=darkgray}} Runner-up#D9A821|border=darkgray}} Third place
OrderFinishedArtist (s)Act (s)
place=194 pointsJimmy TamleyVentriloquist
place=292 pointsJoe PasqualeComedian
place=370 pointsBrothers Demented
432 pointsMike SterlingMusical theatre-style singer
526 pointsRichard CourticeTenor vocalist
610 pointsBilly JonesRock 'n' roll singer/guitarist
7Lea CassellImpressionist
8Derek BarronPianist/organist
9Paul DuffySaxophonist
10Denny WatersComedian
11Barbara Allan
12Stiles and DreweSinging duo

1988 final

[4]

The 1988 final took place at the Birmingham Hippodrome Theatre on Saturday 3rd December 1988 and was hosted by the 1975 winner Marti Caine.

Keygold|border=darkgray}} Winnersilver|border=darkgray}} Runner-up#D9A821|border=darkgray}} Third place
Performance OrderFinishedArtist (s)Act (s)
place=12WinnerStephen Lee GardenMusical theatre-style singer
place=11Runner UpSteve WomackComedian
place=9ThirdDonimoComedy Mime
2FourthStevie RiksImpressionist
1Max BaconVocalist
3The Mad HattersComedy Group
4Tim MurrayVocalist
5Steve TandyComedian
6Janice WatsonSoprano Vocalist
7The Brothers CondoComedy Group
8T.J.KingVocalist
10Louisa ShawVocalist

Note: Vocalist Tim Murray[5] is the son of 1950s singer Ruby Murray

Famous winners and contestants

{{col-start}}{{col-2}}
  • Jeffrey Hooper – 1974.
  • Marti Caine
  • Lenny Henry – Multiple wins in 1975.[6]
  • Michael Barrymore
  • Joe Pasquale – 2nd in 1987. Pasquale won his heat but he came second in the final.
  • Roy Walker
  • The Chuckle Brothers – 1974.
  • Malandra Burrows – 1974, youngest winner at 9 years old.
  • Carline and Walling
  • Victoria Wood
  • Terry St. Clair – 1974.
  • Roger De Courcey and Nookie Bear – Winners of the 1976 Grand Final.
  • Nicol and Marsh's Easy Street – Runners-up in 1976.
  • Mick Miller
  • Les Dennis
  • Showaddywaddy
{{col-2}}
  • Jim Davidson
  • Gary Wilmot and Judy McPhee
  • Billy Pearce[7]
  • Fivepenny Piece
  • Aiden J. Harvey
  • Patti Boulaye – Appeared in the last 1970s edition of the show and was the only contestant ever to receive the maximum 120 points.
  • Stevie Riks – Highest scoring contestant ever on the show.
  • Max Bacon
  • Sweet Sensation – From Manchester and fronted by 15-year-old Marcel King went on to become the first black British born soul band to hit the number spot in UK charts in September 1974 with hit record 'Sad Sweet Dreamer'.
  • Andy Cameron
  • Sheer Elegance – Pop trio who went on to have two hit singles in 1976.
  • Lance Ellington- 1977 winner sang with the late Bet Hannah as singing duo Koffee'n'Kreme.
  • Roy 'Chubby' Brown – 10 December 1977
  • Paul Zenon - 21 November 1986
{{col-end}}

Other winners and contestants

  • Penny Black – Extremely popular female fronted five piece band from Walsall. Appeared December 4th 1976 opening the show performing Kiki Dee's "I got the music in me". Penny Black's TV lineup included Tiki Jones (vocals), Barry Underhill (Bass guitar & vocals), Rob Wood (Lead guitar & vocals), Roger Hayward (Hammond organ & vocals), and John Perkins (Drums). An EP was recorded to coincide with the New Faces TV appearance however it was never released. Penny Black performed with various personnel changes with Underhill an ever present from 1974 until 1989 when they changed their name to PARIS and introduced a revamped modern 'romantics' image initiated by their latest female vocalist, Paula Tuckley. Penny Black/PARIS performed around the UK heavily throughout the 70's & 80's establishing a strong fan base. They recorded 'Inside These 4 Walls' written by Underhill/Wood in 1981, with 'Teenager in Love' on the B-side, before disbanding in late 1991, however Underhill & Wood continued as a duo until 1999. PARIS reformed in July 2012 with the original band members to perform a 'One Night Only' Charity gig in November that year, however the gig was so successful they decided to carry on performing, until Underhill left the band in early 2014 and PARIS finally disbanded shortly afterwards.
{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}
  • The Glentones – 20 piece high school big band playing music from the Glenn Miller era.
  • Charlie James – Female singer – Winner, December 1973.
  • Mike McCabe – Comedian.
  • Bokkle Green – Pop music duo from Wolverhampton performing a song written by member Kevin Clark on the 24.11.73 episode. Kevin went on to become a successful musician, songwriter & record producer ("Crush" by Jennifer Paige).
  • Martin Berger
  • Al Brown – Comedian and father of television personality Claire Sweeney.
  • Pete Hartley – Won audience vote in 1987.
  • Pete Price
  • Dave Curtis – Vocalist.
  • Son of a Gun – Won in 1975 with 111 points beating Paul Shane. They did a number of TV shows and were signed to RCA. They lost to Lenny Henry in the final.
  • Sparrow
  • M3 – 3 sisters, Maureen Stevens, Mary Stevens, Marilyn Stevens.
  • Walker and Cadman
  • Professor Steve Green – Pianist and doctor.[8]
  • Dragon's Playground – Band.
  • David Gold – Vocalist.
{{col-2}}
  • Jimmy Tamley – Beat Joe Pasquale.
  • Crick's Canine Wonders
  • Darren Stuart
  • Frank Leyton
  • Frank Yonco and Kit Connor
  • The Mad Hatters
  • Rabbit – Cabaret Band.
  • Sandra Christie – Voice of Edith Piaf.
  • The Libra Brothers. Three-piece band from Barnsley – members were Frank Cawthrow, Charlie Foster and Gordon Scholey.
  • Rod and Mark Lyons – Father and son ventriloquist duo who had a minor hit single in Germany with the Neil Sedaka song "Oh, Carol!".
  • Ground Pepper – Band. Song – Draculamania Feb 1975
  • Pyramid-comedy showgroup from Gateshead – Steve Laidlaw, Allen Meche and Brian Pick.
  • Colin "fingers" Henry
  • Inter-City Union 6 piece Soul/Funk group from London
{{col-end}}

Transmissions

ATV

Series Start date Final date Episodes
Pilot 7 July 1973 1
1 29 September 1973 29 December 1973 14
2 6 April 1974 6 July 1974 14
3 21 September 1974 27 July 1975 45
4 20 December 1975 31 July 1976 33
5 11 September 1976 2 April 1977 30
6 10 September 1977 2 April 1978 30

Many of the episodes from the ATV era of New Faces were wiped from the archives with 38 surviving, including episode 14 of series 1, episodes 1, 11 & 14 of series 2, episodes 1, 36, 40 & 45 of series 3, episodes 7, 11, 15, 19, 22–24 & 28–29 of series 4, episodes 1, 5, 8, 11, 14–16, 21, 24 & 30 of series 5 and episodes 20–30 of series 6.[9]

Series 3 was not fully broadcast on Scottish Television, with episodes not being broadcast during the weekends, which resulted in their votes not being counted. Episodes were instead broadcast on a Thursday evening between December 1974 and July 1975.

Central

Series Start date Final date Episodes
1 19 September 1986 13 December 1986 13
2 4 September 1987 28 November 1987 13
3 10 September 1988 3 December 1988 13

References

1. ^{{cite news |title=Midlands TV Listings |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000560/19730531/121/0018 |accessdate=27 Jan 2019 |work=Daily Mirror |agency=Trinity Mirror |date=31 May 1973}}
2. ^{{cite news |last1=Terry |first1=Metcalf |title=Arts Review - Television |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002135/19730601/427/0018 |accessdate=27 January 2019 |work=Birmingham Daily Post |publisher=Trinity Mirror |date=1 June 1973}}
3. ^{{cite news|title=The precarious path of talent show fame|publisher=BBC|date=12 December 2011|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-16119375|accessdate=2011-12-13}}
4. ^The Stage - Thursday 8th December 1988
5. ^Liverpool Echo - Monday 3rd October 1988
6. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.expressandstar.com/millennium/1900/1950-1975/1974.html|title=Our Century 1950–1975|publisher=}}
7. ^{{cite news|title= Wonderland special: New Faces – I once had the X Factor.|publisher= Daily Telegraph|date=11 December 2011|url= https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/8947194/Wonderland-special-New-Faces-I-once-had-the-X-Factor.html|accessdate=2011-12-13|first=Michael|last=Hogan}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=http://icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0100regionalnews/tm_objectid=16321476&method=full&siteid=50061&headline=flying-doctor-saves-baby-girl-using-flat-lemonade-name_page.html|title=News|publisher=}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.lostshows.com/default.aspx?programme=a0a03430-0160-4240-be40-6fab612a013d|title=Lost UK TV Shows Search Engine|author=Simon Coward, Invisible Technology Ltd|publisher=}}

External links

  • {{IMDb title|0188349|New Faces}}.
  • New Faces at BFI.
  • New Faces of '86 at BFI.
  • New Faces of '87 at BFI.
  • New Faces of '88 at BFI.
  • {{UKGameshow|New_Faces}}.
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2010}}

10 : 1970s British television series|1980s British television series|1973 British television programme debuts|1988 British television programme endings|Talent shows|Television series by ITV Studios|English-language television programs|ITV reality television programmes|Television programmes produced by Associated Television (ATV)|Television programmes produced by Central Independent Television

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