Four specially selected episodes of the much-loved BBC Radio 4 panel game chaired by Nicholas Parsons, showcasing the talents of Sheila Hancock. Loved for the verbal dexterity, wicked wit and competitive edge of its participants, Just a Minute has welcomed scores of guest players to the game since it began in 1967. Sheila Hancock first appeared on the second ever show, and since then she has become one of the most popular and long-standing contestants. This collection presents four classic episodes featuring Sheila as she uses her warmth, wit and ingenuity in the course of the game. With episodes taken from the 1970s, 1980s and 2000s, she displays her talent for wordplay and ear for a good anecdote as she tackles subjects as diverse as Uncle Tom Cobley, Excuses, The Greatest Woman Who Ever Lived and Things You Should Never Do On A Train. In addition, there is strong participation from other regular panellists: Kenneth Williams, Peter Jones, Derek Nimmo, Clement Freud, Kit Hesketh-Harvey and Paul Merton. Asalways, Nicholas Parsons is the capable, unflappable chairman of the game. The selected episodes were broadcast on 6 August 1973, 16 March 1977, 12 February 1980, and 28 July 2003. Duration: 2 hours approx.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 125 x 142mm
Publication Date: 22 Apr 2016
Publisher: BBC Audio A Division Of Random House
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781785295379
About BBC Radio
The formula for this long-running and popular radio panel game was devised in the early 1950s by Ian Messiter a Light Entertainment producer who was on the staff of the BBC from 1942 to 1952. Although Just A Minute was Messiter's preferred name for the show the Head of Light Entertainment thought this too slick - and insisted the show be called One Minute Please. The idea came from a humiliating experience that Messiter had suffered as a schoolboy at Sherborne. The 13-year-old had been staring out of the window daydreaming during a Latin class. Suddenly the Latin master Parry-Jones told him to come up to the front of the class and repeat what had just been said without hesitating or repeating himself. Of course he couldn't and the resultant caning in front of the class provided a lasting lesson. In that first show Roy Plomley acted as Chairman with Gilbert Harding Kenneth Horne and Reggie Purdell pitting their wits against Yvonne Arnaud Valerie Hobson and Nan Kenway. One Minute Please was responsible for introducing the versatile talents of the artist tuba player and raconteur Gerard Hoffnung to a wider audience. It was on the show that Hoffnung first told his famous Bricklayer Story which was used to warm up the audience before the start of the programme. In 1952 Messiter left the BBC and set up a commercial radio station in Johannesburg. According to Ian's wife Enid Messiter it was here that Just A Minute first went on air in the format we know. Ian Messiter produced and chaired the programme and Enid herself played Chopin's Minute Waltz for these South African recordings. In 1967 the Messiters returned to England and a pilot edition of Just A Minute was proposed to Roy Rich then Head of Light Entertainment for BBC radio. The pilot was made but initially rejected. Producer David Hatch threatened to resign unless it was offered to BBC Radio 4 planners. It was and the rest is history. In addition to the radio series there have been several TV series on both ITV and BBC. For many years the regular panellists included Clement Freud Derek Nimmo Kenneth Williams and Peter Jones. As their numbers dwindled in the early 1990s however an increasing number of guests joined the show. Paul Merton has become a mainstay of latter-day Just A Minute while many others now form a pool of semi-regular contestants. In 2003 the programme won a Gold Sony Radio Academy Award and in 2012 it celebrated its 45th year. With Nicholas Parsons at the helm for its entire tenure Just A Minute has been a continually popular feature of the Radio 4 schedules. Decade after decade it has succeeded in both finding new fans and pleasing its legion of loyal older ones.