The South Bank Show
| The South Bank Show | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Arts |
| Presented by | Melvyn Bragg |
| Opening theme | Variation on Paganini's "24th Caprice" by Andrew Lloyd Webber |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 32 |
No. of episodes | 736 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 60mins (inc. adverts) |
| Production company(s) | LWT |
| Distributor | ITV Studios |
| Release | |
| Original network | ITV (14 January 1978 – 30 May 2010) Sky Arts (27 May 2012 – present) |
| Picture format | 16:9 |
| Original release | 14 January 1978 (1978-01-14) – present |
The South Bank Show is a British television arts magazine show. It was originally produced by London Weekend Television and broadcast on ITV between 1978 and 2010. A new version of the series began on Sky Arts from 27 May 2012.[1] Conceived, written and presented by former BBC arts broadcaster Melvyn Bragg, the show aims to bring both high art and popular culture to a mass audience.
Contents
1 History
1.1 ITV (1978-2010)
1.2 Sky Arts (2012-present)
2 Theme music and visuals
3 Subjects
4 Directors
5 Podcast
6 Awards
7 Parodies
8 References
9 External links
History
ITV (1978-2010)
The programme was a replacement for Aquarius, the arts series which had been running since 1970. Presenter Melvyn Bragg was already well known for his arts broadcasting on BBC television, notably Monitor and BBC Two's The Lively Arts. It first aired on 14 January 1978, covering many subjects, including Germaine Greer, Gerald Scarfe and Paul McCartney. It is the longest continuously running arts programme on UK television. From the beginning the series' intent was to mix high art and popular culture. This has remained, and the programme has always focused predominantly on art of the 20th and 21st centuries.
For much of its life, the show was produced by London Weekend Television (LWT) for the ITV network.
In May 2009, ITV announced that the show was to come to an end. Although it was originally reported that the show was ending due to Bragg's retirement,[2] Bragg later made it clear that he decided to leave after they ended the show, and thought ending it was a mistake; according to him, "they've killed the show, so I thought, I'll go as well."[3][4]
On Monday 28 December 2009 the final edition of The South Bank Show was broadcast featuring The Royal Shakespeare Company as its subject. Melvyn Bragg announced on this programme, after the final South Bank Show Awards in January 2010, there would be a series of ten South Bank Show Revisited programmes transmitted in early 2010 featuring updates on previous South Bank Show subjects.
Sky Arts (2012-present)
At the British Academy of Film and Television Arts awards show in January 2010, Lord Melvyn Bragg said he was baffled by ITV's decision to axe The South Bank Show after 30 years on air. Also at the awards show, Prince Charles said in a taped testimonial that it was the end of one of the most important beacons of arts in this country which this country was lucky enough to enjoy.
In July 2010, it was revealed that Bragg had bought the rights to the brand and had first right of access to The South Bank Show archives.[5]Sky Arts broadcasts South Bank Show archive editions and hosted the South Bank Sky Arts Awards on 25 Jan 2011, presented by Melvyn Bragg, accompanied by a new arrangement of The South Bank Show theme.
Sky Arts revived The South Bank Show with a new series starting 27 May 2012.[1]
Theme music and visuals
The iconic image of the Hand of God giving life to Adam, used since the series' inception.
The theme music is taken from Andrew Lloyd Webber's Variations composed in 1977 for his brother, the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber. This is based on the theme from Paganini's "24th Caprice". The brand image of the programme is an animated version of a detail from Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel ceiling painting, specifically the image of the Hand of God giving life to Adam. It shows the two hands meeting, generating a lightning bolt.
Subjects
There have been many subjects of the show,[6] including:
- 1970s
Paul McCartney in 1978
Ken Dodd in 1978
John Peel in 1979
Satyajit Ray in 1979
Francis Ford Coppola in 1979
Rough Trade Records in 1979
Talking Heads in 1979
- 1980s
Arthur Miller in 1980
Sir Laurence Olivier in 1982
Catherine Cookson in 1982
Peter Gabriel in 1982
Julian Lloyd Webber in 1982
Gene Hackman in 1983
Oscar Peterson in 1984
Weather Report in 1984
Elisabeth Vellacott in 1984
Sir Alec Guinness in 1985
Francis Bacon in 1985
John Cleese in 1986
Michala Petri in 1986
Fay Godwin in 1986
Eric Clapton in 1987
The Smiths in 1987
Penguin Cafe Orchestra in 1987
John Houseman in 1988
Paul Bowles in 1988
Ben Elton in 1989
John Zorn in 1989
Robert Redford in 1989
- 1990s
Mark Morris Dance Group in 1990
Pet Shop Boys in 1990
Terry Gilliam in 1991
Stan Laurel in 1991
Douglas Adams in 1992
Sir Richard Attenborough in 1992
Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in 1992
Viviana Durante in 1992
Anthony Hopkins in 1992
Billy Connolly in 1992 and 2010
Sylvie Guillem in 1993
Agnes Habereder in 1993
Paul Simon in 1993
Clive Barker in 1994
David Mamet in 1994
Coronation Street in 1995
Clint Eastwood in 1995
k. d. lang in 1995
Sting in 1996
John Galliano in 1996
Elaine Paige in 1996
Marlene Dietrich in 1996
Sir John Mills in 1996
Bee Gees in 1997
Björk in 1997
Iain Banks in 1997
Scanner in 1997
Gillian Wearing/Gary Hume in 1998
Will Self in 1998
Cher in 1999
Blur in 1999
Tracey Emin in 1999
- 2000s
Judith Weir in 2001
Bernie Taupin in 2002
Juan Diego Florez in 2002
Ewan McGregor in 2003
Dance Theatre of Harlem in 2004
Ronnie Wood in 2004
Sir Malcolm Arnold in 2004
The Darkness in 2004
John Lennon's jukebox in 2004
Iggy Pop in 2004
Little Britain in 2005
Dusty Springfield in 2006
Steve Reich in 2006
J. G. Ballard in 2006
George Michael in 2006
Grayson Perry in 2006
Gerhard Richter in 2006
Jarvis Cocker in 2007
Victoria Wood in 2007
June Whitfield in 2007
Annie Lennox in 2007
Eric Clapton in 2007
The Nutcracker (ballet) in 2007
Nick Park in 2007
Liza Minnelli in 2008
James Bond in 2008
Will Young in 2009
Peter Kosminsky in 2009- The Cambridge Footlights in February 2009[7]
Coldplay in September 2009
Disney Pixar in October 2009
Elbow in November 2009
The Royal Shakespeare Company in December 2009
- 2010s
Tracey Ullman in 2018
Directors
Directors who have made editions of the programme include:
John Bulmer[8]
- Margy Kinmonth
- Tony Cash
- Chris Dooks
- Kim Evans
- Andy Harries
- Mary Harron
- David Hinton
- James Ivory
- Tony Knox
- Ken Loach
- Jeremy Marre
- Tony Palmer
- Ken Russell
- Irshad Ashraf
Podcast
From 18 September 2006, ITV have begun releasing a podcast of the interviews from the show, including extra material not included in the broadcast editions. There are plans to release past interviews as part of the podcast as well.[9]
Awards
The programme has been awarded more than 110 awards (including 12 BAFTAs, 5 Prix Italia and 4 RTS Awards). Pat Gavin's animated title sequences have won two BAFTAs.
Parodies
The comedy series Dead Ringers often parodied The South Bank Show. It does this in a series of sketches called South Bank, a cross between The South Bank Show and the American cartoon South Park, set in the South Bank of London. In these sketches, Melvyn Bragg is Stan Marsh, Alan Yentob is Kyle Broflovski, Mark Lawson is Eric Cartman and Kenneth Branagh is Kenny McCormick.
A sketch in The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer featured Vic Reeves as Melvyn Bragg (with felt-tip marks on his face) presenting a feature on fictional folk singers Mulligan and O'Hare. Reeves depicts Bragg as an unlikely A-Team obsessive.
Harry Enfield's TV film Norbert Smith - a Life is a parody edition of The South Bank Show.
Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant's second series of Extras featured a reference to a fictional episode of The South Bank Show focused on madcap children's television presenters Dick and Dom.
Private Eye tends to parody Melvyn Bragg's name, and Spitting Image would rather accentuate his nasal accent.
Benny Hill once parodied Bragg in a 1978 episode of The Benny Hill Show as Melvyn Dragg. The name of the show was also parodied, and it was called "The South Blank Show."
References
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^ "ITV to axe The South Bank Show when Melvyn Bragg retires next year", The Guardian (London), 6 May 2009
^ Chitra Ramaswamy (9 November 2009). "Interview: Melvyn Bragg - Man out of time". The Scotsman. Retrieved 9 November 2009.'It did [shock me] a bit, especially from [ITV chairman] Michael [Grade],' says Bragg before steeling himself. 'I think it's a mistake. But there you go. These things happen. You move on.'
^ See also Bragg's book of reminiscences, The South Bank Show: Final Cut. Hodder, 2010.
ISBN 978-1-4447-0552-2
^ Brown, Maggie (19 July 2010). "Lord Bragg takes South Bank Show to Sky Arts". The Guardian. London.
^ "The South Bank Show (a Subjects & Air Dates Guide)". epguides.com. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
^ "Drama & Soaps". The ITV Hub.
^ Description of one programme, British Film Institute. Accessed 13 February 2013.
^ "The South Bank Show Podcast RSS". itv.com. Archived from the original on 27 January 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
External links
The South Bank Show at itv.com (Archive)- Complete list of subjects from epguides.com
The South Bank Show on IMDb
Variations performance by Julian Lloyd Webber and Colosseum II, from YouTube

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