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Antiques Roadshow

Antiques Roadshow is a British television programme broadcast by the BBC in which antiques appraisers travel to various regions of the United Kingdom (and occasionally in other countries) to appraise antiques brought in by local people (generally speaking). It has been running since 1979, based on a 1977 documentary programme.[1]

Antiques Roadshow
Antiques Roadshow title logo
Created byBBC Studios
Starring
Theme music composerPaul Reade
Tim Gibson
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series45
No. of episodes866 (list of episodes)
Production
Running time60 minutes
Production companyBBC Studios Factual Entertainment Productions
Release
Original networkBBC One
Original release18 February 1979 (1979-02-18) –
present

The series has spawned many international versions throughout Europe, North America and other countries with the same TV format. The program is hosted by Fiona Bruce and it is in its 45th series.[2]

History

 
Paul Atterbury examines an antique cricket bat

The programme began as a BBC documentary that aired in 1977, about a London auction house doing a tour of the West Country in England. The pilot roadshow was recorded in Hereford on 17 May 1977 and presented by contributor Bruce Parker, a presenter of the news/current affairs programme Nationwide, and antiques expert Arthur Negus, who had previously worked on a similarly themed show, called Going for a Song. The pilot was so successful that it was transmitted and the format has remained almost unchanged ever since. Negus appeared on Antiques Roadshow until 1983. In the original BBC programme, various towns or famous places are advertised as venues. The show has since visited a number of other countries (including Canada in 2001 and Australia in 2005) and has been imitated by other TV production companies around the world.

In the United Kingdom, annual children's Christmas specials aired from 1991 until 2006, under the title Antiques Roadshow: The Next Generation (except for the 1991 edition, which was titled Antiques Roadshow Going Live) and used a specially reworked version of the regular theme music. However, there was no children's special in 2007; instead an edition was devoted to "antiques of the future" dating from the 1950s to the present day. Since then individually themed specials have been aired, though not every year.

A spin-off programme, 20th Century Roadshow, focusing on modern collectibles, aired between April and June 2005. It was hosted by Alan Titchmarsh. Two other spin-off programmes, Antiques Roadshow Gems (1991) and Priceless Antiques Roadshow (2009–10), revisited items from the show's history and provided background information on the making of the show and interviews with the programme's experts.

In the 1980s, a girl wrote in to Jim'll Fix It to ask if Jimmy Savile would "fix it" for her to "accidentally" drop and smash a seemingly valuable vase in an episode of the show. This was broadcast as part of a regular edition, as well as in the Jim'll Fix It episode, with many of the Roadshow spectators looking on in astonishment, until antiques expert David Battie, who retired in 2020, explained the ruse.[citation needed]

The most valuable item to ever appear on the show featured on 16 November 2008. This was an original 1990s maquette of the Angel of the North sculpture by Antony Gormley, owned by Gateshead Council, which was valued at £1,000,000 by Philip Mould.[3] Glassware expert Andy McConnell later valued a collection of chandeliers at seven million pounds (their actual insurance value), noting as he did so that this beat Mould's record; however these were fixtures of the building in which the show was being filmed (Bath Assembly Rooms) rather than an item that had been brought in. In reality, the two most expensive objects to be sold as a result of being discovered on the show are the 1932[4] camera found by Marc Allum, which realised over $600,000 (US) in 2013 and the Christofle et Cie Japonisme jardiniere filmed by Eric Knowles, which sold for £668,450 (including buyers premium).

Conversely, many items brought before the experts are without commercial value, if not outright counterfeits. They are seldom shown in the broadcast episodes, to spare embarrassment for the individuals involved,[5] although counterfeit objects are sometimes included, to give experts an opportunity to explain the difference between real and fake items. Value is not the only criterion for inclusion; items with an interesting story attached, or of a provenance relevant to the show's location, will often be featured regardless of value. An episode commemorating the end of the First World War and featuring personal mementoes, included no valuations. All items are appraised, although most appraisals take place off-camera, with only the most promising items (around 50 on an average day) being filmed, of which about 20 appear in the final programme.[citation needed]

 
The Artist's Halt in the Desert by Moonlight, watercolour, by Richard Dadd

Some significant items have been acquired by museums after being sold once their owners were appraised of their true value. An example is the watercolour painting The Artist's Halt in the Desert by Richard Dadd, discovered and shown by Peter Nahum in 1986 and purchased the next year by the British Museum[6] for £100,000.[7] Another such item, later dubbed "Ozzy the Owl", is a Staffordshire slipware jug, valued by Henry Sandon on a 1990 show at £20,000 to £30,000,[7] and subsequently acquired by Potteries Museum & Art Gallery.[8]

The original theme music was Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 (for several years in a Moog synthesiser version by Wendy Carlos), but was changed in the early 1990s to an original piece. This theme was written by Paul Reade and Tim Gibson and published by Air Edel.[9]

Format

Visitors (predominantly from the area being visited by the show) bring along their possessions to be evaluated for authenticity and interest (especially related to the venue) and an approximate valuation is given. The production team selects the items whose appraisal is to be televised. Often, the professional evaluators give a rather in-depth historical, craft, or artistic context to the item, adding a very strong cultural element to the show. This increases the show's appeal to people interested in the study of the past or some particular crafts, or certain arts, regardless of the monetary value of the objects.[citation needed] At the core, however, the focus of the production is on the interplay between the owner and the evaluator.

Presenters

Antiques Roadshow has been hosted by:

Programme experts for 2021/2022

Antiques Roadshow has a team of experts numbering over 60. Many have areas of speciality, some of them are long tenuring experts on the programme.[11]

Arms and militaria

  • Bill Harriman
  • Runjeet Singh
  • Mark Smith
  • Robert Tilney

Books and manuscripts

Ceramics and glass

Clocks and watches

  • Alastair Chandler
  • Richard Price
  • Ben Wright

Furniture

Jewellery

  • John Benjamin
  • Kate Flitcroft
  • Joanna Hardy
  • Geoffrey Munn
  • Susan Rumfitt
  • Siobhan Tyrrell

Miscellaneous

Pictures and prints

Silver

Locations

Episodes

Episodes are usually filmed during the spring and summer and aired the following autumn and winter (into the following year). Each location visited is covered by one or two (exceptionally even three) episodes.

International versions

Australia

In 2005, part of the BBC team visited Australia and produced six one-hour episodes in conjunction with The LifeStyle Channel (XYZnetworks). These were titled Antiques Roadshow Australia.[15] A special was also made about the visit to Australia, entitled Antiques Roadshow Australia: Behind the Scenes.

Belgium

In Flanders, VTM has been broadcasting a local version,[16] called Rijker dan je denkt? (Richer than you thought?) since 2012, which is hosted by Staf Coppens.

Canada

 
Eastward Ho! (1857) by Henry Nelson O'Neil was appraised on Canadian Antiques Roadshow

In Canada, Canadian Antiques Roadshow – a programme based on the British and American versions[17] - debuted in January 2005 on CBC Television and CBC Newsworld. The show has also been aired on CBC Country Canada. It was hosted by Valerie Pringle.

The most expensive item featured was Henry Nelson O'Neil's "Eastward Ho!" oil on canvas. Recommended insurance: CDN$500,000, later sold at Sotheby's in London for GB£164,800 (about CDN$300,000 at the 2008 exchange rate).

Finland

The Finnish version, known as Antiikkia, antiikkia,[18] (Antiques, antiques), has been running on YLE TV1 since 1997.

Germany

In Germany, various versions are broadcast regularly on the public regional channels of the ARD, the oldest being the BR production Kunst und Krempel (Art and Junk), airing since 1985. Other versions include Lieb & teuer (Near & dear), shown on NDR, Kitsch oder Kunst? (Kitsch or Art?), shown on HR, and Echt Antik?! (Genuinely antique?!), shown on SWR.

Netherlands

The show Tussen Kunst & Kitsch (Between Art & Kitsch) has been running in the Netherlands since 1984.[19] First shown on AVRO, the programme is usually set in a museum somewhere in the Netherlands, sometimes in Belgium and Germany. Due to its popularity, special episodes have been made in which the experts take the viewers on "cultural art excursions" to places of great importance in the history of art.

In 2011, a painting of Joost van Geel with the title Het Kantwerkstertje (The Little Lacemaker) was discovered with an estimated value of 250,000 euros, the highest-appraised item on the show.[20] The programme has been presented by Cees van Drongelen (1984-2002), Nelleke van der Krogt (2002-2015), and Frits Sissing (2015-), and it celebrated its 30th series in 2014.

Sweden

The Swedish version started out as a co-production between SVT Malmö and the BBC, whose Antiques Roadshow visited Scandinavia for two programmes.[21] Antikrundan (Antiques Round), its Swedish version, premiered in August 1989 on TV2, and SVT has produced a new season every year since.

As of 2019, 30 seasons have been shown and most of the experts have been with the programme since its start. Jesper Aspegren was the original host. He left in 2000, and from the 2001 season onwards, Antikrundan has been hosted by Anne Lundberg.

The BBC original is also run on Swedish television, under the name Engelska Antikrundan ("English [sic] Antiques Round").

United States

American public broadcaster PBS created a show in 1997 inspired by the Antiques Roadshow.[22] The American version of Antiques Roadshow is produced by WGBH, a PBS member station in Boston, Massachusetts. Mark Walberg is host and Marsha Bemko is executive producer.

PBS also airs the original BBC programme, though it is called Antiques Roadshow UK to differentiate it from the PBS version. Values of items in United States dollars are often superimposed over the pound sterling values given in the original broadcast.

Related shows

Specials

  • Antiques Roadshow: The First Ten Years (20 December 1987)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Going Live! (26 December 1991)
  • Antiques Roadshow: The Next Generation (12 editions, broadcast 1 January 1992 – 29 December 2006)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Fifteen Priceless Years (28 March 1993)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Junior Roadshow (13 August 1993)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Priceless Gems (6 editions, broadcast 1 October 1996 – 11 April 2001)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Unwrapped – 21st Anniversary (20 December 1998)
  • Antiques Roadshow: 25 Years On! (1 September 2002)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Greatest Finds (3 editions, broadcast 3–17 September 2006)
  • Antiques Roadshow: Farewell to Michael Aspel (30 March 2008)
  • Priceless Antiques Roadshow Series 1 (15 editions, broadcast 9–27 March 2009)
  • Priceless Antiques Roadshow Series 2 (20 editions, broadcast 1–26 February 2010)
  • Restoration Roadshow (20 editions, broadcast 9 August – 3 September 2010; presented by Eric Knowles)
  • Shakespeare Special (29 April 2012)
  • Diamond Jubilee Special (10 June 2012)
  • Antiques Roadshow Detectives (15 editions, broadcast 6–24 April 2015) - a series of programmes looking at some of the stories behind featured objects in more detail
  • Balmoral Royal Special (30 September 2015)
  • Golden Age of Travel Special (30 October 2016) - a look at items from the golden age of rail, air and sea including the world's most famous steam locomotive: 60103 Flying Scotsman
  • Highlights of 2016 (28 December 2016)
  • Holocaust Memorial (15 January 2017)
  • Pioneering Women Special (10 June 2018)
  • World War I Special (4 November 2018)
  • Compilation 1 (31 December 2018)
  • Compilation 2 (23 June 2019)
  • Second World War Special (8 September 2019)
  • What Happened Next (29 December 2019)
  • VE Day Special (10 May 2020)
  • The Best of the Summer (6 September 2020)
  • The Battle of Britain and the Blitz (13 September 2020)
  • The Best of the Summer, part 2 (27 September 2020)
  • The Best of the Summer, part 3 (18 October 2020)
  • What Happened Next (27 December 2020)
  • World War II – The Aftermath (2 May 2021)

Overseas specials

Hugh Scully hosted a Beaulieu based show on 3 January 1993,[23] a Jamaican based show on 14 February 1993,[24] a Cork based show on 13 February 1994[25] and a Brussels based show on 16 April 1995,[26] all on the BBC.

Antiques Roadshow Detectives

Fiona Bruce together with individual Antiques Roadshow appraisers investigate the history of significant items, uncovering the stories that form the history of family heirlooms and finding out about their origin and authenticity.[27]

Broadcasts

This one-season programme was broadcast in 2015 and comprises 15 episodes.[28]

In Sweden it was shown on SVT in Autumn 2018 under the name of Engelska Antikrundan: Arvegodsens hemligheter ("English Round of Antiques: The Secrets of the Heirlooms").[citation needed]

Reception

Ellen E Jones of The Independent called the first episode, about a Cromwellian escutcheon, "a welcome addition to the schedules".[29]

Literature

Magazines

The BBC published a monthly Homes & Antiques magazine until 2011, which offered behind-the-scenes insights into Antiques Roadshow, as well as offering tips and advice on buying and evaluating antiques.[30] This magazine still exists, now published by Immediate since 2015.[31]

There is also a spin-off magazine of the American version of the show called Antiques Roadshow Insider, which gives fans an inside look at the show as well as offering special features about antiques and collectibles from the programme itself.

Further reading

  • Roadshow experts (2000). Lars Tharp (ed.). BBC Antiques Roadshow: A-Z of 20th Century Antiques. Michael Aspel (foreword). Boxtree Ltd. p. 252. ISBN 0-7522-1790-9.
  • Hugh Scully; Fiona Malcolm; Paul Atterbury (1998). Antiques Roadshow: A Celebration of the First 21 Years. Mitchell Beazley. p. 152. ISBN 1-84000-072-4.
  • Antiques Roadshow: Experts on Objects. Edited by Christopher Lewis. Authors include Eric Knowles, David Battie, John Bly and Anthony J Lester. BBC Books, 1987. p. 192. ISBN 0-5632-0628-4.

See also

References

  1. ^ "BBC - Cult - Classic TV - BBC - Title Sequences - The Antiques Roadshow". BBC.
  2. ^ "Antiques Roadshow - The team - BBC One". BBC.
  3. ^ "Antiques Roadshow's Highest Valuation Ever", BBC Channel on YouTube. Retrieved 25 August 2009
  4. ^ "Bonhams: An extraordinarily rare Leica Luxus II, 1932". Bonhams. 31 October 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  5. ^ "Antiques Roadshow: Collector left embarrassed after told his expensive 'antique' came from Tesco". Daily Mirror. 25 August 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  6. ^ "Artist's Halt in the Desert by Moonlight by RICHARD DADD". Peter Nahum At The Leicester Galleries. Retrieved 16 September 2019.
  7. ^ a b Singh, Anita (14 October 2008). "Antiques Roadshow memorable moments". The Telegraph. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  8. ^ "Museum Treasures: Ozzy the Owl". The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery. 2 February 2018. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  9. ^ Frequently Asked Questions at pbs.org 25 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ . BBC News. 22 June 2007. Archived from the original on 26 June 2007. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
  11. ^ "The team".
  12. ^ Watson, Fay (30 December 2020). "David Battie Antiques Roadshow: Why has David Battie quit?". Daily and Sunday Express. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  13. ^ "Antiques Roadshow expert Paul Atterbury on Augustus Pugin Antiques expert Paul Atterbury shares his love of the gothic revival work of Augustus Pugin". Homes and Antiques. 17 December 2018. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  14. ^ "Emotions run high on Antiques Roadshow as expert Fergus Gambon uncovers rare dolls worth £200,000". Metro. 26 August 2016. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  15. ^ Antiques Roadshow Australia
  16. ^ (in Dutch) Rijker dan je denkt infotainment VTM 2015
  17. ^ Canadian Antiques Roadshow
  18. ^ (in Finnish) Antiikkia, antiikkia
  19. ^ (in Dutch) Official website 11 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine, AVROTROS
  20. ^ "Duurste vondst ooit bij Kunst en Kitsch: kwart miljoen". Algemeen Dagblad (in Dutch). 8 February 2011. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
  21. ^ Antiques Road Trip Why it's a vintage period for antiques on television
  22. ^ ANTIQUES ROADSHOW OUR FIRST 10 YEARS A TIMELINE, PBS
  23. ^ "Antiques Roadshow (UK): Beaulieu". TV.com.
  24. ^ "Antiques Roadshow (UK): Jamaica". TV.com.
  25. ^ "Antiques Roadshow (UK): Cork". TV.com.
  26. ^ "Antiques Roadshow (UK): Brussels". TV.com.
  27. ^ "On TV, March 12–18: including Antiques Roadshow Detectives and Black Work - The Listener". Noted. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  28. ^ "BBC Two - Antiques Roadshow Detectives". BBC. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  29. ^ "Antiques Roadshow Detectives, BBC2 - TV review". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  30. ^ "BBC - Press Office - Homes & Antiques magazine creates 1950s living room for Festival of Britain anniversary celebrations". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
  31. ^ "Immediate - Homes & Antiques Magazine relaunches with exiting new look in its May issue, on sale 2nd April 2015". www.immediate.co.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2018.

External links

antiques, roadshow, version, american, program, british, television, programme, broadcast, which, antiques, appraisers, travel, various, regions, united, kingdom, occasionally, other, countries, appraise, antiques, brought, local, people, generally, speaking, . For the U S version see Antiques Roadshow American TV program Antiques Roadshow is a British television programme broadcast by the BBC in which antiques appraisers travel to various regions of the United Kingdom and occasionally in other countries to appraise antiques brought in by local people generally speaking It has been running since 1979 based on a 1977 documentary programme 1 Antiques RoadshowAntiques Roadshow title logoCreated byBBC StudiosStarringBruce Parker 1979 Angela Rippon 1979 Arthur Negus 1979 1983 Hugh Scully 1981 2000 Michael Aspel 2000 2008 Fiona Bruce 2008 Theme music composerPaul ReadeTim GibsonCountry of originUnited KingdomOriginal languageEnglishNo of series45No of episodes866 list of episodes ProductionRunning time60 minutesProduction companyBBC Studios Factual Entertainment ProductionsReleaseOriginal networkBBC OneOriginal release18 February 1979 1979 02 18 presentThe series has spawned many international versions throughout Europe North America and other countries with the same TV format The program is hosted by Fiona Bruce and it is in its 45th series 2 Contents 1 History 2 Format 3 Presenters 4 Programme experts for 2021 2022 4 1 Arms and militaria 4 2 Books and manuscripts 4 3 Ceramics and glass 4 4 Clocks and watches 4 5 Furniture 4 6 Jewellery 4 7 Miscellaneous 4 8 Pictures and prints 4 9 Silver 5 Locations 5 1 Episodes 6 International versions 6 1 Australia 6 2 Belgium 6 3 Canada 6 4 Finland 6 5 Germany 6 6 Netherlands 6 7 Sweden 6 8 United States 7 Related shows 7 1 Specials 7 2 Overseas specials 7 3 Antiques Roadshow Detectives 7 3 1 Broadcasts 7 3 2 Reception 8 Literature 8 1 Magazines 8 2 Further reading 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory Edit Paul Atterbury examines an antique cricket bat The programme began as a BBC documentary that aired in 1977 about a London auction house doing a tour of the West Country in England The pilot roadshow was recorded in Hereford on 17 May 1977 and presented by contributor Bruce Parker a presenter of the news current affairs programme Nationwide and antiques expert Arthur Negus who had previously worked on a similarly themed show called Going for a Song The pilot was so successful that it was transmitted and the format has remained almost unchanged ever since Negus appeared on Antiques Roadshow until 1983 In the original BBC programme various towns or famous places are advertised as venues The show has since visited a number of other countries including Canada in 2001 and Australia in 2005 and has been imitated by other TV production companies around the world In the United Kingdom annual children s Christmas specials aired from 1991 until 2006 under the title Antiques Roadshow The Next Generation except for the 1991 edition which was titled Antiques Roadshow Going Live and used a specially reworked version of the regular theme music However there was no children s special in 2007 instead an edition was devoted to antiques of the future dating from the 1950s to the present day Since then individually themed specials have been aired though not every year A spin off programme 20th Century Roadshow focusing on modern collectibles aired between April and June 2005 It was hosted by Alan Titchmarsh Two other spin off programmes Antiques Roadshow Gems 1991 and Priceless Antiques Roadshow 2009 10 revisited items from the show s history and provided background information on the making of the show and interviews with the programme s experts In the 1980s a girl wrote in to Jim ll Fix It to ask if Jimmy Savile would fix it for her to accidentally drop and smash a seemingly valuable vase in an episode of the show This was broadcast as part of a regular edition as well as in the Jim ll Fix It episode with many of the Roadshow spectators looking on in astonishment until antiques expert David Battie who retired in 2020 explained the ruse citation needed The most valuable item to ever appear on the show featured on 16 November 2008 This was an original 1990s maquette of the Angel of the North sculpture by Antony Gormley owned by Gateshead Council which was valued at 1 000 000 by Philip Mould 3 Glassware expert Andy McConnell later valued a collection of chandeliers at seven million pounds their actual insurance value noting as he did so that this beat Mould s record however these were fixtures of the building in which the show was being filmed Bath Assembly Rooms rather than an item that had been brought in In reality the two most expensive objects to be sold as a result of being discovered on the show are the 1932 4 camera found by Marc Allum which realised over 600 000 US in 2013 and the Christofle et Cie Japonisme jardiniere filmed by Eric Knowles which sold for 668 450 including buyers premium Conversely many items brought before the experts are without commercial value if not outright counterfeits They are seldom shown in the broadcast episodes to spare embarrassment for the individuals involved 5 although counterfeit objects are sometimes included to give experts an opportunity to explain the difference between real and fake items Value is not the only criterion for inclusion items with an interesting story attached or of a provenance relevant to the show s location will often be featured regardless of value An episode commemorating the end of the First World War and featuring personal mementoes included no valuations All items are appraised although most appraisals take place off camera with only the most promising items around 50 on an average day being filmed of which about 20 appear in the final programme citation needed The Artist s Halt in the Desert by Moonlight watercolour by Richard Dadd Some significant items have been acquired by museums after being sold once their owners were appraised of their true value An example is the watercolour painting The Artist s Halt in the Desert by Richard Dadd discovered and shown by Peter Nahum in 1986 and purchased the next year by the British Museum 6 for 100 000 7 Another such item later dubbed Ozzy the Owl is a Staffordshire slipware jug valued by Henry Sandon on a 1990 show at 20 000 to 30 000 7 and subsequently acquired by Potteries Museum amp Art Gallery 8 The original theme music was Bach s Brandenburg Concerto No 3 for several years in a Moog synthesiser version by Wendy Carlos but was changed in the early 1990s to an original piece This theme was written by Paul Reade and Tim Gibson and published by Air Edel 9 Format EditVisitors predominantly from the area being visited by the show bring along their possessions to be evaluated for authenticity and interest especially related to the venue and an approximate valuation is given The production team selects the items whose appraisal is to be televised Often the professional evaluators give a rather in depth historical craft or artistic context to the item adding a very strong cultural element to the show This increases the show s appeal to people interested in the study of the past or some particular crafts or certain arts regardless of the monetary value of the objects citation needed At the core however the focus of the production is on the interplay between the owner and the evaluator Presenters EditAntiques Roadshow has been hosted by Bruce Parker 1979 Angela Rippon 1979 Arthur Negus 1979 1983 Hugh Scully 1981 2000 Michael Aspel 2000 2007 Fiona Bruce 2008 10 Programme experts for 2021 2022 EditSee also List of Antiques Roadshow episodes Antiques Roadshow has a team of experts numbering over 60 Many have areas of speciality some of them are long tenuring experts on the programme 11 Arms and militaria Edit Bill Harriman Runjeet Singh Mark Smith Robert Tilney Books and manuscripts Edit Justin Croft Clive Farahar Matthew Haley Rupert Powell Fuchsia Voremberg Ceramics and glass Edit Alexandra Aguilar Serhat Ahmet Rosa Assennato John Axford David Battie he retired in 2021 after 43 years on the show 12 Theo Burrell Will Farmer Andy McConnell Steven Moore Henry Sandon John Sandon Lars Tharp Clocks and watches Edit Alastair Chandler Richard Price Ben Wright Furniture Edit Lennox Cato Christopher Payne Jewellery Edit John Benjamin Kate Flitcroft Joanna Hardy Geoffrey Munn Susan Rumfitt Siobhan Tyrrell Miscellaneous Edit Marc Allum George Archdale Ronnie Archer Morgan Paul Atterbury 13 Jon Baddeley Cristian Beadman Elaine Binning Bunny Campione Wayne Colquhoun John Foster Fergus Gambon 14 Sally Hoban Mark Hill Amin Jaffer Hilary Kay Eric Knowles Lisa Lloyd Judith Miller Adam Schoon Philip Taubenheim Jennifer Welch Chris Yeo Lee Young Pictures and prints Edit Frances Christie Dendy Easton Grant Ford Alexandra Gill Lawrence Hendra Rupert Maas Philip Mould Charlotte Riordan Suzanne Zack Silver Edit Duncan Campbell Alastair Dickenson Gordon Foster Ian PickfordLocations EditEpisodes Edit Main article List of Antiques Roadshow episodes Episodes are usually filmed during the spring and summer and aired the following autumn and winter into the following year Each location visited is covered by one or two exceptionally even three episodes International versions EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Australia Edit In 2005 part of the BBC team visited Australia and produced six one hour episodes in conjunction with The LifeStyle Channel XYZnetworks These were titled Antiques Roadshow Australia 15 A special was also made about the visit to Australia entitled Antiques Roadshow Australia Behind the Scenes Belgium Edit In Flanders VTM has been broadcasting a local version 16 called Rijker dan je denkt Richer than you thought since 2012 which is hosted by Staf Coppens Canada Edit Eastward Ho 1857 by Henry Nelson O Neil was appraised on Canadian Antiques Roadshow In Canada Canadian Antiques Roadshow a programme based on the British and American versions 17 debuted in January 2005 on CBC Television and CBC Newsworld The show has also been aired on CBC Country Canada It was hosted by Valerie Pringle The most expensive item featured was Henry Nelson O Neil s Eastward Ho oil on canvas Recommended insurance CDN 500 000 later sold at Sotheby s in London for GB 164 800 about CDN 300 000 at the 2008 exchange rate Finland Edit The Finnish version known as Antiikkia antiikkia 18 Antiques antiques has been running on YLE TV1 since 1997 Germany Edit In Germany various versions are broadcast regularly on the public regional channels of the ARD the oldest being the BR production Kunst und Krempel Art and Junk airing since 1985 Other versions include Lieb amp teuer Near amp dear shown on NDR Kitsch oder Kunst Kitsch or Art shown on HR and Echt Antik Genuinely antique shown on SWR Netherlands Edit The show Tussen Kunst amp Kitsch Between Art amp Kitsch has been running in the Netherlands since 1984 19 First shown on AVRO the programme is usually set in a museum somewhere in the Netherlands sometimes in Belgium and Germany Due to its popularity special episodes have been made in which the experts take the viewers on cultural art excursions to places of great importance in the history of art In 2011 a painting of Joost van Geel with the title Het Kantwerkstertje The Little Lacemaker was discovered with an estimated value of 250 000 euros the highest appraised item on the show 20 The programme has been presented by Cees van Drongelen 1984 2002 Nelleke van der Krogt 2002 2015 and Frits Sissing 2015 and it celebrated its 30th series in 2014 Sweden Edit Main article Antikrundan The Swedish version started out as a co production between SVT Malmo and the BBC whose Antiques Roadshow visited Scandinavia for two programmes 21 Antikrundan Antiques Round its Swedish version premiered in August 1989 on TV2 and SVT has produced a new season every year since As of 2019 30 seasons have been shown and most of the experts have been with the programme since its start Jesper Aspegren was the original host He left in 2000 and from the 2001 season onwards Antikrundan has been hosted by Anne Lundberg The BBC original is also run on Swedish television under the name Engelska Antikrundan English sic Antiques Round United States Edit Main article Antiques Roadshow U S TV program American public broadcaster PBS created a show in 1997 inspired by the Antiques Roadshow 22 The American version of Antiques Roadshow is produced by WGBH a PBS member station in Boston Massachusetts Mark Walberg is host and Marsha Bemko is executive producer PBS also airs the original BBC programme though it is called Antiques Roadshow UK to differentiate it from the PBS version Values of items in United States dollars are often superimposed over the pound sterling values given in the original broadcast Related shows EditSpecials Edit Antiques Roadshow The First Ten Years 20 December 1987 Antiques Roadshow Going Live 26 December 1991 Antiques Roadshow The Next Generation 12 editions broadcast 1 January 1992 29 December 2006 Antiques Roadshow Fifteen Priceless Years 28 March 1993 Antiques Roadshow Junior Roadshow 13 August 1993 Antiques Roadshow Priceless Gems 6 editions broadcast 1 October 1996 11 April 2001 Antiques Roadshow Unwrapped 21st Anniversary 20 December 1998 Antiques Roadshow 25 Years On 1 September 2002 Antiques Roadshow Greatest Finds 3 editions broadcast 3 17 September 2006 Antiques Roadshow Farewell to Michael Aspel 30 March 2008 Priceless Antiques Roadshow Series 1 15 editions broadcast 9 27 March 2009 Priceless Antiques Roadshow Series 2 20 editions broadcast 1 26 February 2010 Restoration Roadshow 20 editions broadcast 9 August 3 September 2010 presented by Eric Knowles Shakespeare Special 29 April 2012 Diamond Jubilee Special 10 June 2012 Antiques Roadshow Detectives 15 editions broadcast 6 24 April 2015 a series of programmes looking at some of the stories behind featured objects in more detail Balmoral Royal Special 30 September 2015 Golden Age of Travel Special 30 October 2016 a look at items from the golden age of rail air and sea including the world s most famous steam locomotive 60103 Flying Scotsman Highlights of 2016 28 December 2016 Holocaust Memorial 15 January 2017 Pioneering Women Special 10 June 2018 World War I Special 4 November 2018 Compilation 1 31 December 2018 Compilation 2 23 June 2019 Second World War Special 8 September 2019 What Happened Next 29 December 2019 VE Day Special 10 May 2020 The Best of the Summer 6 September 2020 The Battle of Britain and the Blitz 13 September 2020 The Best of the Summer part 2 27 September 2020 The Best of the Summer part 3 18 October 2020 What Happened Next 27 December 2020 World War II The Aftermath 2 May 2021 Overseas specials Edit Hugh Scully hosted a Beaulieu based show on 3 January 1993 23 a Jamaican based show on 14 February 1993 24 a Cork based show on 13 February 1994 25 and a Brussels based show on 16 April 1995 26 all on the BBC Antiques Roadshow Detectives Edit Fiona Bruce together with individual Antiques Roadshow appraisers investigate the history of significant items uncovering the stories that form the history of family heirlooms and finding out about their origin and authenticity 27 Broadcasts Edit This one season programme was broadcast in 2015 and comprises 15 episodes 28 In Sweden it was shown on SVT in Autumn 2018 under the name of Engelska Antikrundan Arvegodsens hemligheter English Round of Antiques The Secrets of the Heirlooms citation needed Reception Edit Ellen E Jones of The Independent called the first episode about a Cromwellian escutcheon a welcome addition to the schedules 29 Literature EditMagazines Edit The BBC published a monthly Homes amp Antiques magazine until 2011 which offered behind the scenes insights into Antiques Roadshow as well as offering tips and advice on buying and evaluating antiques 30 This magazine still exists now published by Immediate since 2015 31 There is also a spin off magazine of the American version of the show called Antiques Roadshow Insider which gives fans an inside look at the show as well as offering special features about antiques and collectibles from the programme itself Further reading Edit Roadshow experts 2000 Lars Tharp ed BBC Antiques Roadshow A Z of 20th Century Antiques Michael Aspel foreword Boxtree Ltd p 252 ISBN 0 7522 1790 9 Hugh Scully Fiona Malcolm Paul Atterbury 1998 Antiques Roadshow A Celebration of the First 21 Years Mitchell Beazley p 152 ISBN 1 84000 072 4 Antiques Roadshow Experts on Objects Edited by Christopher Lewis Authors include Eric Knowles David Battie John Bly and Anthony J Lester BBC Books 1987 p 192 ISBN 0 5632 0628 4 See also EditBargain Hunt 2000 Cash in the Attic 2002 2012 Flog It 2002 2020 Dickinson s Real Deal 2006 Antiques Road Trip 2010 Fake or Fortune 2011 References Edit BBC Cult Classic TV BBC Title Sequences The Antiques Roadshow BBC Antiques Roadshow The team BBC One BBC Antiques Roadshow s Highest Valuation Ever BBC Channel on YouTube Retrieved 25 August 2009 Bonhams An extraordinarily rare Leica Luxus II 1932 Bonhams 31 October 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2016 Antiques Roadshow Collector left embarrassed after told his expensive antique came from Tesco Daily Mirror 25 August 2009 Retrieved 22 March 2015 Artist s Halt in the Desert by Moonlight by RICHARD DADD Peter Nahum At The Leicester Galleries Retrieved 16 September 2019 a b Singh Anita 14 October 2008 Antiques Roadshow memorable moments The Telegraph Retrieved 15 December 2018 Museum Treasures Ozzy the Owl The Potteries Museum amp Art Gallery 2 February 2018 Retrieved 15 December 2018 Frequently Asked Questions at pbs org Archived 25 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bruce to host Antiques Roadshow BBC News 22 June 2007 Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 22 June 2007 The team Watson Fay 30 December 2020 David Battie Antiques Roadshow Why has David Battie quit Daily and Sunday Express Retrieved 28 July 2021 Antiques Roadshow expert Paul Atterbury on Augustus Pugin Antiques expert Paul Atterbury shares his love of the gothic revival work of Augustus Pugin Homes and Antiques 17 December 2018 Retrieved 22 October 2020 Emotions run high on Antiques Roadshow as expert Fergus Gambon uncovers rare dolls worth 200 000 Metro 26 August 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2020 Antiques Roadshow Australia in Dutch Rijker dan je denkt infotainment VTM 2015 Canadian Antiques Roadshow in Finnish Antiikkia antiikkia in Dutch Official website Archived 11 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine AVROTROS Duurste vondst ooit bij Kunst en Kitsch kwart miljoen Algemeen Dagblad in Dutch 8 February 2011 Retrieved 10 December 2014 Antiques Road Trip Why it s a vintage period for antiques on television ANTIQUES ROADSHOW OUR FIRST 10 YEARS A TIMELINE PBS Antiques Roadshow UK Beaulieu TV com Antiques Roadshow UK Jamaica TV com Antiques Roadshow UK Cork TV com Antiques Roadshow UK Brussels TV com On TV March 12 18 including Antiques Roadshow Detectives and Black Work The Listener Noted Retrieved 5 October 2018 BBC Two Antiques Roadshow Detectives BBC Retrieved 5 October 2018 Antiques Roadshow Detectives BBC2 TV review The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2018 BBC Press Office Homes amp Antiques magazine creates 1950s living room for Festival of Britain anniversary celebrations bbc co uk Retrieved 22 March 2018 Immediate Homes amp Antiques Magazine relaunches with exiting new look in its May issue on sale 2nd April 2015 www immediate co uk Retrieved 22 March 2018 External links EditAntiques Roadshow at BBC Online Antiques Roadshow at epguides com Antiques Roadshow at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antiques Roadshow amp oldid 1130784248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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