Concentration (UK game show)

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Concentration
Presented by Barry McQueen (1959)
Chris Howland (1960)
David Gell (1960)
Nick Jackson (1988)
Bob Carolgees (1989-90)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1 (Granada era)
2 (TVS era)
No. of episodes 70 (Granada era)
?? (TVS era)
Production
Running time 30mins (inc. adverts)
Production company(s) Granada (16 June 1959 - 7 June 1960)
TVS in association with Mark Goodson Productions and Talbot Television (4 September 1988 - 1990)
Distributor ITV Studios
Release
Original network ITV
Picture format 4:3
Original release 16 June 1959 (1959-06-16) –
1990 (1990)
Chronology
Related shows Concentration (US version)
External links
[{{#property:P856}} Website]

Concentration originally aired from 16 June 1959 to 7 June 1960 by Granada and was hosted by Barry McQueen in 1959 (Chris Howland and David Gell each hosted in 1960).

It was later revived by TVS from 4 September 1988 to 1990, hosted by Nick Jackson and Bob Carolgees.

Both versions were shown on ITV, while the American version with Alex Trebek was also shown by Sky One in the 1990s.

Format

Two contestants sat before a game board divided up into 30 squares (25 in the TVS ers). Behind each square was part of a rebus (pictures and symbols that make up a word or phrase), names of prizes, and special squares.

One at a time, the contestants called out two numbers. If the prizes or special action did not match, the opponent took a turn. However, if the contestant did match, that prize was placed on a board behind the contestant; or, he/she could perform an action. The second number had to be called out within a certain time limit, otherwise the contestant's turn ended.

More importantly, a match also revealed two pieces of the rebus. The contestant could try to solve the rebus by making one guess or choose two more numbers. There was no penalty for a wrong guess; even if he/she was wrong, he/she kept control. Usually, a contestant waited to solve the puzzle until he/she had exposed a good portion of the rebus through several matches. In rare instances, the puzzle was solved with only a few clues showing.

Special Squares

  • Wild card: Provided an automatic match. When a wild card match was made, the natural match was also located resulting in three puzzle parts being revealed. Choosing two wild cards in one turn earned the contestant a £50 bonus.
  • Take: Appeared on four cards in each game. There were two red and two green, a colour match had to be made. If a contestant matched them, he/she could take his/her choice of any of the prizes listed on their opponent's prize board. In series 2, this changed to only the last prize the opponent matched.
  • Swap: Matching this allowed you to swap a prize for either £1, £50, or £100. Introduced in the second series.

Three rounds are always played no matter what the outcome, and the first to solve two puzzles wins the game. Both players keep all prizes matched.

Global Game

The bonus round, dubbed the "Global Game", was played for one of eight holidays. The contestant was shown a board of 15 numbered panels, behind which seven of the eight holidays had matching pairs; the eighth was always used as a decoy. Contestants were given 50 seconds (45 in series 2), and if a contestant made all seven matches, the last holiday he/she matched was the one won.

Transmissions

Granada era

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 16 June 1959 7 June 1960 70

TVS era

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 4 September 1988 20 November 1988 13
2 29 December 1989  ??  ??

External links