Blind Date (British game show): Difference between revisions

 

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===Cancellation===

===Cancellation===

The series ended in 2003 when, during a special one-off live episode on 4 January 2003, Black announced she was quitting the show.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/2628283.stm |title=Cilla quits Blind Date |work=BBC News Online |date=4 January 2003 |access-date=26 August 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cillablack.com/cpt_news/cilla-quits-blind-date-after-fronting-the-popular-dating-game-show-for-18-years/ |title=Cilla quits ‘Blind Date’ after fronting the popular dating-game show for 18 years! |publisher=Cillablack.com |date=7 January 2003 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019130551/http://www.cillablack.com/cpt_news/cilla-quits-blind-date-after-fronting-the-popular-dating-game-show-for-18-years/ |archive-date=19 October 2013}}</ref> The production crew had not been told. A change in the show’s format was one of the factors in her decision to leave the show.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/2949692.stm</ref><ref name=”Story”>{{cite news|last=Bushby |first=Helen |url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/2949842.stm |title=Cilla’s Blind Date success story |publisher=BBC|work=BBC News |date=30 May 2003 |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref> Production was halted after the series ended; [[Trisha Goddard]], [[Dale Winton]] and [[Paul O’Grady]] were to be in line for her replacement<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/2631185.stm |title=Blind Date to continue |work=BBC News Online |date=6 January 2003}}</ref> but the show was later cancelled. ITV had been refused permission to make changes to the format by [[Columbia TriStar Television|Columbia]], the US company which owned ”Blind Date” at the time.<ref name=”Axed”/>

The series ended in 2003 when, during a special one-off live episode on 4 January 2003, Black announced she was quitting the show.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/2628283.stm |title=Cilla quits Blind Date |work=BBC News Online |date=4 January 2003 |access-date=26 August 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cillablack.com/cpt_news/cilla-quits-blind-date-after-fronting-the-popular-dating-game-show-for-18-years/ |title=Cilla quits ‘Blind Date’ after fronting the popular dating-game show for 18 years! |publisher=Cillablack.com |date=7 January 2003 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019130551/http://www.cillablack.com/cpt_news/cilla-quits-blind-date-after-fronting-the-popular-dating-game-show-for-18-years/ |archive-date=19 October 2013}}</ref> The production crew had not been told. A change in the show’s format was one of the factors in her decision to leave the show.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/entertainment/2949692.stm</ref><ref name=”Story”>{{cite news|last=Bushby |first=Helen |url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/2949842.stm |title=Cilla’s Blind Date success story |publisher=BBC|work=BBC News |date=30 May 2003 |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref> Production was halted after the series ended; [[Trisha Goddard]], [[Dale Winton]] and [[Paul O’Grady]] were to be in line for her replacement<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/2631185.stm |title=Blind Date to continue |work=BBC News Online |date=6 January 2003}}</ref> but the show was later cancelled. ITV had been refused permission to make changes to the format by [[Columbia TriStar Television|Columbia]], the US company which owned ”Blind Date” at the time.<ref name=”Axed”/>

However, ITV briefly aired a similar replacement show in 2004 hosted by [[Davina McCall]], called ”[[Love on a Saturday Night]]”, and from 2010 to 2019, ”[[Take Me Out (British game show)|Take Me Out]]”, hosted by [[Paddy McGuinness]].

However, ITV briefly aired a similar replacement show in 2004 hosted by [[Davina McCall]], called ”[[Love on a Saturday Night]]”, and from 2010 to 2019, ”[[Take Me Out (British game show)|Take Me Out]]”, hosted by [[Paddy McGuinness]].

UK game show

Blind Date is a British dating game show first produced by London Weekend Television. An unscreened pilot was made with comic Duncan Norvelle as presenter but it was eventually hosted by Cilla Black, who already hosted the LWT series Surprise Surprise. Blind Date originally ran on Saturday nights from 30 November 1985 to 31 May 2003 on ITV.

The show returned in 2017 on Channel 5. The new series began airing on 17 June 2017 in its usual Saturday night slot and is produced by So Television, Olga TV and Stellify Media, a firm part-owned by Sony Pictures Television.[1] Paul O’Grady presented the revived series.[2] Melanie Sykes became the new voice of the show, taking over the role most famously held by Graham Skidmore in the original series.[3] On 30 June 2025, it was announced that the series was to be rebooted again and this time would be aired on Disney+.[4]

The show had a format similar to the show known in Australia as Perfect Match or in the United States as The Dating Game. Three singles of the same sex were introduced to the audience. They were then asked a question by a single individual of the opposite sex, who could hear but not see them, to choose with whom to go on a date. Before the decision “Our Graham” Skidmore (replaced in the final ITV series by Tommy Sandhu), who was never seen, gave an amusing reminder of each contestant. The couple then picked an envelope naming their destination. The following episode showed the couple on their date, as well as interviews with them about the date and each other. Locations ranged from Bognor Regis or a date in an ice cream factory, to Anguilla or the Maldives.

In the final original series (2002–03), the format was tweaked; the “Ditch or Date?” twist was added to the show, allowing the picking contestant to stick with the person they have chosen, or gamble on the single remaining unseen contestant.[5] Also, a behind-the-scenes companion show, called Blind Date: Kiss & Tell was produced for ITV2 and hosted by Sarah Cawood and Brendan Courtney.[6] In January 2003, to try to improve dwindling ratings, the show broadcast a special one-off live episode. It was during this episode that Black surprisingly announced her resignation, having been told by producers that it was likely to be the last series.[7]

A pilot, as It’s a Hoot!, was shot in early 1985 and fronted by comedian Duncan Norvelle.[8] John Birt, LWT‘s director of programmes, and the IBA regulatory body had reservations about Norvelle’s camp style. Black had seen The Dating Game in the US and enthused about it to LWT’s Alan Boyd, the then Controller of Entertainment. Gill Stribling-Wright produced both the pilots with Duncan Norvelle, and Cilla Black, and once the show was commissioned produced the first three series.[8] Thelma Pickles, an old girlfriend of John Lennon, worked as a producer on the show in a subsequent series.[9] The distinctive theme music for Blind Date has a strong resemblance to the jazz standard “Soft Winds” and was composed by Laurie Holloway. It was remixed by Sandhu for the final ITV series.[10]

Popularity and decline

[edit]

At the height of its popularity in the 1980s, 18.2 million tuned in on a Saturday night. Black’s scouse accent and her catchphrases became familiar throughout the United Kingdom. The show won the Lew Grade Award at the British Academy Television Awards in 1995.[11]

The series was not one of the 30 top-rated UK TV shows of 2000 and was ranked 45th in ITV’s top 50 list with 9.6 million viewers. The first episode of Series 17, on 10 November 2001, was reportedly watched at 19:00 GMT by seven million viewers – 32% of the audience. This was around a million fewer than tuned in to its debut episode in the previous series.[12] Black was responsible for ITV shifting its football programme, The Premiership, to make way for the new series in a prime-time slot. The broadcaster reportedly gave in to Black’s ultimatum “move the Premiership football programme or I quit”.[13]

In April 2002, it was reported that the series would be revamped;[14] later in September, producers denied that Trisha Goddard was being lined up to replace Black as host once her two-year exclusive contract with Granada and ITV finishes at the end of the year.[15] However, a month later, it was reported that talks had begun with Black to settle a deal for a further two series, running through to 2005.[16]

Viewing figures had declined to 5 million by 2003.[17] The final episode in May 2003 was seen by 2.9 million viewers.[18]

The series ended in 2003 when, during a special one-off live episode on 4 January 2003, Black announced she was quitting the show.[19][20] The production crew had not been told. A change in the show’s format was one of the factors in her decision to leave the show.[21][22] Production was halted after the series ended; Trisha Goddard, Dale Winton and Paul O’Grady were to be in line for her replacement[23] but the show was later cancelled. ITV had been refused permission to make changes to the format by Columbia, the US company which owned Blind Date at the time.[18]

However, ITV briefly aired a similar replacement show in 2004 hosted by Davina McCall, called Love on a Saturday Night, and from 2010 to 2019, Take Me Out, hosted by Paddy McGuinness.

Blind Date returned on 20 May 2006, as part of ITV’s coverage of a concert held outside the Tower of London to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the foundation of the charity The Prince’s Trust. Comedian Patrick Kielty and TV presenter Kate Thornton acted as hosts for the show which featured Dame Edna Everage, Roger Moore, Richard E. Grant and Chico Slimani as contestants.[24]

It returned again on 16 October 2013 to celebrate Black’s 50-year career in the entertainment industry. This special one-off was part of another programme, The One and Only Cilla Black, presented by Paul O’Grady.[25] Black returned as host, and producers brought back three of the show’s most memorable contestants who were still single, giving them a second chance to win a date.[26] However, the couple’s date was not shown.

A planned Irish revival of the format, hosted by Lucy Kennedy on TV3, was dropped by the broadcaster in June 2015.[27] It was later picked up with comedian Al Porter announced as the host in May 2017.[28]

In February 2017, it was announced that Blind Date would be returning but would now be aired on Channel 5 fourteen years after being cancelled.[1] On 16 March 2017, Paul O’Grady was announced as the show’s new presenter who replaced Cilla Black since her death in August 2015[2] and Melanie Sykes provides the voiceover.[3] The revived series began on 17 June 2017 and received mainly positive reviews.[29] Unlike the original version, the revival features both mixed and same-sex couplings. This version ran for four series until June 2019. Viewing figures were initially positive, with a peak of 2 million viewers tuning in for the premiere episode;[30] however, in the fourth series had fallen to below a million. In March 2020, it was reportedly axed by the network.[31]

On 30 June 2025, it was announced that the show would once again be revived for Disney+ as part of a slate of unscripted UK commissions from the streamer, with Stellify Media and SO Television set as co-producers as with the previous revival.[32]

Celebrity contestants

[edit]

Blind Date featured celebrities before they became well known. These include:

In a Comic Relief sketch from 1993, Mr. Bean from the British sitcom of the same name appears as a contestant on the show. The sketch featured Rowan Atkinson as Bean, Barbara Durkin as Tracy, Bean’s date, and Cilla Black as herself. The other contestants were played by Alan Cumming and Paul Opacic. For Red Nose Day 1999, Black returned to present a live studio version with Lenny Henry choosing between Twiggy, Helena Bonham Carter and Elle Mcpherson.[39]

The first episode of the revamped eighteenth series, broadcast in October 2002, featured the boy band Blue.[40][41] A 2002 celebrity Christmas edition featured Tara Palmer-Tomkinson and Alex Sibley.[22]

During the show’s history, three Blind Date weddings took place (as a result of contestants meeting on the show) and were watched by millions of television viewers. Black was a guest at the weddings.

  • Sue Middleton and Alex Tatham (1991) – met on the show in 1988, where they were sent on a date to a medieval banquet in County Clare, Ireland. The couple married in October 1991 at St Michael & All Angels Church, Pelsall, with the service being broadcast a day later as part of a special episode that was watched by 18 million viewers. Black attended with her husband Bobby Willis.[42] They returned for the show’s 10th anniversary special and celebrated 25 years together in 2013.[43] They appeared as mystery guests on The Big Fat Quiz of Everything 2019 and renewed their wedding vows at the same church in October 2024.[44]
  • Lillian Morris and David Fenson (1994) – the elderly couple quickly got engaged after meeting on the show and were married four months later in February 1994 at the town hall register office in Tiverton, Devon.[8]
  • Anna Azonwanna and Paul Pratt (1998) – met on the show in September 1993, where they were sent on a date to Zermatt, Switzerland. In a special episode broadcast in 1997, the couple appeared in the studio audience from where Pratt would subsequently propose; they married in October 1998 in Barbados. LWT paid for the wedding and the honeymoon at The Colony Club, a luxury hotel on the island.[45][46] The other couples also attended the wedding with Cilla.[47]

The programme would also lead to another wedding in 1997; Darren Walker proposed to ex-girlfriend Kellie Cooper after watching her on the show with fellow contestant Tom Jones and this was later featured in a special episode.[48] On 29 December 2001, the episode saw contestant Hannarle Davies from Essex propose to Mark Ackerell from Buckinghamshire after their date to Vienna, Austria.[49] Davies later admitted that the proposal was a joke.[50]

Cosmopolitan controversy

[edit]

A contestant named Nicola Gill came on the show, claiming she was a temporary secretary, when she was in reality a journalist for Cosmopolitan attempting to go through the entire Blind Date process for a story. When the show’s staff and Black found out Gill’s true profession, she exposed the truth about Gill’s deception, earning the ire of the audience, who booed Gill for not coming on the show with honest intentions. Black also asked Gill if she was already dating, which she denied; a lower-third graphic then revealed she was to be married to her boyfriend in June. Because of the deception, Gill’s intended blind date was able to come back on the show for a second time with Black apologizing for not stopping the date beforehand, and was able to choose among three new women for an honest blind date.[51]

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 17 June 2017 23 December 2017 7
2 30 December 2017 3 February 2018 6
3 16 June 2018 18 August 2018 10
22 December 2018 29 December 2018
4 7 April 2019 19 May 2019 10
2 June 2019 16 June 2019

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