SMTV Live | |
---|---|
Presented by | Ant & Dec Cat Deeley Brian Dowling Tess Daly James Redmond Ian "H" Watkins Claire Richards Shavaughn Ruakere Des Clarke Stephen Mulhern |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 279 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Conor McAnally |
Producers | David Staite Steve Pinhay |
Production locations | Studio 2, The London Studios (1998–2003) Studios 1 & 2, Riverside Studios (2003) |
Running time | 125 mins |
Production company | Blaze Television |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 29 August 1998 – 27 December 2003 |
SMTV Live (an abbreviation of Saturday Morning Television Live, and also stylised as SM:tv LIVE) was a British Saturday morning children's television programme, produced by Blaze Television for ITV. Operating on a similar format to other Saturday morning programmes for[children, such as BBC's Live & Kicking , the programme premiered on 29 August 1998 and ran for 279 episodes across five years, before its conclusion on 27 December 2003. [1]
The programme's format focused on a collection of sketches, competitions and challenges, alongside a compilation of children's programmes and cartoons. The programme proved a major success, contributing to furthering the careers of Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly under the partnership of Ant & Dec, as well as promoting the broadcast of Japanese anime series Pokémon on British television. SMTV Live became notable for various elements including a sketch based on Pokémon, the phone competition of "Wonkey Donkey", and the late morning edition of CD:UK that the presenters of the programme were involved in towards the end of the morning schedule. The programme was regularly popular with its audiences, attracting around 2.5 million viewers.
Following its conclusion, Ant & Dec's former company Gallowgate Holdings Limited retained the rights to the show. In April 2017, the duo made a proposal for a 20th anniversary special to reunite them with co-presenter Cat Deeley, [2] but despite an announcement of it being revived during the 2017 British Academy Television Awards, [3] [4] ITV later stated that the proposal had been dropped. [5]
On 26 December 2020, a one-off reunion documentary aired on ITV under the title The Story of SM:TV Live, featuring Ant, Dec and Cat reminiscing on their time on the show. [6]
The series' iconic sketch "Chums" was recreated for the fifth episode of series 17 of Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway on 20 March 2021 which reenacts and picks up the cliffhanger from the wedding episode 20 years ago which signaled the duo's retirement from SMTV Live on 1 December 2001.
SMTV Live operated on a live-television format for its timeslot on Saturday. Alongside the involvement of audience of children and celebrity guests - including bands - the programme mostly consisted of studio segments that were interwoven around regular children programming used during the show's over 2-hour timeslot. Studio segments frequently featured sketches by the presenters, competitions (including phone-ins), and other features.
Children's programming featured on SMTV Live consisted of two categories - cartoons and live-action programmes:
Presenters often conducted a variety of sketches on the programme during SMTV Live's broadcast. Most were performed by McPartlin and Donnelly, with assistance from Deeley, with many often being parodies of programmes airing between 1998 and 2003. The most prominent sketches used on the programme included:
Alongside sketches, the programme also featured a mixture of competitions - both phone-ins and studio-based - and other segments. Competition prizes differed from those offered by other Saturday morning children's programmes, by including more valuable items on offer including holidays. Amongst these segments that were used, the most notable included:
After the broadcast of SMTV Live, the show was followed by the broadcast of CD:UK (an abbreviation of CountDown United Kingdom). The programme took place within the same studio and with the same presenters, and operated on its own live-television format, featuring bands in the UK Singles Chart, music videos, and interviews with famous music stars. The programme continued after SMTV Live concluded, finally ending in April 2006.
SMTV Live was originally hosted by Byker Grove stars Ant & Dec alongside former fashion model Cat Deeley. In 2001, Ant & Dec left the show to present Saturday night talent show Pop Idol [8] and were replaced by Hollyoaks star James Redmond. [9] Redmond's stint at SMTV Live lasted just three months however, after show bosses decided he had not settled into the role. [10] [11] Deeley left the show in 2002 to focus on presenting BBC talent show Fame Academy , leaving SMTV with none of its original presenters. [12] For the remainder of its time on the air, it was hosted by a string of other people, including Steps members Ian "H" Watkins and Claire Richards, Big Brother winner Brian Dowling, Tess Daly all who presented from 2002 until all 4 eventually left by 2003. Comedian Des Clarke, New Zealand actress Shavaughn Ruakere and magician Stephen Mulhern presented the show for its final run when it was renamed SMTV:Gold in which it focused on showing highlights of the best bits of the past 5 years of the show, mainly due to declining ratings since the departure of the original presenters. [13]
The first month of the show was produced by former Top of the Pops producer Ric Blaxill. He was replaced by Steve Pinhay, while Phil Mount was brought in as producer of CD:UK.
From 1999 until 2003, SMTV Live was produced by David Staite.
In its first year the show was written by Richard Preddy and Gary Howe as well as Dean Wilkinson who stayed with it until the end. In September 1999, Ben Ward and Gez Foster were brought in from rival BBC show, Live & Kicking , to work on semi-scripted features including 'Chums'. After a steady erosion of Live & Kicking's initial popularity, SMTV overtook them in the ratings in October 1999 and never looked back.
Multi award-winning writer Dean Wilkinson was with the show throughout most of its run with Blaze Television's director of programmes Conor McAnally as its executive producer.
Falling viewing figures during 2003 led to the programme's axing at the end of the year. The programme marked the end of its five-year run with a series of SMTV Gold specials featuring highlights from the show and cartoons, presented by Stephen Mulhern and Des Clarke with different celebrity co-hosts each week. The Gold series ended on 20 December 2003 with the very last SMTV Live programme airing on Saturday 27 December 2003, recorded at the Riverside Studios in Hammersmith.
In August 2003, after two years of declining ratings following the departure of Ant & Dec, ITV announced the cancellation of SMTV Live, to be replaced by an as-yet untitled programme featuring "games, sketches, music and acquired programming, with increased interactive elements." [13] CD:UK, however, would remain for the time being. [13] Steven Andrew, ITV's controller of children's programmes, said: "After five fantastic years of SM:TV we all recognised it was time for a change. We have gone for a show that is all about fun with a team with bags of fresh ideas. I'm confident the new show, teamed with CD:UK, will be a compelling proposition for kids." [14] The replacement show in question was Ministry of Mayhem . [15]
On 27 December 2003, the grand finale which includes all the presenters singing a version of "My Way" by Frank Sinatra with the SMTV end credits rolling through the last chorus. And for the big finale, a special fireworks display with the words SMTV Live 1998-2003 written in it, and flashback voices from Ant, Dec and Cat. The screen fades and SMTV comes to an end after five and a half years. No copyright text was written after the credits.
At one point, the Gold episodes were broadcast on Saturday afternoons because of morning coverage of the 2003 Rugby World Cup.
The series spawned two video releases – the first, Chums, was released in 2000 by the Contender Entertainment Group and featured six full Chums episodes and a selection of other SMTV comedy segments. The VHS was released on DVD four years later, also by Contender.
A second release from Universal Pictures Video, The Best of SMTV Live So Far, was released in 2001, featuring specially produced links recorded shortly before Ant & Dec's departure and an extended compilation of sketches and segments.
SMTV Live was twice voted Best Entertainment Programme at the BAFTA Children's Film and Television Awards (2000 & 2002) and won BAFTA & British Comedy awards voted for by the public.
Ant & Dec won the Royal Television Society award for best presenter in 2001 for their work on the programme while Cat Deeley won the BAFTA for best children's presenter in the same year.
In 2014, it was in 5th place for Channel 5's 50 Greatest Kids TV Shows.
In 2001, it finished 27th place in a Channel 4 poll for the 100 Greatest Kids' TV Shows. [16]
On 4 September 2020, Ant & Dec revealed in an interview on BBC Radio 2 that they had filmed a one-off reunion episode with Deeley, in which the three of them would look back at SMTV's best bits. [17] The following week, Deeley told The Chris Moyles Show that they went back to where the original show was filmed and producers rebuilt the old set. [18] Later that month, Ant & Dec shared a teaser on Instagram. [19] ITV confirmed that the reunion show would air on 26 December 2020 as The Story of SM:TV Live. [6]
Anthony David McPartlin is an English television presenter, former singer, rapper and actor. He is best known for working alongside Declan Donnelly as part of the presenting duo Ant & Dec.
Ant & Dec are a British television presenting duo consisting of Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly from Newcastle upon Tyne. After meeting as child actors on CBBC's drama Byker Grove, they performed together as pop musicians PJ & Duncan, the names of their characters from the series.
Declan Joseph Oliver Donnelly is a British television presenter, television producer, former singer, rapper, comedian and actor. He is best known for working alongside Ant McPartlin as part of the presenting duo Ant & Dec.
The National Comedy Awards is an annual awards ceremony in the United Kingdom, celebrating notable comedians and entertainment performances of the previous year.
Catherine Elizabeth Deeley is an English television presenter. She began her career as a co-presenter of the ITV children's show SMTV Live (1998–2002), for which she won a BAFTA Children's Award, and its spin-off chart show CD:UK (1998–2005).
Live & Kicking is a British children's television series that originally aired on BBC1 from 2 October 1993 to 15 September 2001. It was the replacement for Going Live!, and took many of its features from it, such as phone-ins, games, comedy, competitions and the showing of cartoons. Once Live & Kicking had become established in series two, it reached its height in popularity during series four, when it was presented by Zoe Ball and Jamie Theakston; their final edition won a BAFTA award. After this, the programme's ratings dropped with the launch of SMTV Live on ITV and the show ended in 2001.
CD:UK, stylised as cd:uk, was a music television programme that ran in the United Kingdom from 29 August 1998 to 1 April 2006. Originally run in conjunction with SMTV Live, the programme aired on ITV as a rival to the BBC's Live & Kicking and was the replacement for The Chart Show, which had been airing on the network for nine years.
Andi Eleazu Peters is a British television presenter, producer, journalist and voice actor, currently employed by ITV and known for presenting Children's BBC, roles on breakfast TV shows Live & Kicking, GMTV, Good Morning Britain and Lorraine, and for hosting Dancing on Ice: Extra and The Big Reunion.
The Saturday Show is a British children's television series that aired on BBC One from 22 September 2001 to 3 September 2005. It was the replacement for Live & Kicking and contained a mix of audience participation, cartoons, games and gunge. The presenters were Dani Behr and Joe Mace, who presented the show from September 2001 - September 2002, then Fearne Cotton and Simon Grant presented from September 2002 - September 2003 and Grant presented until the programme finished in September 2005. Then in April 2004, Angelica Bell and Jake Humphrey joined Grant until to the end of the shows run.
Stephen Daniel Mulhern is an English television presenter, magician and comedian. He began his career at CITV presenting the children’s television shows Finger Tips (2001–2004) and Tricky TV (2005–2010). Mulhern went on to present various television shows for ITV, including Britain's Got More Talent (2007–2019), Animals Do the Funniest Things (2007–2011), This Morning's Hub (2011–2014), Catchphrase (2013–present), Big Star's Little Star (2013–2018), In for a Penny (2019–2024), Rolling In It (2020–2021), Deal or No Deal (2023–present) and Dancing on Ice (2024–present).
"The Stripper" is an instrumental composed by David Rose, recorded in 1958 and released four years later. It evinces a jazz influence with especially prominent trombone slides, and evokes the feel of music used to accompany striptease artists.
Slap Bang with Ant & Dec was a short lived television programme that was shown in the United Kingdom on ITV in 2001.
Saturday Nick TV was a weekend morning show aired on Nickelodeon Australia from 10am to 2pm on Saturday. It was produced by Burberry Productions and shot in Melbourne. It was started with the help of Britney Spears.
This Is Your Life is a British biographical television documentary, based on the 1952 American series. In the show, the host surprises a special guest, before taking them through their life with the assistance of the 'big red book'. Both celebrities and non-celebrities have been featured on the show. The show was originally broadcast live, and over its run it has alternated between being broadcast on the BBC and on ITV.
Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway is a British television variety show, presented by Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly, which was broadcast on ITV from 8 June 2002 to 21 March 2009, and again after a 4-year hiatus from 23 February 2013 to 13 April 2024, after which the show went on another hiatus for a undisclosed amount of time. The show is expected to return at some point in the future as it was confirmed during the hiatus announcement on the duo's instagram post
Dean Earle Wilkinson is an English comedy writer. He wrote the multi-award-winning SMTV Live and Chums for Ant & Dec, and scripted the Sony console game series LittleBigPlanet.
The twelfth series of British talent competition programme Britain's Got Talent was broadcast on ITV, from 14 April to 3 June 2018. For this series, the live episodes were broadcast from Hammersmith Apollo, and presented by Dec Donnelly only; while Ant McPartlin suspended his TV commitments on 19 March 2018, he still appeared in the audition episodes as these had already been filmed in January and February earlier that year. Compared to previous years, this series featured a higher number of participants for the judges to select semi-finalists from, not counting those who received the Golden Buzzer, and saw the return of the Judges' Vote to the show's format.
Britain's Got Talent: The Champions is a spin-off of Britain's Got Talent, a British talent competition series, which began broadcasting on ITV on 31 August 2019. The programme functions similar to BGT, but features a selection of participants - winners, finalists and other notable acts - from across the history of both Britain's Got Talent and the Got Talent franchise, who compete in a series of preliminaries to secure a place in the grand final and a chance to win a large prize and to be crowned Britain's champion within Got Talent.
This is a timeline of children's programming on the British ITV network and ITV Digital Channels. The timeline starts in 1980 when ITV launched its first branding for children's programming, although programmes for children had been broadcast on ITV from the earliest years of the network.
Stars including Tess Daly and Stephen Mulhern then took over until it came to an end in 2003, where it was replaced by Holly Willoughby's series Ministry of Mayhem.