Saturday, 7 November 2015
270 Multi-Coloured Swap Shop
First watched : 2 October 1976
Although I don't regard this show with special affection it does seem like another milestone emerging through the murk of childhood memory. I had not long started secondary school but there's a more particular memory associated with the programme. During the summer my mum had become concerned at a couple of speech defects I apparently had. One was pronouncing r's as w's Roy Jenkins-style ; the other th's as f's. The latter could be corrected by a few sessions with a speech therapist but the former was caused by my tongue being too firmly anchored and I had to have a simple operation to free it up a bit requiring general anaesthetic at Rochdale Infirmary.
Genome has confirmed the date of the operation to be Friday 8th October 1976. I know this because my mum said I would have to stay in all day on the Saturday after having anaesthetic and my consolation - along with my first packet of Top Trumps ( Locomotives which I still have ) - was being able to watch the whole of the exciting new programme which I'd caught the tail end of the week before.
Before Multi-Coloured Swap Shop Saturday mornings were a graveyard slot largely occupied by repeated cartoons and vintage comedy films ( Laurel and Hardy, Chaplin , Abbott and Costello etc ). The cartoons were incorporated into the Swap Shop ( the "Multi-Coloured" was dropped after a while ) format but with colour TV now the norm ( not for us yet ), the old films largely disappeared from BBC1 from this point.
It's hard to recall what exactly captivated me on first viewing the show. Perhaps it was just the sheer length of the show; it seemed like a major triumph that a children's show had been given most of the morning rather than being squeezed in between Nai Zindagi and the cricket. I would also have been pleased to see a familiar face from Top of the Pops at the helm.
This of course was the beginning of Noel Edmunds's rise to the top of the telly tree. For all the brickbats thrown his way over the years, the abstemious ultra-professional took command of an unprecedented three-hour kids' show completely live and reliant on technology working and children behaving themselves. And he nailed it completely ; Ant and Dec acknowledge him as the Godfather of their art.
His three main co-presenters are all still working in TV today, another reason why it doesn't seem too long ago. I suppose Keith Chegwin , a mildly successful child actor who'd been in Polanski's Macbeth , took his cues from the Play School presenters, but they were in a studio. He was out in the rain and cold, bringing his manic enthusiasm from some car park in the provinces where kids gathered to swap their Action Man for a Mastermind game and his style seemed astonishingly fresh. Of course he later married Maggie Philbin who joined the programme from series 3 onwards. Making up the quartet was Newsround presenter John Craven, basically doing an extended version of his weekday slot, though he was allowed to show a lighter side in his banter with Noel.
The first show had repeats of Hong Kong Phooey and Land of the Dinosaurs, pop guests Harpo and Flintlock ( not exactly a great start ) , a cookery slot with Delia Smith, star guest Elisabeth Sladen and of course the swap board allowing viewers to phone in with their offers though you had to be pretty quick to respond.
There was also an appearance by 15 year old Peter Gardiner who collected light bulbs, an item which came to be seen as typical of the show. One lad infamously appeared accompanied by his collection of World War 2 artifacts with a Nazi flag draped over the couch behind him. There was a perception that Swap Shop favoured the same sort of middle class kids that appeared on Ask The Family. On the other hand you could view it as giving the geek a chance to shine.
Inevitably with the magazine format there'd be items that were less absorbing than others and I remember that, even while watching that second edition, my interest started to flag before the end. I don't know if it was on that particular episode but early on they had patrician newsreader Richard Baker on the couch discussing what piece of classical music would best suit a small film of a kitten playing and I remember thinking what child is going to find this entertaining ?
So after that I rarely watched the whole show and it wasn't long before I found something much better to do on Saturday mornings. By co-incidence that ended ( something I've never fully come to terms with ) pretty much at the same time Swap Shop did ( March 1982 ) when Noel moved into adult TV with The Late Late Breakfast Show . Except it didn't really end there. The remaining trio were all re-engaged to work on successor show Saturday Superstore with Edmunds-wannabe Mike Read ( the two men are not exactly bosom buddies ). The swapping element was ditched but otherwise it was pretty much the same show and the formula has endured through the decades.
I'm aware I've ignored the elephant in the room that usually crops up whenever Swap Shop is discussed but for me, apart from length and time slot, that show had little in common with it and it was more or less a coincidence they emerged together.
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