Soapstar Superstar
Soapstar Superstar | |
---|---|
Presented by | Ben Shephard Fern Britton (2006) Zoë Ball (2007) |
Starring | Soap stars from the UK and Australia |
Judges | Billy Sammeth (2006-07) Chris Cowey (2006-07) Cilla Black (2006) Martine McCutcheon (2007) Michael Ball (2007) David Gest (2007) |
Voices of | Peter Dickson (2006-07) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Production | |
Producer | ITV Productions |
Running time | 60 to 90 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ITV, STV, UTV |
Release | 6 January 2006 – 13 January 2007 |
Soapstar Superstar is a British reality singing competition produced by Granada Productions (later branded ITV Studios) which first aired on British television station ITV in 2006. In the competition, ten soap opera actors perform in front of a celebrity panel, which included Cilla Black, Billy Sammeth and Chris Cowey. The contestants are judged on their singing ability, in a format similar to Pop Idol and The X Factor. However in this show, the audience decided which song contestants would sing in the next round. The two with the fewest votes were then put up for the public vote, and the one with the fewest votes from that round was eliminated from the competition. However, the eliminated contestant did get the honour of being part of the judging panel for that show and they got to save one contestant and decide which song they got to sing. Series one was presented by Fern Britton and Ben Shephard, with the ITV2 coverage presented by Jayne Middlemiss and Duncan James. The Voice Over was provided by Peter Dickson.
The second season began on Friday 5 January 2007. Zoë Ball became the new host on ITV, with the ITV2 show being fronted by Mark Durden-Smith, Sheree Murphy and Rob Deering. Billy Sammeth and Chris Cowey returned as judges. However, Martine McCutcheon and Michael Ball replaced Cilla Black as judges. David Gest was also a guest judge for one episode. This was due to Michael Ball coaching the stars on how to sing songs from musicals. The Vocal Academy based in Manchester supplied the vocal coaching for the stars. The second season coaches were Jo Price, Jerone and Mandy.
On 25 May 2007, ITV confirmed that the show would not be returning for a third series in 2008, citing that it had reached "natural conclusion".[1] It has therefore been axed.
Judges and presenters
Presenters
Years | Presenter | Show |
---|---|---|
2006 | Fern Britton | Main Show |
2006 | Ben Shephard | Main Show |
2007 | Zoë Ball | Main Show |
2006 | Jayne Middlemiss | Soapstar Superstar: Extra Tracks |
2006 | Duncan James | Soapstar Superstar: Extra Tracks |
2007 | Mark Durden-Smith | "Soapstar Superstar: Bonus Tracks " |
2007 | Sheree Murphy | Soapstar Superstar: Bonus Tracks |
2007 | Rob Deering | Soapstar Superstar: Bonus Tracks |
Judges
Years | Judge |
---|---|
2006 | Cilla Black |
2006-2007 | Billy Sammeth |
2006-2007 | Chris Cowey |
2007 | Martine McCutcheon |
2007 | Michael Ball |
2007 | David Gest |
Series 1
The actors who took part were:
Place | Actor | Character | Soap |
---|---|---|---|
1st | Richard Fleeshman | Craig Harris | Coronation Street |
2nd | Andy Whyment | Kirk Sutherland | Coronation Street |
3rd | Lucy Pargeter | Helen Raven & Chastity Dingle | Crossroads & Emmerdale |
4th | Roxanne Pallett | Jo Stiles | Emmerdale |
5th | Lee Otway | David "Bombhead" Burke | Hollyoaks |
6th | Wendi Peters | Cilla Battersby-Brown | Coronation Street |
7th | Shobna Gulati | Ameena & Sunita Alahan | Eastenders & Coronation Street |
8th | Nicholas Bailey | Lee Middleton & Anthony Trueman | Coronation Street & EastEnders |
9th | Michael Greco | Beppe di Marco | EastEnders |
10th | Sammy Winward | Katie Sugden | Emmerdale |
Series 2
The actors who took part were:
Place | Actor | Character | Soap |
---|---|---|---|
1st | Antony Cotton | Sean Tully | Coronation Street |
2nd | Hayley Tamaddon | Delilah Dingle | Emmerdale |
3rd | Mark Furze | Ric Dalby | Home & Away |
4th | Tupele Dorgu | Annette Poole & Kelly Crabtree | Doctors & Coronation Street |
5th | Gemma Atkinson | Lisa Hunter | Hollyoaks |
6th | Alan Fletcher | Karl Kennedy | Neighbours |
7th | Leon Lopez | Jerome Johnson | Brookside |
8th | Matthew Wolfenden | David Metcalfe | Emmerdale |
9th | Verity Rushworth | Donna Windsor-Dingle | Emmerdale |
10th | Jane Danson | Leanne Battersby | Coronation Street |
11th | Elaine Lordan | Lynne Hobbs | EastEnders |
Note: Leon Lopez was a replacement for Ben Freeman, who was banned by ITV because he'd been suspended from Emmerdale as he had a court case abroad, and so he was not in the country.[2]
Controversy
On 18 October 2007, after an in-depth investigation of ITV phone-in shows by Deloitte, it was revealed that phone-in votes for songs and even votes for contestants to go through to the next round had been manipulated by the programme makers. This involved some 20% of the viewers' votes for songs being ignored, and Jane Danson and Tupele Dorgu being put up for eviction in the first episode when the bottom two contestants by votes were actually Verity Rushworth and Leon Lopez.[3]
As a result, ITV aired an Ofcom summary of findings announcement just before the final of the second series of Britain's Got Talent on 31 May 2008. It was shown again on 8 June 2008 before that night's episode of Coronation Street.
International versions
The Polish edition of Soapstar Superstar, Jak Oni Śpiewają (How They Sing) aired from 3 March until 2 June 2007. It was won by Agnieszka Włodarczyk (Weronika Potoczny from "Plebania"). The second season ran from 8 September until 15 December 2007. The winner was Joanna Liszowska (Dorota Lewkiewicz from "Na dobre i na złe"). The third season aired from 8 March until 31 May 2008. It was won by Krzysztof Respondek (Michał Jeleń from "Barwy Szczęścia"). The fourth season ran from 6 September until 6 December 2008.The winner was Artur Chamski. The 5th season won Laura Samojłowicz. The 6th season won Krzysztof Respondek again (It was All Star Season).
In Belgium, the third season of Steracteur Sterartiest is currently airing on één, all editions were hosted by Katja Retsin and Thomas Vanderveken.
References
- ^ Soapstar Superstar axed[dead link ]
- ^ Published Wednesday, Dec 13 2006, 14:40 GMT (13 December 2006). "Leon Lopez for 'Soapstar Superstar' - TV News". Digital Spy. Retrieved 13 August 2013.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "ITV programmes named and shamed". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 13 August 2013.