Mastermind (British game show)
Mastermind | |
---|---|
Also known as | Supermind Mastermind Cup Final/Sport Mastermind International Mastermind Champions/Champion of Champions Junior Mastermind |
Genre | Game show |
Created by | Bill Wright |
Presented by | Magnus Magnusson (1972–1997) Peter Snow (1998–2000) Clive Anderson (2001–2002) John Humphrys (2003–) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 45 (Regular) 3 (Supermind) 4 (Cup Final/Sport) 5 (International) 2 (Champions/Champion of Champions) 5 (Junior) |
No. of episodes | 978 (Regular) 3 (Supermind) 13 (Cup Final/Sport) 5 (International) 8 (Champions/Champion of Champions) 29 (Junior) |
Production | |
Production location | dock10 studios |
Running time | 30 minutes (Regular) 60 minutes (Series finals) |
Production companies | BBC (1972–2015) BBC Studios (2015–2019) Hat Trick Productions and Hindsight Productions (2019–present) |
Original release | |
Network | BBC1 (1972–1997) BBC Radio 4 (1998–2000) Discovery Channel (2001–2002) BBC Two (2003–) |
Release | 11 September 1972 present | –
Related | |
Celebrity Mastermind Disney Q Family Mastermind |
Mastermind is a British television game show for the BBC. Its creator, Bill Wright, drew inspiration from his experiences of being interrogated by the Gestapo during World War II.[1] The show featured an intimidating setting and challenging questions. Four and in later contests five or six contestants face two rounds, one on a specialised subject of the contestant's choice, the other a general knowledge round.
Mastermind's theme music is "Approaching Menace" by the British composer Neil Richardson. The quiz programme originated and was recorded in Manchester at studios such as New Broadcasting House and Granada Studios, before moving to dock10 studios in 2011. The show relocated to Belfast for the 2019–2020 series.
Format
For the first round, each contestant in turn is given a set length of time, usually two minutes (one minute and a half in semi-finals, similarly hereinafter), to answer questions on a specialised subject which he or she has chosen. The contestant scores one point for each correct answer and may pass as often as desired. If the contestant responds incorrectly, the questioner gives the correct answer before continuing to the next question; answers to passed questions are read out only after time has expired.
If time runs out while a question is being read, the questioner will finish it and give the contestant a few seconds to answer. This convention has led to the programme's catchphrase, "I've started so I'll finish." If a question has been read out in full when time expires, but the contestants have not yet given an answer, they are allowed a few seconds to do so. The contestant's score is displayed on screen; beginning with the 2016–17 series, the border around the score gradually turns blue (black in the 2019–20 series) during the final 10 seconds.
During the second round, each contestant in turn answers a series of general knowledge questions. The rules from the first round apply, except that the time limit is extended (usually two and a half minutes since 2010, or two minutes in semi-finals and up until 2010). Originally, the contestants played in the same order as in the first round; currently, they play in ascending order by first-round score.
The winner is the contestant with the highest score after two rounds. Ties are broken in favour of the contestant with the fewest total passes. If contestants have the same score and number of passes, a five-question tiebreaker is played. One contestant at a time is asked the same set of questions, with the others exiting the studio so that they cannot hear the results. The contestant who gives the most correct answers is the winner.
The winners advance to the next round, for which they must choose a different specialised subject. The winner of the final of the BBC version is declared "Mastermind" for that year and is the only contestant to receive a prize, in the form of a cut-glass engraved bowl. During Magnus Magnusson's tenure as presenter, the trophy was specially manufactured by Caithness Glass. A special guest would always be invited to present the trophy to the winner, with the exception of the final edition in 1997, in which Magnusson presented it himself.
Versions
Mastermind first aired on BBC1 in 1972 and lasted until 1997. It was presented by Magnus Magnusson. It was originally broadcast late on a Sunday night and was not expected to receive a huge audience. In 1973 it was moved to a prime-time slot as an emergency replacement for a Leslie Phillips sitcom, Casanova '73, which had been moved to a later time following complaints about its risqué content. The quiz subsequently became one of the most-watched shows on British television. Magnusson's catchphrase "I've started so I'll finish" was also the title of his history of the show.[2] The original series was filmed in a variety of venues, often academic and ecclesiastical buildings. The last programme of the original series was filmed at St Magnus Cathedral in Orkney.[3]
The original series also spawned many specials. Supermind was an annual playoff between either the first four champions of Mastermind or champions of other TV quiz shows (including Mastermind) from 1976 or 1977. It ran for three years between 1976 and 1978. Cup Final Mastermind was an annual playoff between experts and supporters from the FA Cup Finalist teams they are supporting. It ran from 1978 and 1980. Mastermind International was an annual playoff between winners of various international versions of the show (or the nearest equivalents in some countries) and ran for five years between 1979 and 1983. Mastermind Champions was a 1982 3-part competition where the first ten champions of the show compete to become the Mastermind Champion of Champions.
After being dropped by BBC1 in 1997, it was picked up by BBC Radio 4 and ran between 1998 and 2000. It was hosted by Peter Snow.
Mastermind then moved to Discovery Channel hosted by Clive Anderson in 2001. With Discovery Channel having commercials, this shortened the amount of time available for the answering of questions and lasted just one series. This was also the first to go 'interactive'. By using the red button viewers could play the general knowledge section throughout the series. These questions had been written specifically to afford both standard and multiple-choice format in presentation. There was a one-off competition between the four highest scoring viewers.
A new BBC Two version premiered in 2003, hosted by John Humphrys. Whereas the original series kept talk to a minimum, asking contestants only their name, occupation and specialist subject, at first the new run included some conversational elements with contestants at the start of the General Knowledge round (normally about the contestant's specialist subject), although these have been dropped since the 2011 series. It is also distinguished from the original BBC TV series by the fact that many more contestants' specialist subjects come from popular culture, which probably reflects cultural changes in the British middle classes in recent years. Unlike the original version, this version is studio-based. It is now made in MediaCity in Salford (although, due to asbestos being found at Granada's Manchester studios, parts of the 2006 series were filmed at Yorkshire Television's Leeds studios). It came back in 2008 as a 10-part competition this time entitled Sport Mastermind. Mastermind Champion of Champions was a 2010 5-part competition that featured previous Mastermind champions.
Junior Mastermind, also hosted by John Humphrys, is a children's version of the quiz programme and has the same format, the difference being that the contestants are only ten and eleven years old. The programme aired across six nights on BBC One, ending on 4 September 2004. The winner was Daniel Parker, whose specialist subjects were the Volkswagen Beetle (heat) and James Bond villains (final). There was another series in 2005 (subjects included Black Holes and the Star Wars trilogy), which was won by Robin Geddes, whose specialist subjects were The Vicar of Dibley and A Series of Unfortunate Events, with a third series airing in 2006, won by Domnhall Ryan, and featuring subjects such as Harry Potter and Chelsea Football Club, and a fourth series in 2007 won by Robert Stutter and a fifth series later that year won by David Verghese. The Junior version was cancelled after the two 2007 series.
In the United States, the game show 2 Minute Drill on sports network ESPN had its roots in Mastermind. Contestants faced questions fired at them by a panel of four sports and entertainment celebrities for two minutes; like Mastermind, there were two rounds of questions, but the first round had each panellist's questions representing a different sports category pertaining to their area of expertise, and the second round had no categories and the contestant could not control who asked the questions; they were fired at random. The contestant with the highest score after two rounds would win a cash prize, and would have a chance to double those winnings by correctly answering the "Question of Great Significance," as host Kenny Mayne called it, from a speciality category chosen by the winner (usually a particular athlete or sports team from the past). In each series, winners advanced in a bracket-style playoff format, with cash prizes increasing from $5,000 in the first round to $50,000 (doubling to $100,000 by answering the final question) in the final round. Prizes such as trips to the Super Bowl or ESPY Awards were also given, known as "ESPN Experiences". The show had three series over a 15-month period, from September 2000 to December 2001. Like Mastermind, 2 Minute Drill featured a leather chair, dramatic lighting and sound effects. Willy Gibson of Columbus, Ohio, was the grand champion of the first two series; he was defeated in the second round of the third and final series.[citation needed]
Records
Highest scores
The highest overall Mastermind score is 41 points, set by Kevin Ashman in 1995, his specialist subject being "The Life of Martin Luther King". Ashman would go on to become six times IQA world champion. In addition he holds the record for the highest ever score on Brain of Britain and has been a member of the Eggheads since that series debut.
In August 2010 during an edition of Mastermind Champion of Champions, the 2010 series champion, Jesse Honey, scored 23 out of 23 on "Flags of the World" in the specialist subject round, an all-time record. He finished as runner-up with a combined score of 36 points, losing out to Pat Gibson by having two more passes. Honey's score was equalled by Iwan Thomas, who scored a record 23 (in two-and-half minutes) in the general knowledge round in 2010.
On Junior Mastermind in February 2007, an 11-year-old schoolboy called Callum scored 19 points on his specialist subject, cricketer Andrew Flintoff. However, he did not win, being beaten by one point after achieving a final score of 32.
Lowest scores
The current record for the lowest score in the specialist subject round is jointly held by Simon Curtis and Steve Ferry, who both only scored 1 point when answering questions on the life & films of Jim Carrey and the Thirty Years' War respectively.
The current record for the overall lowest score is 3 points, set on 21 December 2016 in a Celebrity edition by parasport athlete Kadeena Cox, scoring all 3 points on her specialist subject of Arsenal F.C. She is currently the only ever contestant to score no points in a round.
The previous record for the overall lowest score is 5 points, set on 29 January 2010 by software analyst Kajen Thuraaisingham, scoring 4 points for his specialist subject of the life of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.[4] Previous to this, the lowest attained score had been 7 points which was first set by Colin Kidd in 2005. His specialist subject was "The World Chess Championships". The score was equalled in November 2009 by gas fitter Michael Burton; he only scored 2 for his specialist subject, Angels.[5]
Champions
Regular
The following is a list of Mastermind champions since 1972.[6]
Year | Winner | Specialist subjects | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Heat | Semi-final | Final | ||
1972 | Nancy Wilkinson | French literature | European antiques | History of music, 1550–1900 |
1973 | Patricia Owen | Grand Opera | Byzantine art | Grand Opera |
1974 | Elizabeth Horrocks | Shakespeare's plays | Works of J.R.R. Tolkien | Works of Dorothy L. Sayers |
1975 | John Hart | Athens 500–400 BC | Rome 100–1 BC | Athens 500–400 BC |
1976 | Roger Pritchard | Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington | 20th century British warships | Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington |
1977 | Sir David Hunt | World War II British campaigns in North Africa | World War II Allied campaign in Italy | Roman Revolution 60–14 BC |
1978 | Rosemary James | Roman and Greek mythology | Works of Frederick Rolfe | Roman and Greek mythology |
1979 | Philip Jenkins | Christianity AD 30–150 | Vikings in Scotland and Ireland 800–1150 AD | History of Wales 400–1100 |
1980 | Fred Housego | King Henry II | Westminster Abbey | Tower of London |
1981 | Leslie Grout | St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle | Burial Grounds of London | St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle |
1983 | Chris Hughes | British Steam Locomotives, 1900–63 | Flashman novels | British Steam Locomotives, 1900–63 |
1984 | Margaret Harris | Cecil Rhodes | Postal history of Southern Africa | Cecil Rhodes |
1985 | Ian Meadows | English Civil War | History of astronomy to 1700 | English Civil War |
1986 | Jennifer Keaveney | Elizabeth Gaskell | E. Nesbit | Elizabeth Gaskell |
1987 | Jeremy Bradbrooke | Franco-Prussian War | War of 1812 | Crimean War |
1988 | David Beamish | Nancy Astor | British Royal Family, 1714–1910 | Nancy Astor |
1989 | Mary Elizabeth Raw | King Charles I | Prince Albert | Charles I |
1990 | David Edwards | Michael Faraday | Benjamin Thompson | James Clerk Maxwell |
1991 | Stephen Allen | King Henry VII | Dartmoor and its environs | Francis Drake |
1992 | Steve Williams | Surrealist art 1918–39 | Peter I of Russia | Pre-Socratic philosophy |
1993 | Gavin Fuller | Doctor Who | The medieval castle in the British Isles | The Crusades |
1994 | George Davidson | English coinage, 1066–1662 | History of chemistry, 1500–1870 | John Dalton |
1995 | Kevin Ashman | Martin Luther King, Jr. | History of the Western film | Zulu War |
1996 | Richard Sturch | Charles Williams | Frederick III, German Emperor | Operas of Gilbert and Sullivan |
1997 | Anne Ashurst | Frances Carr, Countess of Somerset | Regency novels of Georgette Heyer | Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland |
1998 | Robert Gibson | Solar System | King Charles II | Robert the Bruce |
1999 | Christopher Carter | Birds of Europe | Tudor dynasty | British customs and traditions |
2000 | Stephen Follows | The Life and Operas of Benjamin Britten | The Poetry and Plays of T.S. Eliot | The Life and Operas of Leoš Janáček |
2001 | Michael Penrice | Professional boxing to 1980 | (no semi-final) | English history 1603–1714 |
2003 | Andy Page | Academy Awards | Gilbert and Sullivan | Golfing majors since 1970 |
2004 | Shaun Wallace | UEFA Champions League finals since 1970 | England at the UEFA European Football Championship | FA Cup Finals since 1970 |
2005 | Patrick Gibson | The films of Quentin Tarantino | The Culture novels by Iain M. Banks | Father Ted |
2006 | Geoff Thomas | Édith Piaf | William Joyce | Margaret Mitchell and Gone with the Wind |
2008 | David Clark | Henry Ford | George, The Prince Regent | History of London Bridge |
2009 | Nancy Dickmann | Amelia Peabody novels of Elizabeth Peters | Life and films of Fritz Lang | Lewis and Clark Expedition |
2010 | Jesse Honey | London Borough of Wandsworth | The life and work of Antoni Gaudí | Liverpool Cathedral (Anglican) |
2011 | Ian Bayley | Romanov Dynasty | Life and Work of Jean Sibelius | Paintings in the National Gallery |
2012 | Gary Grant | Seven Wonders of the Ancient World | Monaco Grand Prix | Cetaceans |
2013 | Aidan McQuade | Michael Collins | The novels of Dennis Lehane | Abraham Lincoln |
2014 | Clive Dunning | Blackadder | Life and work of John Lennon | Life and poetry of Philip Larkin |
2015 | Marianne Fairthorne | Empress Livia | Çatalhöyük | Caterina Sforza |
2016 | Alan Heath | I, Claudius | British Summer Olympic Champions | Thunderbirds |
2017 | Isabelle Heward | The Life and Films of Rita Hayworth | The Daughters of George III | The Life and Films of Billy Wilder |
2018 | Brian Chesney | The Life of Harold Wilson | The Giordano Bruno novels of SJ Parris | The Revolt of the Netherlands 1568–1609 |
2019 | Judith Lewis | The Life of C. S. Lewis | The Lord Peter Wimsey novels of Dorothy L. Sayers | The Fortunes of War series by Olivia Manning |
2020 | Dave McBryan | Otis Redding | Olympic Fencing | The View Askewniverse Films of Kevin Smith |
Supermind
Information needed
Cup Final/Sport
Information needed
International
Year | Winner | Country | Specialist Subject |
---|---|---|---|
1979 | John Mulcahy | Ireland | Irish History (1916–22) |
1980 | Rachel "Ray" Stewart | Australia | Life and times of Julius Caesar |
1981 | David Harvey | New Zealand | The Lord of the Rings trilogy |
1982 | Leslie Grout | Great Britain | Windsor Castle |
1983 | Christopher Hughes | Great Britain | British Steam Locomotives |
Champions/Champion of Champions
Mastermind Champion of Champions was televised Monday to Friday at 7:30 pm on BBC Two in the first full week of August 2010. It featured the winners of previous series of Mastermind.
Year | Winner | Specialist subjects | |
---|---|---|---|
Heat | Final | ||
1982 | Sir David Hunt | History of Cyprus | Alexander the Great |
2010 | Pat Gibson | Pixar animated films | Great mathematicians |
Junior
Year | Winner | Specialist subjects | |
---|---|---|---|
Heat | Final | ||
2004 | Daniel Parker | Tudor dynasty | James Bond villains |
2005 | Robin Geddes | The Vicar of Dibley | A Series of Unfortunate Events |
2006 | Domhnall Ryan | Supermarine Spitfire | Animals of the African plains |
2007 | Robert Stutter | Madame Tussaud | Tintin |
2007 | David Verghese | Jurassic Park films | George Lucas |
Chair
Contestants sit in a black leather chair, lit by a solitary spotlight in an otherwise dark studio. The inspiration for this was the interrogations faced by the show's creator, Bill Wright, as a prisoner of war in World War II.[3] The original black chair was given to Magnus Magnusson as a souvenir when he retired from the show.[7] On one occasion the original black chair was stolen by a group of students during the BBC crew's evening meal break, and held to ransom to raise money for charity. This prank delayed the recording of two programmes. The BBC subsequently commissioned a duplicate chair which was kept locked in the scenery truck at every recording to thwart similar ransom demands. The duplicate chair was never used on air, except in the title sequence, which was recorded in London while the main chair was on the road. Its current whereabouts are unknown.[citation needed]
The current chair is an Eames Soft Pad Lounge Chair designed by Charles and Ray Eames in 1969.[citation needed]
Parodies
The programme has been the target for many television spoofs, including a Two Ronnies sketch written by David Renwick (a less polished version had previously appeared in the Radio 4 series "The Burkiss Way") in 1980, featuring Ronnie Barker as Magnus Magnusson and Ronnie Corbett as a contestant named Charlie Smithers, whose specialist subject was "answering the question before last". A similar sketch featured Monty Python alumni Michael Palin as Magnússon and Terry Gilliam as a contestant whose speciality was "questions to which the answer is two."
The 2003-onwards version has been spoofed by the Dead Ringers team, with Jon Culshaw playing John Humphrys. In one send-up, which appeared on the television edition of Dead Ringers, the contestant offered to answer questions on Mary Queen of Scots, but when an answer was given, John Humphrys was shown saying "Yes, but you sexed that answer up". The sketch was a reference to the controversy caused by the aftermath of the Iraq War. One episode included Mastermind: The Opera.[8]
Another spoof was featured in Armando Iannucci's 2004: The Stupid Version, where a contestant's specialist subject was "The television series Thunderbirds and Lady Penelope's Cockney chauffeur".
Also in 2004, Johnny Vaughan's BBC Three show Live at Johnny's featured a version called Mastermind Rejects—the premise being that the specialist subjects were too ludicrously obscure even for Mastermind. In the final show of the series, Magnus Magnusson took over as the quizmaster—it was the last time he would utter the catchphrase "I've started so I'll finish" on any form of Mastermind. The specialist subject was The History of the Home Video Recorder, 1972 to 1984.[citation needed]
On their 2005 Christmas Special, comedy duo French & Saunders parodied the show with Jennifer Saunders playing Abigail Wilson, a pensioner whose special subject is ceramic teapots. She passes on all but one question, which she answers incorrectly anyway.
In 2005, the show was spoofed on BBC Radio 4's The Now Show where the specialist subject was "Britishness", relating to the proposed test immigrants may have to take, to prove they can fit in with British society.
In 1974, Morecambe and Wise performed a sketch based on Mastermind, which featured Magnússon and the black chair. The format was different, however, with Wise, then Morecambe, being asked 10 questions each.
In 1975 The Goodies featured Mastermind in the episode "Frankenfido" when a dog (Bill Oddie in a suit) appeared on the show and managed to correctly answer questions asked of it as they all had answers that could be represented by growls, such as 'bark' and 'ruff'.
In the late 1970s, Noel Edmonds' radio Sunday lunchtime show used to feature a send-up called "Musty Mind" where a phone-in contestant would be asked ludicrous questions on a parody of a serious subject, such as the "Toad Racing" or, on another occasion, "The Cultural and Social History of Rockall" – Rockall being a bald lump of uninhabited rock in the eastern Atlantic.
Benny Hill parodied Mastermind on The Benny Hill Show on at least two separate occasions. In one of the parodies the show was called "Masterbrane". In each, Benny played the role of Magnússon while Jackie Wright played the hapless contestant.
Spitting Image used the Mastermind format in a sketch where a Magnus Magnusson puppet asked questions of a Jeffrey Archer puppet whose specialist subject was himself. The twist was that Archer's puppet, being incapable of answering questions about himself without exaggeration or evasion, ends the round with zero points.
The BBC's satirical current affairs quiz show Have I Got News for You has parodied the show several times, by turning the lights down – except for spotlights above select chairs – and playing the theme tune, before subjecting at least one of the panel to some rigorous questioning. The first occasion happened on the 1995 video special, where only regular captains Ian Hislop and Paul Merton were asked questions; Hislop on "The Life and Lies of Jeffrey Archer", and Merton on "Absurd Newspaper Stories Between 1990 and 1995". The second occasion was in 1998, when Magnus Magnusson appeared as a guest. All four panellists were asked questions on this occasion.
In his early routines Bill Bailey would often parody the Mastermind music, finding it very sinister. He would then play the music on keyboard with an over-the-top hellish sounding climax. In the last episode of "Is It Bill Bailey?" he followed on from this performance with a sketch where he was a contestant on Mastermind, and it was implied that his specialist subject was the microwave cooking instructions on supermarket ready meals. As the camera panned out it became evident that the chair itself was on a platter, slowly turning in a giant microwave oven.
The Channel 4 Prank programme Balls of Steel parodied Mastermind with its sketch The Alex Zane Cleverness Game, in which experts were quizzed on their specialist subjects (included were "The Life of Anne Frank", "Eurovision Song Contest Winners", and "Hercule Poirot"). Unbeknown to the experts, the show was a hoax, and incorrect answers were included to frustrate them whenever they supplied the correct answer.
The BBC Three comedy show Snuff Box had the two main characters Rich Fulcher and Matt Berry both appear on Mastermind. Berry chose his specialist subject as Alton Towers and only scored 3 points before a blackout, in which he apparently shoots the host after being told to sit down. Fulcher chooses 'Anglo-Saxon architecture', though displays no knowledge of the subject and makes up answers such as 'Toto from The Wizard Of Oz' and 'Elvis', and scoring no points.
In 2011, The Chris Moyles Show on BBC Radio 1 parodied the show with a feature called 'Disastermind'. Using the back-up chair from the Mastermind studio, each team member chose a specialist subject, only to have them swapped before being questioned in the chair on their randomly selected subject and general knowledge. The specialist subjects were The World of Glee; UK Dialling Codes; U2; Husky Dogs and Back to the Future.
In 2013, Mastermind featured on the ITV show Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, as part of an Ant Vs Dec segment where Ant and Dec had to answer questions based around a school challenge they took part in. Ant won.
Transmissions
Regular
|
Supermind
Cup Final/Sport
International
Champions/Champion of Champions
Junior
Specials
|
International versions
Currently in production No longer in production
Region or country | Local name | Network | Host | Broadcast |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | Mastermind | ABC | Huw Evans | 1978–1984 |
Mastermind | SBS | Jennifer Byrne | 2019–present | |
India | Mastermind India | BBC India | Siddhartha Basu | 1998–2002 |
Disney Q Family Mastermind | Disney Channel India | Benjamin Gilani | 2013 | |
Ireland | Mastermind | TV3 | Nora Owen | 2011 |
Israel | מקבילית המוחות Mastermind | Channel 1 | Yitzhak Shimoni Michael Dak |
1990–1996 |
Kazakhstan | Зерде Zerde |
Khabar | Bopesh Zhandayev | 2018–2019 |
New Zealand | Mastermind | TVNZ 1 | Peter Sinclair Peter Williams |
1976–1991 2016 |
Russia | Властелин ума Vlastelin uma |
Bibigon | Andrey Urgant | 2007 |
Гений Genij |
Russia-K | Alexei Begak | 2017–2018 | |
Turkey | Mastermind Türkiye | NTV | Altan Erkekli | 2013 |
United States | 2 Minute Drill | ESPN | Kenny Mayne | 2000–2001 |
Wales | Mastermind Cymru | S4C | Betsan Powys | 2006–2007 2008–2009 (junior version) |
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- ^ "Supermind – BBC One London – 28 December 1976". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Supermind – BBC One London – 3 January 1978". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Cup Final Grandstand – BBC One London – 6 May 1978". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Cup Final Grandstand – BBC One London – 12 May 1979". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Cup Final Grandstand – BBC One London – 10 May 1980". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Mastermind International – BBC One London – 28 February 1979". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Mastermind International – BBC One London – 7 April 1980". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Mastermind International – BBC One London – 11 June 1981". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Television Datepad – Wednesday". "Herald TV Guide", Sydney Morning Herald, 1 June 1981, p.4. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
- ^ "Mastermind International – BBC One London – 3 June 1982". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Mastermind International – BBC One London – 29 August 1983". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Mastermind Champions – BBC One London – 1 May 1982". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "Mastermind Champions – BBC One London – 3 May 1982". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ^ "BBC Radio 1Xtra – Hip Hop Mastermind". BBC. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
- ^ "BBC Two – Mastermind, Motty Mastermind". BBC. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
External links
- Mastermind at BBC Online
- Junior Mastermind
- Sport Mastermind
- Mastermind at IMDb
- Template:BFI
- Mastermind at UKGameshows.com
- 1972 British television series debuts
- 1970s British television series
- 1980s British television series
- 1990s British television series
- 2000s British television series
- 2010s British television series
- 2020s British television series
- BBC television game shows
- 1970s British game shows
- 1980s British game shows
- 1990s British game shows
- 2000s British game shows
- 2010s British game shows
- 2020s British game shows
- English-language television shows
- Television series by Hat Trick Productions
- Lost BBC episodes