Surprise Surprise | |
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The show's current title card (2015—)
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Genre | Light entertainment |
Presented by |
Cilla Black (1984–2001) Holly Willoughby (2012–) |
Starring | Christopher Biggins (1984) Bob Carolgees (1985–95) Gordon Burns (1986–91) Tessa Sanderson (1990–92) Michael Underwood (2014–) Marvin Humes (2013–) Mark Wright (2013–) Dave Berry (2012–) Peter Andre (2014–) Matt Johnson (2015–) Kian Egan (2012) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 14 (Original) 3 (Revival) |
No. of episodes | 128 (Original: inc. 9 specials) 23 (Revival: inc. 3 specials) |
Production | |
Location(s) | The London Studios |
Running time | 60 minutes (inc. adverts) |
Production company(s) |
LWT (1984–2001) ITV Studios (2012–) |
Distributor | ITV Studios |
Release | |
Original network | ITV, STV, UTV |
Picture format |
SDTV: 4:3 (1984–2001) HDTV: 16:9 (2012–) |
Original release |
Original series: 6 May 1984 – 26 December 2001 Revived series: 21 October 2012 – present |
Chronology | |
Related shows |
Jim'll Fix It Keith Lemon's LemonAid OMG! Jedward's Dream Factory |
Surprise Surprise is a British light entertainment television programme for ITV that originally ran from 6 May 1984 to 26 December 2001 with Cilla Black as the host. The show returned on 21 October 2012 and is now hosted by Holly Willoughby.
The show was hosted by Cilla Black, and filmed in front of a live studio audience. Its premise involved surprising members of the public with long-held wishes, setting up tricks to fool members of the public, prank calls to people and reuniting guests with long-lost loved ones. Black was assisted for eight series by Bob Carolgees, famous for his glove puppetry act Spit the Dog, while Gordon Burns and Tessa Sanderson were roving reporters. Other featured acts were "Cilla-grams," where Black would perform a song in a musical sketch relevant to the surprise a person was receiving. (Example: a soldier was celebrating his 21st birthday, so the featuring song Black sang was "Celebration" by Kool & The Gang.)
The concept of the first series had been to film surprising and often unusual moments similar to those previously seen on Game for a Laugh, but the format was not successful. However, the final item in the last episode of the first series featured a successful surprise reunion, which led executive producer Alan Boyd to change the format slightly so that all items in subsequent series involved surprises, rather than just being surprising. Although including many pre-filmed inserts, the first series and some early episodes of the second series were televised live in their entirety, however, thereafter, all episodes were pre-recorded.
From 1984 to 1988, the show was broadcast on Sunday evenings. From 1989 to 1992, the show moved to Fridays, before returning to the Sunday evening timeslot from 1993 to 1996. The final series of the original run in 1997 was broadcast on Friday evenings.
Over the years, the show had many special guests, some of whom appeared live, including Neil Diamond. Many variety acts were also featured on the show. The Spice Girls made their live debut on an episode in 1996.