0:00:04 > 0:00:08These people are amongst the greatest quiz players in Britain.
0:00:09 > 0:00:11Together, they make up the Eggheads,
0:00:11 > 0:00:14arguably the most formidable quiz team in the country.
0:00:17 > 0:00:19The question is, can they be beaten?
0:00:23 > 0:00:27Welcome to Eggheads, the show where a team of five quiz challengers
0:00:27 > 0:00:30attempt to beat possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain.
0:00:30 > 0:00:35Their quiz pedigree is well known, as they've won some of the country's toughest quiz shows.
0:00:35 > 0:00:37They are the Eggheads.
0:00:37 > 0:00:41And taking on the awesome might of our quiz Goliaths today are Haven't A Clue.
0:00:41 > 0:00:45This team of friends all live in or around the south coast town
0:00:45 > 0:00:48of Havant and are connected to the Havant and Emsworth Quiz League.
0:00:48 > 0:00:50Let's meet them.
0:00:50 > 0:00:54Hi, I'm Chris, I'm 58 and I'm a materials planner.
0:00:54 > 0:00:58Hello, I'm Jenny, I'm 49, and I'm a voluntary worker.
0:00:58 > 0:01:02Hello, I'm Alan, I'm 56, and I'm a product safety engineer.
0:01:02 > 0:01:05Hi, I'm Andy, I'm 46, I'm a client manager.
0:01:05 > 0:01:10Hello, I'm Jim, I'm 67, and I'm a retired shopkeeper.
0:01:10 > 0:01:14So, Chris and team, welcome. Great to see you. Tell us about the quiz league.
0:01:14 > 0:01:18The quiz league, Jeremy, has been running for roughly 21 years.
0:01:18 > 0:01:21Two or three pubs wanted to challenge each other.
0:01:21 > 0:01:24They've had darts, they've had fishing, football,
0:01:24 > 0:01:27they wanted to do something different, so they decided
0:01:27 > 0:01:30to have a quiz challenge to see who is the most knowledgeable team.
0:01:30 > 0:01:33And that's how the league's been going for the 21 years.
0:01:33 > 0:01:36OK, so they'll all be tuned in to see how you do today, good luck.
0:01:36 > 0:01:39- Yes!- Everyday there's £1,000 worth of cash up for grabs
0:01:39 > 0:01:42for our challengers. However, if they fail to defeat the Eggheads
0:01:42 > 0:01:45the prize-money rolls over to the next show.
0:01:45 > 0:01:49So, Haven't A Clue, the Eggheads have won the last seven games,
0:01:49 > 0:01:52which means £8,000 says you can't beat them today.
0:01:52 > 0:01:54- Do you want to get cracking? - Yes, please.- Absolutely.
0:01:54 > 0:01:59OK, the first head-to-head battle is on the subject of Film & Television.
0:01:59 > 0:02:01Who would like this?
0:02:01 > 0:02:03- That's me, Jeremy.- Andy, OK.
0:02:03 > 0:02:08- Which Egghead, Andy? - Um, I'll take Chris, please.
0:02:08 > 0:02:11All right, so it's Andy from Haven't A Clue
0:02:11 > 0:02:15versus Chris from the Eggheads, and to ensure there's no conferring
0:02:15 > 0:02:17please take your positions in the Question Room.
0:02:17 > 0:02:21I'll ask you three questions, multiple-choice, on Film & TV,
0:02:21 > 0:02:24and, Andy, you can choose the first or second set of questions.
0:02:24 > 0:02:26I'll go first, please, Jeremy.
0:02:29 > 0:02:31Here we go, good luck to your team.
0:02:31 > 0:02:35The 2010 film TRON: Legacy is a sequel to the original TRON movie
0:02:35 > 0:02:37that was first released in which year?
0:02:43 > 0:02:46OK, Jeremy, well, on the process of elimination,
0:02:46 > 0:02:49I think I can take out 2002.
0:02:49 > 0:02:52And I think I saw this film when I was at university,
0:02:52 > 0:02:54so I'll go 1982.
0:02:54 > 0:02:571982 is the right answer.
0:02:57 > 0:03:00OK, Chris, your question.
0:03:00 > 0:03:03Who was the winner of the 2010 series of The Apprentice?
0:03:09 > 0:03:13Oh, ho, ho. I don't watch The Apprentice.
0:03:15 > 0:03:18I have an idea it was Paloma Vivanco.
0:03:18 > 0:03:19I'm afraid you're wrong.
0:03:19 > 0:03:21Daphne, who was it?
0:03:21 > 0:03:22Stella English.
0:03:22 > 0:03:26- Did you watch it? - No.- No!? How do you know that?
0:03:26 > 0:03:28Well, that's what you do when you're an Egghead,
0:03:28 > 0:03:33- you find out who wins all these. - You remember it, that's amazing!
0:03:33 > 0:03:34Yes, we don't watch them.
0:03:34 > 0:03:37I watch them, they were fantastic.
0:03:37 > 0:03:39OK, Barry watched it, Barry is a normal person.
0:03:39 > 0:03:41OK, Andy, your question.
0:03:41 > 0:03:45In 2007, Christina Hendricks started playing
0:03:45 > 0:03:48a character called Joan in which TV drama series?
0:03:54 > 0:03:58I've got this vague recollection that she may be
0:03:58 > 0:04:01the actress that plays, er...
0:04:01 > 0:04:07..a lady with quite a good sense of style in Mad Men, I think.
0:04:08 > 0:04:10Mad Men is your answer, you're right.
0:04:10 > 0:04:14"Quite a good sense of style" is a very,
0:04:14 > 0:04:18very gentlemanly way of describing Christina Hendricks.
0:04:18 > 0:04:21Chris, who won an Academy award for his supporting role
0:04:21 > 0:04:25in the 1953 film From Here To Eternity?
0:04:30 > 0:04:31Oh, yeah, that was,...
0:04:33 > 0:04:37..Burt Lancaster and Deborah Carr rolling around in the sand.
0:04:37 > 0:04:41The best supporting actor was Frank Sinatra.
0:04:41 > 0:04:43Frank Sinatra, well done, you've got a point.
0:04:43 > 0:04:46Even so, if Andy gets this one right, he's knocked you out.
0:04:46 > 0:04:47Here we go, Andy.
0:04:47 > 0:04:51Which director made the 1970 film Myra Breckenridge,
0:04:51 > 0:04:56and had also recorded a 1962 UK number one single?
0:05:03 > 0:05:06OK, looking at the options there,
0:05:06 > 0:05:11I don't know Peter Collinson, I know Mike Sarne did Come Outside
0:05:11 > 0:05:15with Wendy Richards, I think it'd be about 1962.
0:05:15 > 0:05:17I don't know him as a film director,
0:05:17 > 0:05:20but just going on that basis I'll go with Mike Sarne, please.
0:05:20 > 0:05:24Well played, sir. You've got it absolutely right.
0:05:24 > 0:05:26Very, very good quizzing.
0:05:26 > 0:05:29Yeah, Come Outside, well done, Andy, you knocked Chris out,
0:05:29 > 0:05:32Chris is not in the final, he will be in the sin bin for the final round -
0:05:32 > 0:05:35Andy, you'll be there. If you both come back to us, we will play on.
0:05:37 > 0:05:40As it stands, the challengers have lost no brains from the final round,
0:05:40 > 0:05:42the Eggheads have lost one brain.
0:05:42 > 0:05:45The next subject is Politics. Who would like Politics?
0:05:47 > 0:05:48None of us, really.
0:05:48 > 0:05:51That was going to be my... I was down for both of those.
0:05:51 > 0:05:52Oh, dear.
0:05:52 > 0:05:57- So it's down to you two. - I'll take it, Jeremy.
0:05:57 > 0:05:59Alan, OK. Which Egghead, Alan? Can't be Chris, obviously.
0:05:59 > 0:06:01I think Daphne, please.
0:06:01 > 0:06:05So, Alan from Haven't A Clue versus Daphne from the Eggheads,
0:06:05 > 0:06:07please take your positions now.
0:06:07 > 0:06:11OK, so we're on Politics now, and you get three questions, multiple-choice.
0:06:11 > 0:06:15If you win the round, you're in the final, you know that.
0:06:15 > 0:06:18Would you like the first or the second set of questions?
0:06:18 > 0:06:20The first set of questions, please, Jeremy.
0:06:22 > 0:06:24OK, Alan, here we go.
0:06:24 > 0:06:28Edward Balladur was Prime Minister of which country in the 1990s?
0:06:32 > 0:06:37Well, Balladur, it doesn't sound like a German name,
0:06:37 > 0:06:39it doesn't sound familiar to me.
0:06:39 > 0:06:41I'm going to go for France, Jeremy,
0:06:41 > 0:06:45simply because it sounds a more French-sounding name.
0:06:45 > 0:06:47France is the right answer, well done.
0:06:49 > 0:06:52Daphne, the installation of a new holder of which UK political office
0:06:52 > 0:06:56is accompanied by a traditional show of reluctance?
0:07:01 > 0:07:05Um, that's the Speaker of the House of Commons,
0:07:05 > 0:07:08when they have to drag him to the chair.
0:07:09 > 0:07:12That is quite right, Speaker of the House of Commons.
0:07:13 > 0:07:16Alan, the book Beyond The Crash,
0:07:16 > 0:07:19published in 2010, was written by which former Prime Minister?
0:07:23 > 0:07:27Right, well, I don't think Gordon Brown would have had enough time
0:07:27 > 0:07:30since he stopped being Prime Minister.
0:07:30 > 0:07:36Tony Blair has written a book about...an autobiography,
0:07:36 > 0:07:40so my guess would be John Major.
0:07:41 > 0:07:44No, it's actually Mr Brown. Bad luck.
0:07:44 > 0:07:50OK, Daphne, your question in 2010, the singer Wyclef Jean
0:07:50 > 0:07:53announced his attention to run for president of which country?
0:07:57 > 0:08:00I think it was Haiti,
0:08:00 > 0:08:04I think he was disqualified for some reason or other.
0:08:04 > 0:08:07Haiti is the right answer, Daphne, well done.
0:08:07 > 0:08:08OK, she is in the lead, Alan,
0:08:08 > 0:08:11you've got to get this right. Your third question
0:08:11 > 0:08:15which former president represented the Progressive Party
0:08:15 > 0:08:17at the 1912 American presidential election?
0:08:22 > 0:08:24Right.
0:08:26 > 0:08:30Grover Cleveland was president twice,
0:08:30 > 0:08:32he was the 22nd and 24th president, as I recall.
0:08:34 > 0:08:37I'm going to go for Grover Cleveland, Jeremy.
0:08:37 > 0:08:39I think Barry will know this.
0:08:39 > 0:08:40It's Theodore Roosevelt.
0:08:40 > 0:08:44Theodore Roosevelt it is, sorry, so you've got that wrong,
0:08:44 > 0:08:48and as a result, Daphne, you are in the final round. You've beaten Alan.
0:08:48 > 0:08:51Please, both of you, come back here and rejoin your teams.
0:08:52 > 0:08:57So, as it stands, the challengers have lost one brain from the final round,
0:08:57 > 0:09:00the Eggheads have also lost a brain. The next subject is Sport.
0:09:00 > 0:09:03Have you got a plan here?
0:09:03 > 0:09:04- Was that yours, Alan?- It was indeed.
0:09:04 > 0:09:07- Oh, dear! - I have been mugging up for weeks!
0:09:07 > 0:09:10- It's going to be mine, Jeremy.- OK.
0:09:10 > 0:09:12So, it's going to be Chris against which Egghead?
0:09:12 > 0:09:14I think Barry.
0:09:14 > 0:09:19OK, so Chris from Haven't A Clue versus Barry from the Eggheads.
0:09:19 > 0:09:24And to ensure there's no conferring, please go to the question room.
0:09:24 > 0:09:27OK, so Sport, and you've got three questions.
0:09:27 > 0:09:30Chris, you can choose the first or the second set.
0:09:30 > 0:09:32I'd like to go first, Jeremy.
0:09:34 > 0:09:37Here we go, good luck.
0:09:37 > 0:09:40Phil Tufnell usually performed which role for the England cricket team?
0:09:45 > 0:09:48I don't believe it's a spin bowler.
0:09:48 > 0:09:49Um...
0:09:49 > 0:09:54I'm going to go for - it's not particularly my main sport -
0:09:54 > 0:09:55opening batsman.
0:09:55 > 0:09:58I'm afraid Alan is wincing,
0:09:58 > 0:10:00because it is spin bowler.
0:10:00 > 0:10:03- He was an offy, yes.- Left.
0:10:03 > 0:10:05OK, Barry, your question.
0:10:05 > 0:10:09How high in metres was the men's high jump world record
0:10:09 > 0:10:13set by Javier Sotomayor in 1993?
0:10:19 > 0:10:24I think it's somewhere around eight feet,
0:10:24 > 0:10:27so 4.45 metres would be far too high,
0:10:27 > 0:10:30and 3.45 metres would also be too high,
0:10:30 > 0:10:32It must be 2.45 metres.
0:10:32 > 0:10:362.45 metres is correct, Barry, well done.
0:10:36 > 0:10:38OK, Chris, your question.
0:10:38 > 0:10:42In 2007, racing driver Lewis Hamilton announced he would move to live in which country?
0:10:46 > 0:10:49I can't see why he would pick Fiji.
0:10:50 > 0:10:53I think it's Switzerland.
0:10:53 > 0:10:56You are right, Switzerland is the right answer.
0:10:56 > 0:10:59What is the reason for that? You obviously know your sport.
0:10:59 > 0:11:01- Was it taxes?- Must be tax, yeah.
0:11:01 > 0:11:03OK. So, Barry,
0:11:03 > 0:11:05your second question to take the lead.
0:11:05 > 0:11:09In 2005, Phil Neville left Manchester United
0:11:09 > 0:11:12and joined which other Premier League club?
0:11:15 > 0:11:17Oh, gosh.
0:11:17 > 0:11:20I remember reading about this, I remember reading that he left,
0:11:20 > 0:11:22I can't remember reading which club he joined.
0:11:24 > 0:11:26I don't think he joined a London club,
0:11:26 > 0:11:27which would rule out Spurs,
0:11:27 > 0:11:30and I don't think it would be a Liverpool club,
0:11:30 > 0:11:33which would rule out Everton - I think it was Aston Villa.
0:11:33 > 0:11:35No, no, no, Barry, it was Everton.
0:11:35 > 0:11:36Ah!
0:11:36 > 0:11:40So, Chris,
0:11:40 > 0:11:43the Tooting Bec Cup is awarded for an outstanding performance
0:11:43 > 0:11:46at which leading sporting occasion?
0:11:52 > 0:11:57Well, being a fan of tennis, Jeremy, I would have remembered that one.
0:11:57 > 0:11:59Golf I don't think so.
0:11:59 > 0:12:01I think it's the Henley Rowing Regatta.
0:12:02 > 0:12:06That's the wrong answer, anyone know about this?
0:12:06 > 0:12:08It's the Open Championship.
0:12:08 > 0:12:10And what's it given to or for?
0:12:10 > 0:12:13I'm not sure, it might be performance by an amateur,
0:12:13 > 0:12:14I'm not sure.
0:12:14 > 0:12:16It's the British or Irish golfer
0:12:16 > 0:12:18with the lowest score in a single round.
0:12:18 > 0:12:20The Tooting Bec Cup.
0:12:20 > 0:12:23So, you've got one point each,
0:12:23 > 0:12:26Barry, if you get this right you're in the final.
0:12:26 > 0:12:29The Australian-born winger Brian Bevan
0:12:29 > 0:12:36scored a record 796 tries, including 740 for which Rugby League club?
0:12:39 > 0:12:41I think it was Widnes.
0:12:41 > 0:12:43I think it wasn't, it was Warrington.
0:12:43 > 0:12:46So, you're equal after three questions,
0:12:46 > 0:12:49and we go to Sudden Death - how about that, Chris?
0:12:49 > 0:12:52- I thought you were going to be knocked off your perch. - I would have got that.
0:12:52 > 0:12:55It's a bit harder now, I don't give you alternatives, OK?
0:12:55 > 0:12:59In which decade were yellow tennis balls first used at Wimbledon
0:12:59 > 0:13:02in order to make visibility easier for TV viewers?
0:13:06 > 0:13:11I think it is going to be the '70s, Jeremy.
0:13:11 > 0:13:13I'm looking to see what your team-mates think.
0:13:13 > 0:13:16I'd have gone' 70s, as well.
0:13:16 > 0:13:18Yeah, it's funny, I probably would have - '86.
0:13:18 > 0:13:21It's the '80s, later than we thought.
0:13:21 > 0:13:25Ha-ha! So, Barry, you can take it with this question.
0:13:25 > 0:13:29The 2010 Tour de France route included two ascents
0:13:29 > 0:13:33of the Col du Tourmalet in which mountain range?
0:13:35 > 0:13:37Col du Tourmalet...
0:13:39 > 0:13:40The Pyrenees.
0:13:40 > 0:13:43The Pyrenees is the right answer, Barry, you have taken the round
0:13:43 > 0:13:45on Sudden Death, bad luck to you, Chris,
0:13:45 > 0:13:47you've been knocked out.
0:13:47 > 0:13:49So, are the Egghead's turning things around? Let's see.
0:13:49 > 0:13:53Please, both of you, come back and rejoin your team-mates.
0:13:53 > 0:13:57As it stands, the challengers have lost two brains from the final round whilst the Eggheads have lost one.
0:13:57 > 0:14:01The last subject before the final is Food & Drink.
0:14:01 > 0:14:03So, who would like this?
0:14:03 > 0:14:07- I think this is me. - Jenny, OK. Against which Egghead?
0:14:07 > 0:14:11- It can be Pat or Judith. - What do you think, chaps?
0:14:12 > 0:14:14- Judith.- Judith, possibly.
0:14:14 > 0:14:17- I think Judith knows everything about food and drink!- Pat?
0:14:17 > 0:14:20- Go for Pat, then.- I think Pat.
0:14:20 > 0:14:21Pat. We think Pat.
0:14:21 > 0:14:24Any good food and drink experiences recently, Pat?
0:14:24 > 0:14:27- Breakfast.- Breakfast, yes.- Breakfast!
0:14:27 > 0:14:29ALL LAUGH
0:14:29 > 0:14:33OK, so Jenny from Haven't A Clue versus Pat from the Eggheads.
0:14:33 > 0:14:37To ensure there is no conferring, please go to the Question Room now.
0:14:37 > 0:14:39So, Jenny, you work as a classroom assistant?
0:14:39 > 0:14:42A voluntary classroom assistant
0:14:42 > 0:14:46with a Year One class who are all very sweet.
0:14:46 > 0:14:48Good. They're not out of control? They're fun?
0:14:48 > 0:14:51- Oh, they're lovely, they're lovely. - Brilliant.
0:14:51 > 0:14:53Well, good luck keeping Pat under control here.
0:14:53 > 0:14:57He's a bit beyond... He probably is Year One in Egghead years, actually.
0:14:57 > 0:15:00I'll ask each of you three questions on food and drink in turn
0:15:00 > 0:15:03and if you get the most right, you go through to the final.
0:15:03 > 0:15:07- Jenny, you can choose the first or second set. - I'll have the first, please.
0:15:10 > 0:15:15Here we go. What is the traditional flavouring of a Nice biscuit?
0:15:19 > 0:15:24Oh, we always used to have these when I was a kid. It's coconut, Jeremy.
0:15:24 > 0:15:27Coconut is the right answer, well done. Oh, delicious.
0:15:27 > 0:15:29They are nice, aren't they?
0:15:29 > 0:15:32- Mmm.- Oh, my goodness. OK, Pat, your question.
0:15:32 > 0:15:37In Yorkshire, what name is given to the leftover bits of fish batter
0:15:37 > 0:15:39often given away at fish and chip shops?
0:15:45 > 0:15:52I think all those little specks of batter are referred to as scraps.
0:15:52 > 0:15:54Scraps is the right answer, well done.
0:15:54 > 0:15:56OK, Jenny, your question.
0:15:56 > 0:16:01What is the name of the Scottish speciality resembling haggis
0:16:01 > 0:16:02but made with fish liver?
0:16:09 > 0:16:11Um...
0:16:12 > 0:16:16The sackie one sounds a bit as if it would be inside...
0:16:18 > 0:16:20..a casing like a haggis is.
0:16:20 > 0:16:25Or maybe haggamuggell. Haggamuggie.
0:16:25 > 0:16:29- No, I think I'll go for haddiesackie, but it's a total guess.- OK.
0:16:29 > 0:16:32Anyone want to have a...?
0:16:32 > 0:16:34- Haddiesackie?- It's haggamuggie. - Is it?
0:16:34 > 0:16:37- Haggamuggie.- Oh, well.
0:16:37 > 0:16:38OK, Pat, your question.
0:16:38 > 0:16:43The French red wine from the Loire Valley called Bourgueil
0:16:43 > 0:16:46is predominantly made from which variety of grape?
0:16:52 > 0:16:58A red wine? Syrah is definitely a red grape.
0:16:58 > 0:17:01But, of course, the others could be as well. Tough one.
0:17:04 > 0:17:06I've no idea at all.
0:17:08 > 0:17:10I'm completely stumped.
0:17:11 > 0:17:16I think... I know that Syrah is a red grape so perhaps,
0:17:16 > 0:17:20on that basis, I'll have to go for Syrah.
0:17:20 > 0:17:24It's not Syrah, it's Cabernet Franc. So you're equal after two questions.
0:17:24 > 0:17:26Jenny, back to you. To take the lead -
0:17:26 > 0:17:32the broad green leaves known as callaloo in Caribbean cooking
0:17:32 > 0:17:33are more widely known by which name?
0:17:37 > 0:17:43Well, mooli, I think, is a sort of radish used in Asian cookery
0:17:43 > 0:17:44so I'll discount that.
0:17:46 > 0:17:52I think chard is more grown for the stems than the leaves,
0:17:52 > 0:17:54so I think I'll go for amaranth.
0:17:54 > 0:17:57Amaranth is quite right. Well done.
0:17:57 > 0:17:59You've taken the lead here.
0:17:59 > 0:18:02You're about to go out of the contest, Pat, if you don't get this one right.
0:18:02 > 0:18:06The suet pudding known as Heg Peg Dump
0:18:06 > 0:18:09comes from which part of England?
0:18:13 > 0:18:15Gosh.
0:18:15 > 0:18:17Puddings. Hmm.
0:18:17 > 0:18:21It could be absolutely any of them so I'll just have to have a...
0:18:21 > 0:18:23Pin the tail on the donkey, just pick a county.
0:18:23 > 0:18:27- I'll go for Gloucestershire.- Oh, I don't believe it. You're right!
0:18:27 > 0:18:30It's Gloucestershire.
0:18:30 > 0:18:32JEREMY CHUCKLES
0:18:32 > 0:18:34OK. So, Jenny, we go to Sudden Death.
0:18:34 > 0:18:38It gets a bit harder now, I don't give you alternatives. So here's your question.
0:18:38 > 0:18:43Noma, which was named the best restaurant in the world in 2010,
0:18:43 > 0:18:46is in which country?
0:18:46 > 0:18:51- It's just spelt N-O-M-A. - Um... I have heard of it.
0:18:51 > 0:18:55I really can't remember. Um...
0:18:55 > 0:18:59France has a reputation for good cuisine, but...
0:19:00 > 0:19:03..it might well not be.
0:19:03 > 0:19:04Um...
0:19:08 > 0:19:11I'll say France.
0:19:11 > 0:19:14- It's not France, it's Denmark, actually.- Oh.
0:19:15 > 0:19:17Pat. If you get this right,
0:19:17 > 0:19:19you're in the final.
0:19:19 > 0:19:22What alternative name for the fruit often called a persimmon
0:19:22 > 0:19:25comes from the plain in Israel where it is grown?
0:19:28 > 0:19:29Hmm.
0:19:31 > 0:19:35My first thought was kaki, but I don't think that's right.
0:19:37 > 0:19:42Persimmon. There is a Sharon fruit. That sounds good for Israel.
0:19:42 > 0:19:43Plain of Sharon rings a bell.
0:19:45 > 0:19:48No, I'll have to go for the Sharon fruit
0:19:48 > 0:19:51because I think there's a plain of Sharon in Israel.
0:19:51 > 0:19:54You've got it right. Good quizzing, Pat.
0:19:54 > 0:19:57Sharon fruit is the right answer. I don't know how you did that.
0:19:57 > 0:19:59Your brain, it's not like other brains.
0:19:59 > 0:20:03It's very well stored, isn't it? Where did you get that from?
0:20:03 > 0:20:05A Dewey Decimal System of some sort.
0:20:05 > 0:20:08Yes, there is some sort of interesting colour coding
0:20:08 > 0:20:10or whatever, I don't know.
0:20:10 > 0:20:11Jenny, I'm sorry,
0:20:11 > 0:20:14- he's knocked you out there. - Mmm.- Playing well, as well.
0:20:14 > 0:20:18So Pat will be in the final. Please, both of you, come back and rejoin your teams
0:20:18 > 0:20:19and we will play the final round.
0:20:21 > 0:20:23So here we are. This is what we have been playing towards.
0:20:23 > 0:20:27It is time for the final round, which, as always, is General Knowledge.
0:20:27 > 0:20:29I'm afraid those of you who lost your head-to-heads
0:20:29 > 0:20:31won't be allowed to take part in this round.
0:20:31 > 0:20:34Chris, Jenny and Alan from Haven't A Clue,
0:20:34 > 0:20:38and also Chris from the Eggheads, would you please leave the studio?
0:20:40 > 0:20:44Andy and Jim, you're playing to win Haven't A Clue £8,000.
0:20:44 > 0:20:48Daphne, Barry, Pat and Judith, you're playing for something which money can't buy -
0:20:48 > 0:20:50the Eggheads' reputation.
0:20:50 > 0:20:53As usual, I will ask each team three questions in turn.
0:20:53 > 0:20:57This time, the questions are all general knowledge and you are allowed to confer.
0:20:57 > 0:20:59So, Andy and Jim, the question is,
0:20:59 > 0:21:00are your two brains better
0:21:00 > 0:21:04than the Eggheads' four? Would you like to go first or second?
0:21:04 > 0:21:07- I think we should go first, don't you?- We're going to go first, Jeremy, please.
0:21:10 > 0:21:13OK, all the best to you.
0:21:13 > 0:21:16Which singer who had a UK number one single in the 1960s
0:21:16 > 0:21:20married the songwriter Tony Hatch in 1967?
0:21:26 > 0:21:30Tony Hatch used to appear on New Faces, didn't he? And I'm sure...
0:21:30 > 0:21:32And he did the theme tune to Crossroads.
0:21:32 > 0:21:35- Married to Jackie Trent? - I'll take your word for that.
0:21:35 > 0:21:37- Yeah?- Yeah.
0:21:37 > 0:21:40I'm informed Jackie Trent.
0:21:40 > 0:21:43- Jackie Trent is the right answer. Good knowledge.- Well done.
0:21:44 > 0:21:48Eggheads, what terms is used to refer to an organised body
0:21:48 > 0:21:50of hired applauders in the theatre?
0:21:54 > 0:21:57ALL: Claque.
0:21:57 > 0:22:01- That's a claque. - Claque is the right answer.
0:22:03 > 0:22:04Your question, Haven't A Clue.
0:22:04 > 0:22:09In the 19th century, Hippolyte Bayard was a pioneer of which technology?
0:22:14 > 0:22:17- In the 19th century? - The 19th century.- Yes.
0:22:17 > 0:22:20- Well, he's French, by the sound of it.- Yes.
0:22:20 > 0:22:24- Photography was developed in the 19th century.- So was vaccination.
0:22:24 > 0:22:28- Early 19th century. - BOTH: Heavier-than-air flight.
0:22:28 > 0:22:32The balloons were the Montgolfier brothers, weren't they?
0:22:32 > 0:22:35- 18th century. - So photography or vaccination.
0:22:35 > 0:22:38I'm inclined to go for photography. What do you think?
0:22:38 > 0:22:40That's the way I'd be inclined. Yeah.
0:22:40 > 0:22:43- Bit of a guess, really, isn't it? - It is.
0:22:43 > 0:22:47Well, as you've heard, Jeremy, we're struggling on this one
0:22:47 > 0:22:50but we're going to plump for photography.
0:22:50 > 0:22:53Photography is your answer. Do you know, Eggheads?
0:22:53 > 0:22:55I'd have gone for heavier-than-air flight.
0:22:55 > 0:22:58- We thought it was heavier-than-air flight.- Ah.
0:22:58 > 0:23:02- The answer is photography.- Oh! - Well done.- Good guess.
0:23:03 > 0:23:05Maybe this contest
0:23:05 > 0:23:08is going to be tricky for you, Eggheads.
0:23:08 > 0:23:12Johan Zoffany became famous in England during the 18th century
0:23:12 > 0:23:15in which profession?
0:23:17 > 0:23:21- He was a painter.- He had an extraordinary life story.- Painter.
0:23:21 > 0:23:23- He was a painter.- Painter is right.
0:23:23 > 0:23:27Well done. So two each.
0:23:27 > 0:23:29The all-important third question.
0:23:29 > 0:23:33Get this right, puts them under pressure, anything can happen.
0:23:33 > 0:23:39Which American writer is best known for his 1930s novel Anthony Adverse?
0:23:47 > 0:23:49Um...
0:23:49 > 0:23:53- We're both struggling on this.- Yeah.
0:23:53 > 0:23:56- My inclination, I don't know why... - Yeah?
0:23:56 > 0:23:59..would be Oliver La Farge.
0:23:59 > 0:24:02- Well...- No idea why I say that.
0:24:02 > 0:24:05I can't really give you a steer for or against,
0:24:05 > 0:24:07so I'm happy to go with you on that.
0:24:07 > 0:24:11- Well, I think Pat called it pinning a tail on the donkey.- OK, OK.
0:24:11 > 0:24:13Let's see if...
0:24:13 > 0:24:16We'll try and put a tail on the donkey
0:24:16 > 0:24:18and we're going to try Oliver La Farge.
0:24:18 > 0:24:22It's not. I'm afraid it's not. It's Hervey Allen.
0:24:22 > 0:24:24BOTH: OK.
0:24:24 > 0:24:25So that gives the Eggheads a chance
0:24:25 > 0:24:28to take the contest with their third question, and here it is.
0:24:28 > 0:24:33Which mediaeval monastery was located in the Vale of the Deadly Nightshade?
0:24:40 > 0:24:44- BARRY SIGHS - Never heard of it.- No.
0:24:44 > 0:24:46Oh.
0:24:46 > 0:24:49They're all genuine abbeys. In fact, they're all,
0:24:49 > 0:24:51I think, Cistercian abbeys.
0:24:51 > 0:24:53I'm not sure we... There's no real...
0:24:53 > 0:24:56Unless you know it, it's hard to see a logical way of tackling this.
0:24:56 > 0:24:59If we went for the least known...
0:24:59 > 0:25:02Maybe that would be a good bet.
0:25:02 > 0:25:04I think that's a good suggestion, myself.
0:25:04 > 0:25:09The Vale of the Deadly Nightshade, it's such a lovely descriptive term
0:25:09 > 0:25:12- that we should know it about some of the other ones.- Yes.
0:25:12 > 0:25:15- Shall we go for Meaux or whatever it's called?- If you wish.
0:25:15 > 0:25:18- We're just a bit stumped, I think. - Why not?
0:25:18 > 0:25:22We're totally stumped so were going for the one we know least about,
0:25:22 > 0:25:25which is the one in the middle, I'm not sure how you pronounce it,
0:25:25 > 0:25:28Meaux, or Miux, or whatever.
0:25:28 > 0:25:29OK.
0:25:31 > 0:25:34- You've got it wrong, it's Furness Abbey.- Oh.
0:25:34 > 0:25:37So you're level after three questions.
0:25:37 > 0:25:39You live to fight another day. And we go to Sudden Death.
0:25:39 > 0:25:41It's harder, I don't give you alternatives.
0:25:41 > 0:25:46An 1897 speech by Adelaide Hoodless
0:25:46 > 0:25:49given in Canada to a group of farmers' wives
0:25:49 > 0:25:54is regarded as the beginning of which international movement?
0:25:54 > 0:25:581897. Farmers' wives. Canada.
0:25:58 > 0:26:02- Um...- A movement.- A movement.
0:26:02 > 0:26:04- It could be the temperance movement. - Nah.
0:26:04 > 0:26:08Is that too late? It had already started by then?
0:26:08 > 0:26:11Yes, the temperance movement got going in Britain before Canada.
0:26:11 > 0:26:14So, 1897, in the Edwardian times, there was a lot of suffragettes,
0:26:14 > 0:26:17so was that the thing that started the suffragette movement?
0:26:17 > 0:26:20I don't... What's the...?
0:26:21 > 0:26:25- The Women's Institute?- The Women's Institute.- That's a world movement.
0:26:25 > 0:26:27Is it a movement or an institution?
0:26:27 > 0:26:29No, it's a...
0:26:29 > 0:26:33I would have called it a movement.
0:26:34 > 0:26:38I feel the Women's Institute was probably founded in England.
0:26:38 > 0:26:41You think it's more British? I would have thought that could be...
0:26:41 > 0:26:44I'm just wondering if it's a women's movement of some sort.
0:26:44 > 0:26:45We'll say suffragettes?
0:26:46 > 0:26:49Yeah, we'll go for suffragettes.
0:26:49 > 0:26:53- Bit of a guess, though, isn't it? - If it's Women's Institute, then...
0:26:54 > 0:26:58We're struggling, Jeremy.
0:26:58 > 0:27:01We're going to try the suffragette movement.
0:27:02 > 0:27:06- Oh, you feel their pain.- Yes. It's the Women's Institute.
0:27:06 > 0:27:08Sorry.
0:27:08 > 0:27:10You discussed it really well there.
0:27:10 > 0:27:12So you can win the contest now, Eggheads,
0:27:12 > 0:27:13with this question.
0:27:13 > 0:27:18In 1974, Roy Strong became director of which London museum?
0:27:19 > 0:27:23- V&A.- The V&A, yeah. I've got his lovely...
0:27:23 > 0:27:26- ALL MURMUR - It's definitely the V&A.
0:27:26 > 0:27:29Yeah. It's the V&A.
0:27:29 > 0:27:31The Victoria and Albert Museum.
0:27:31 > 0:27:34The Victoria and Albert, or V&A Museum, is the correct answer.
0:27:34 > 0:27:38Congratulations, Eggheads. You have won.
0:27:43 > 0:27:47Well, I'm sorry to see you go like that, but that's the way it goes.
0:27:47 > 0:27:51- WI.- We enjoyed it, Jeremy. Thank you. - I am so glad to hear you say that.
0:27:51 > 0:27:53Thank you. Commiserations to the challengers.
0:27:53 > 0:27:57The Eggheads have done what comes naturally to them and their winning streak continues,
0:27:57 > 0:27:59although you wobbled a bit, didn't you?
0:27:59 > 0:28:01I'm afraid you won't be going home with the £8,000
0:28:01 > 0:28:04so the money rolls over to our next show.
0:28:04 > 0:28:07Eggheads, congratulations. Who will beat you?
0:28:07 > 0:28:12Join us next time to see if a new team of challengers have the brains to defeat the Eggheads.
0:28:12 > 0:28:16£9,000 says they don't. Until then, goodbye.
0:28:37 > 0:28:41Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd