Episode 120

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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 > 0:00:15arguably the most formidable quiz team in the country.

0:00:16 > 0:00:19The question is, can they be beaten?

0:00:23 > 0:00:26Welcome to Eggheads, the show where a team of five quiz Challengers

0:00:26 > 0:00:30pit their wits against possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain.

0:00:30 > 0:00:32They are the Eggheads.

0:00:32 > 0:00:34And challenging our resident quiz champions today

0:00:34 > 0:00:36are Handel With Care.

0:00:36 > 0:00:39This team are all members of the 130-strong

0:00:39 > 0:00:40Southampton Choral Society.

0:00:40 > 0:00:43I feel a song coming on. Let's meet them.

0:00:43 > 0:00:47Hello. I'm Rosaleen. I'm 66 and I'm a gardener.

0:00:47 > 0:00:51Hello. My name's Diana. I'm 61 and I'm a librarian.

0:00:51 > 0:00:55Hello. I'm Clive. I'm 64 and I'm a retired librarian.

0:00:55 > 0:00:59Hello. I'm Steve. I'm 57 and I'm an electronics engineer.

0:00:59 > 0:01:04Hello. I'm Jim. I'm 62 years old and an arts administrator.

0:01:04 > 0:01:06- Rosaleen and team, welcome.- Hello.

0:01:06 > 0:01:08And you've got your finery on here.

0:01:08 > 0:01:11Yes. This is our official uniform for concerts.

0:01:11 > 0:01:13OK, great. Well, it's wonderful to see you.

0:01:13 > 0:01:17I know you're a spread of tenors and altos and basses and what else?

0:01:17 > 0:01:22- What have I missed out?- Soprano top, then altos, then tenors

0:01:22 > 0:01:25- and, at the end, a bass.- So you can sing for us now?- Yup.- Could you?

0:01:25 > 0:01:28- Would you...- We don't get enough singing in the studio.

0:01:28 > 0:01:31- None of them can sing and I can't sing.- All right, then.

0:01:31 > 0:01:32- We will.- Thank you.

0:01:32 > 0:01:36ALL SING: # Hallelujah, hallelujah

0:01:36 > 0:01:41# Hallelujah, hallelujah Halle-lu-jah

0:01:41 > 0:01:44# Hallelujah, hallelujah

0:01:44 > 0:01:50# Hallelujah, hallelujah Halle-lu-jah. #

0:01:50 > 0:01:52- APPLAUSE - Wonderful! Thank you.

0:01:52 > 0:01:55That was so great. Do you quiz together?

0:01:55 > 0:01:59- I feel I'm almost ruining the tone by saying that.- We don't at all.

0:01:59 > 0:02:01- You don't? - This is our first attempt.

0:02:01 > 0:02:03OK. Well, let's see how we do.

0:02:03 > 0:02:06Every day there is £1,000 in cash up for grabs for our Challengers.

0:02:06 > 0:02:09However, if they fail to defeat the Eggheads, the prize money

0:02:09 > 0:02:11rolls over to the next show.

0:02:11 > 0:02:14So, Handel With Care, the Eggheads have won just the last game,

0:02:14 > 0:02:18so that means £2,000 says you can't beat them today.

0:02:18 > 0:02:21First subject is...Arts & Books.

0:02:21 > 0:02:24- Oh. That's lucky. - Right up your street, I reckon.

0:02:24 > 0:02:28- Arts & Books.- That's going to be you?- That's Diana.- Yes.- Diana?

0:02:28 > 0:02:30- I'm quite happy with that. Yes, thank you.- OK.

0:02:30 > 0:02:33- You're one of the librarians? - Yes.- OK. Against which Egghead?

0:02:33 > 0:02:35Ah. Erm...

0:02:36 > 0:02:39- Do you think Daphne? - Daphne's quite good with her books.

0:02:39 > 0:02:42- What do you think?- What about Chris? - Shall we do Chris?

0:02:43 > 0:02:44OK, I challenge Chris.

0:02:44 > 0:02:47All right, so it's Diana from Handel With Care against Chris.

0:02:47 > 0:02:49To ensure there's no conferring,

0:02:49 > 0:02:53would you please take your positions in the Question Room?

0:02:53 > 0:02:56So, Diana, you have been a librarian for a long time?

0:02:56 > 0:03:00Yes, I've been... It's 25 years now, I think, yes.

0:03:00 > 0:03:03And I'm just about to retire, so that's almost it.

0:03:03 > 0:03:05Must be great to spend a life surrounded by books.

0:03:05 > 0:03:08Oh, it's wonderful. I've always been a reader,

0:03:08 > 0:03:11and I absolutely love helping people to find the right book,

0:03:11 > 0:03:14so that's been the perfect job.

0:03:14 > 0:03:15Great. Good luck in this round.

0:03:15 > 0:03:18I'll ask each of you three multiple-choice questions.

0:03:18 > 0:03:21Subject is Arts & Books. Diana, would you like to go first or second?

0:03:21 > 0:03:23I'd like to go first, please, Jeremy.

0:03:25 > 0:03:27Here we go. Good luck to you.

0:03:27 > 0:03:29Samuel Beckett's play, Waiting For Godot,

0:03:29 > 0:03:31was originally written in which language?

0:03:33 > 0:03:35Now, he lived for a long time in France,

0:03:35 > 0:03:37so I'm going to say that was French.

0:03:37 > 0:03:40French is absolutely right. Well done.

0:03:40 > 0:03:41Chris, your question.

0:03:41 > 0:03:43The fearsome Miss Trunchbull

0:03:43 > 0:03:45is a character in which Roald Dahl book?

0:03:48 > 0:03:51Oh, aye, she runs the orphanage, doesn't she, in Matilda.

0:03:51 > 0:03:55Matilda is correct. OK, back to you, Diana.

0:03:55 > 0:03:57Which painter was revealed in 2012

0:03:57 > 0:04:01to have turned down honours five times in his lifetime,

0:04:01 > 0:04:03including an OBE in 1955,

0:04:03 > 0:04:05a CBE in 1961,

0:04:05 > 0:04:08and a knighthood in 1968? Is it...

0:04:11 > 0:04:14I'm not at all sure about this.

0:04:15 > 0:04:18Oh, dear. Er...

0:04:18 > 0:04:21This is an absolute guess, but I'm going to go for Graham Sutherland.

0:04:22 > 0:04:25Let's see if your colleagues know. Anyone?

0:04:25 > 0:04:26- I would have gone for Lowry.- Lowry.

0:04:26 > 0:04:27- Any Eggheads? - ALL: Lowry.

0:04:27 > 0:04:30Yeah, Lowry's the answer, Diana.

0:04:30 > 0:04:32OK. Chris, your question to take the lead.

0:04:32 > 0:04:35Which fictional detective features in the play Black Coffee,

0:04:35 > 0:04:38first performed in the 1930s? Is it...

0:04:42 > 0:04:45Ah, well, I'm pretty well up on Sherlock Holmes,

0:04:45 > 0:04:47and he's never been in a play called Black Coffee.

0:04:47 > 0:04:52Philip Marlowe's a hard-boiled film noir-type private eye in Los Angeles.

0:04:52 > 0:04:54It's unlikely to be him.

0:04:54 > 0:04:56But Cafe Noir, Black Coffee,

0:04:56 > 0:04:59is the sort of title in which you might find Hercule Poirot,

0:04:59 > 0:05:01so that's who I'll go with, Poirot.

0:05:01 > 0:05:03I'm an Agatha Christie fan but I've never heard of this.

0:05:03 > 0:05:06Hercule Poirot is the right answer. Well done, Chris.

0:05:06 > 0:05:08He takes the lead. So you need to get this one right, Diana.

0:05:08 > 0:05:10- Oh dear, right.- Here we go.

0:05:10 > 0:05:14Which French author wrote his own version of the Robin Hood story

0:05:14 > 0:05:18called Robin Hood The Outlaw in 1863? Was it...

0:05:23 > 0:05:27Now, again, this is not something I know, but, erm...

0:05:27 > 0:05:32Alexandre Dumas did lots of adventurous swashbuckling stories,

0:05:32 > 0:05:36so it's quite likely to be him.

0:05:36 > 0:05:39I think I'm going to go for Alexandre Dumas.

0:05:39 > 0:05:42Alexandre Dumas is the right answer, Diana.

0:05:42 > 0:05:44Two out of three. Will Chris win the round?

0:05:44 > 0:05:49A number of paintings bought from the estate of John Julius Angerstein

0:05:49 > 0:05:54formed the nucleus of the collection of which art institution? Is it...

0:05:58 > 0:06:01Well, the Royal Academy have got their own collection.

0:06:01 > 0:06:04National Gallery's been going longer.

0:06:04 > 0:06:07I'd say the National Portrait Gallery.

0:06:08 > 0:06:11- No, it's the National Gallery. - Is it?- Yes, it is.

0:06:11 > 0:06:14So you're equal after three questions.

0:06:14 > 0:06:15Diana, we go to Sudden Death.

0:06:15 > 0:06:18Gets a bit harder, because I don't give you alternatives.

0:06:18 > 0:06:19- Right.- Here's your question.

0:06:19 > 0:06:22Which best-selling Italian author and philosopher

0:06:22 > 0:06:24wrote the children's books The Bomb And The General,

0:06:24 > 0:06:27The Three Astronauts, and The Gnomes of Gnu?

0:06:27 > 0:06:30Oh. Well, I'm...

0:06:30 > 0:06:34I'm quite up in children's books, but not in Italian ones. Erm...

0:06:35 > 0:06:41I'm going to just have to think of an Italian philosopher and author.

0:06:41 > 0:06:42Erm...

0:06:43 > 0:06:46Italo Svevo?

0:06:46 > 0:06:48- No, Umberto Eco.- Ah.

0:06:48 > 0:06:51- Who wrote... What was it, The Name Of The Rose, his famous one?- Yes.

0:06:52 > 0:06:53OK, Chris.

0:06:53 > 0:06:55Confessions Of An English Opium Eater

0:06:55 > 0:07:00is the best-known work by which 19th-century essayist?

0:07:00 > 0:07:02If you get this right, you're in the final round.

0:07:02 > 0:07:05- Thomas De Quincy.- Thomas De Quincy is right, Chris. Well done.

0:07:05 > 0:07:08You've triumphed. Sorry, Diana. Well played, though.

0:07:08 > 0:07:09You won't be in the final.

0:07:09 > 0:07:12Please, both of you, come back and rejoin your teams.

0:07:13 > 0:07:16So, as it stands, the Challengers have lost one brain

0:07:16 > 0:07:19from the Final Round. The Eggheads haven't lost any brains yet.

0:07:19 > 0:07:21The next subject is Geography. Who would like this?

0:07:22 > 0:07:23- Geography.- Who's the traveller?

0:07:23 > 0:07:26- Rosaleen?- Rosaleen or Steve?

0:07:26 > 0:07:29- I'll do it.- Before you go, Rosie, choose an Egghead.

0:07:29 > 0:07:31- Oh, yes.- Can't be Chris.

0:07:31 > 0:07:34- Oh. Oh, Barry.- Barry, yeah. Yes.

0:07:34 > 0:07:36- Yes.- Barry, please.- OK.

0:07:36 > 0:07:38So, Rosaleen from Handel With Care

0:07:38 > 0:07:41versus Barry from the Eggheads on Geography.

0:07:41 > 0:07:43Please go to the Question Room now.

0:07:44 > 0:07:46Rosaleen. Geography.

0:07:46 > 0:07:48Three questions against Barry,

0:07:48 > 0:07:50and you can choose the first or the second set.

0:07:50 > 0:07:52I'll go first, please.

0:07:53 > 0:07:54Here we go. Good luck.

0:07:54 > 0:07:57In the United States, which commodity is sometimes

0:07:57 > 0:07:59referred to as Texas tea? Is it...

0:08:01 > 0:08:03Texas tea? Well...

0:08:03 > 0:08:06I think Texas is particularly famous for oil, isn't it?

0:08:06 > 0:08:09Or is that just too obvious?

0:08:11 > 0:08:12I'll go with oil.

0:08:12 > 0:08:15- And oil is quite right. Well done. - Oh, good.

0:08:15 > 0:08:17Barry, your question.

0:08:17 > 0:08:20What is the official monetary unit of Monaco?

0:08:20 > 0:08:21Is it...

0:08:24 > 0:08:27Ah. Well, it won't be the Lira.

0:08:27 > 0:08:30Have they still stayed on the Franc or have they gone into the Euro?

0:08:30 > 0:08:31No, it...

0:08:31 > 0:08:34It must be the Euro.

0:08:34 > 0:08:37Is Monaco in... It's in France, isn't it? It's independent?

0:08:37 > 0:08:39- It's the South of France, yes. - But is it part of France?

0:08:39 > 0:08:41No. It's an independent principality.

0:08:41 > 0:08:43Independent principality. You're right, anyway.

0:08:43 > 0:08:46It's the Euro. Could have been a nasty one, that.

0:08:47 > 0:08:49OK. On to you, Rosaleen.

0:08:49 > 0:08:52The town of Chepstow is located on which river? Is it...

0:08:55 > 0:08:58Oh, dear. Well, I'm pretty sure it's not the Trent,

0:08:58 > 0:09:00cos that's up North somewhere.

0:09:00 > 0:09:01The Witham?

0:09:01 > 0:09:05I do go to that part of the country sometimes to see relatives.

0:09:05 > 0:09:08And I've certainly sat beside the Wye in Hereford.

0:09:08 > 0:09:11I guess it must be the Wye.

0:09:12 > 0:09:14- Lovely stuff. It is the Wye. - Ooh, great.- Good.

0:09:14 > 0:09:16Now, on to Barry. Let's see if he falls behind.

0:09:16 > 0:09:20The headland called Dr Syntax's Head

0:09:20 > 0:09:23is a feature of which county? Barry, is it...

0:09:25 > 0:09:27Ah. I have heard of this headland

0:09:27 > 0:09:30but I'm not quite sure where it is.

0:09:30 > 0:09:35I don't believe it's in Kent. I think it's further south-west.

0:09:35 > 0:09:38Is it Dorset or Cornwall? I'm going to go for Dorset.

0:09:38 > 0:09:40Let's see if your colleagues know. Is it Dorset?

0:09:40 > 0:09:42- Cornwall. - Cornwall. Whereabouts is it?

0:09:42 > 0:09:46- Near Land's End, isn't it? - Near Land's End, Barry.- Oh.

0:09:46 > 0:09:47Cornwall is the answer.

0:09:47 > 0:09:49So you're in the lead, Rosaleen.

0:09:49 > 0:09:52Get this one right, you've knocked him out. OK, here we go.

0:09:52 > 0:09:56Apia, spelt A-P-I-A, is the capital of which country?

0:09:58 > 0:10:00Oh. You're going to say,

0:10:00 > 0:10:05I know it's something...some Pacific island, isn't it? Oh, dear.

0:10:05 > 0:10:09Do you know, I've been sitting with an atlas every evening for weeks.

0:10:09 > 0:10:12I even printed a list of capital cities out.

0:10:12 > 0:10:16But there were so many, I can't really remember them all.

0:10:16 > 0:10:17Apia.

0:10:17 > 0:10:20Oh, dear. I don't think it's Tonga.

0:10:21 > 0:10:24I think it's Samoa.

0:10:24 > 0:10:27- Samoa is the right answer. Well done.- ALL: Well done!

0:10:27 > 0:10:30Rosaleen, real Daphne-style performance. It's a compliment.

0:10:30 > 0:10:33- You're in the Final Round. - Wonderful!

0:10:33 > 0:10:35- I'm sorry, Barry.- You knocked out Barry.- I'm sorry, Barry.

0:10:35 > 0:10:36CHALLENGERS LAUGH

0:10:36 > 0:10:38He doesn't mind. He can take it.

0:10:38 > 0:10:40Please, both of you, come back and rejoin us here.

0:10:42 > 0:10:44Handel With Care, as it stands,

0:10:44 > 0:10:46you've lost one brain from the Final Round.

0:10:46 > 0:10:47The Eggheads have also lost a brain now.

0:10:47 > 0:10:50Next subject is Film & Television.

0:10:50 > 0:10:51So who would like this?

0:10:51 > 0:10:52ALL: Ooh.

0:10:52 > 0:10:56- Film & TV.- It's up to you, now. - Oh, my God.

0:10:56 > 0:10:58- None of us wanted to do this, did we?- No.

0:10:58 > 0:11:02Well, it was quite high up on my list. I can go and do it?

0:11:02 > 0:11:05- You're pretty good on film, aren't you?- No.- Yeah.

0:11:05 > 0:11:07- Hopeless on TV soaps. - You might get some TV.

0:11:07 > 0:11:10Clive. All right. This is the moment.

0:11:10 > 0:11:14And against which Egghead? Who would you like to take on and knock out?

0:11:14 > 0:11:15Uh, David.

0:11:15 > 0:11:18Tremendous Knowledge Dave is what we call him here, but that's fine.

0:11:18 > 0:11:21- Oh, well. - Clive from Handel With Care

0:11:21 > 0:11:25versus Tremendous Knowledge Dave from the Eggheads on Film & TV.

0:11:25 > 0:11:27Please go to the Question Room now.

0:11:28 > 0:11:29OK. Good luck in this round.

0:11:29 > 0:11:32I'll ask you three questions on Film & Television in turn.

0:11:32 > 0:11:34Clive, you can choose the first or second set.

0:11:34 > 0:11:36I think I'll go for the first, Jeremy.

0:11:38 > 0:11:40Here we go. Best of luck.

0:11:40 > 0:11:43The Foretelling, set in the Wars of the Roses,

0:11:43 > 0:11:47was the title of the first broadcast episode of which 1980s TV comedy?

0:11:51 > 0:11:54Ah. Now, I remember Blackadder

0:11:54 > 0:11:58did start off in the 14th century.

0:11:58 > 0:12:00So, yeah. I'm going to go for Blackadder, Jeremy.

0:12:00 > 0:12:03Blackadder is the right answer, Clive. Well done.

0:12:03 > 0:12:05Tremendous Knowledge Dave.

0:12:05 > 0:12:07The TV show, Sex And The City,

0:12:07 > 0:12:10is mainly set in which US city? Is it...

0:12:13 > 0:12:15Again, the wife's responsible for my knowledge of this.

0:12:15 > 0:12:20Erm, always on when I want to watch golf. Erm,

0:12:20 > 0:12:22- but it's New York. - New York is right.

0:12:22 > 0:12:24I've got the same situation at home, yep.

0:12:25 > 0:12:27I've seen all of them twice. Clive.

0:12:27 > 0:12:30Frank Burnside, played by Christopher Ellison,

0:12:30 > 0:12:33was a long-running character in which TV series? Is it...

0:12:37 > 0:12:41Hmm. Well, I don't know this.

0:12:41 > 0:12:45I've watched The Bill a long time ago.

0:12:45 > 0:12:47I've watched Waking The Dead a couple of times,

0:12:47 > 0:12:49and I regret to say I never watch Cracker,

0:12:49 > 0:12:54so this is going to be a complete guess.

0:12:54 > 0:12:57Most people have been in The Bill at one time or another.

0:12:57 > 0:13:00So I'm going to go for The Bill.

0:13:00 > 0:13:02That's very good logic.

0:13:02 > 0:13:05Again, quizzers' logic. You're right. The Bill it is.

0:13:06 > 0:13:07OK, Dave.

0:13:07 > 0:13:10What was the name of the snail in the UK version

0:13:10 > 0:13:13of the children's TV series The Magic Roundabout?

0:13:15 > 0:13:17Childhood memories.

0:13:17 > 0:13:20Not normally good on children's TV.

0:13:20 > 0:13:23But if I go through, it's Dylan the rabbit and Ermintrude the cow

0:13:23 > 0:13:25and it's Brian the snail.

0:13:25 > 0:13:28Brian the snail is right. So two each.

0:13:28 > 0:13:30You're both playing well. Here we go, Clive.

0:13:30 > 0:13:32The 1948 film, The Emperor Waltz,

0:13:32 > 0:13:37provided the first of 35 Oscar nominations for which designer?

0:13:41 > 0:13:44I've got a feeling Anthony Powell is a novelist.

0:13:44 > 0:13:48Edith Head is a name I know but I'm not quite sure how.

0:13:51 > 0:13:54Again, it's going to be a little bit of a guess, I think.

0:13:54 > 0:13:57I'm going to go for Edith Head.

0:13:58 > 0:14:00- Eggheads, is that correct? - ALL: Yeah.

0:14:00 > 0:14:03- Yeah, you're right, Clive. You played very well.- Well done, Clive.

0:14:03 > 0:14:05Real quizzer. OK, so, if you get this wrong,

0:14:05 > 0:14:07- Dave, you're going to be out.- Yep.

0:14:07 > 0:14:10The 1957 film, The Prince And The Showgirl,

0:14:10 > 0:14:13starring Laurence Olivier and Marilyn Monroe,

0:14:13 > 0:14:16is based on a play by which writer?

0:14:21 > 0:14:24Oh, it's...it could be any of them.

0:14:25 > 0:14:28I do not know.

0:14:28 > 0:14:31I'm going to go George Bernard Shaw.

0:14:31 > 0:14:34- DIANA:- Ooh!- And I think I'll be back here in the Sin Bin.

0:14:34 > 0:14:35HE LAUGHS

0:14:35 > 0:14:39- Team, Challengers?- It's Rattigan. - It is Rattigan. Well done, Diana.

0:14:39 > 0:14:41- Well done.- Terence Rattigan is the answer, not Shaw.

0:14:41 > 0:14:42So, Clive, well done.

0:14:42 > 0:14:45You're in the Final Round. Very well played.

0:14:45 > 0:14:48Very well played indeed. This is getting interesting.

0:14:48 > 0:14:50Please, both of you, come back and rejoin your teams.

0:14:52 > 0:14:54As it stands, the Challengers have lost one brain,

0:14:54 > 0:14:58the Eggheads have lost two brains from the all-important Final Round.

0:14:58 > 0:15:01And here we go with the last subject, which is Music.

0:15:01 > 0:15:02The omens are good, here.

0:15:03 > 0:15:04Who's going to do Music?

0:15:04 > 0:15:08- There you go.- We've got two left. It's one of you two.- Steve or Jim.

0:15:08 > 0:15:12- I'm afraid Steve.- It's me, is it? - He's got more pop music knowledge.

0:15:12 > 0:15:14- Steve's got the short straw.- Yeah.

0:15:14 > 0:15:17- What do you think?- Steve? OK. - He's better at General Knowledge..

0:15:17 > 0:15:20Looks like it's going to be me. Not my strongest subject, but...

0:15:20 > 0:15:22OK. Don't get up just yet. Steve, against which Egghead?

0:15:22 > 0:15:25- Right. So who shall we go for then? - Could be Daphne or Kevin.

0:15:25 > 0:15:29- Daphne.- Daphne?- Daphne, we think it's you, please.

0:15:29 > 0:15:31Oh, right.

0:15:31 > 0:15:34Steve from Handel With Care versus Daphne from the Eggheads.

0:15:34 > 0:15:38To ensure there's no conferring, please go to the Question Room.

0:15:39 > 0:15:43OK. Good luck in Music. Do you want to go first or second, Steve?

0:15:43 > 0:15:45I'll go for first, please.

0:15:48 > 0:15:52Here we go. Good luck. A recording of which popular song

0:15:52 > 0:15:56became a UK top 10 single for Cat Stevens in the early 1970s?

0:16:01 > 0:16:05OK. Well, this is taking me back to my sixth form.

0:16:05 > 0:16:08And definitely not Lord Of The Dance.

0:16:08 > 0:16:11All Things Bright And Beautiful, I'm not sure if anybody sang that,

0:16:11 > 0:16:15that I can remember, but Morning Has Broken was Cat Stevens.

0:16:15 > 0:16:17Morning Has Broken is the right answer.

0:16:18 > 0:16:19Daphne,

0:16:19 > 0:16:25what was the title of Maria McKee's 1990 UK number 1 single?

0:16:28 > 0:16:30- SHE LAUGHS - Um...

0:16:31 > 0:16:34I think the only one...

0:16:34 > 0:16:38I think I've heard of is Show Me Heaven?

0:16:39 > 0:16:41- Can you sing it?- No! No.

0:16:41 > 0:16:43I could clear the studio.

0:16:44 > 0:16:47Show Me Heaven is the right answer.

0:16:47 > 0:16:48Steve, over to you.

0:16:48 > 0:16:52Which English composer's operatic version of A Midsummer Night's Dream

0:16:52 > 0:16:56premiered in 1960? Is it...

0:17:00 > 0:17:02OK. Edward Elgar was quite a bit earlier than that.

0:17:02 > 0:17:05Not sure about Harrison Birtwistle

0:17:05 > 0:17:09but Benjamin Britten does sound... I know he's written some operas.

0:17:09 > 0:17:11So I'll go for Benjamin Britten.

0:17:11 > 0:17:15Benjamin Britten is correct. Playing well.

0:17:15 > 0:17:17Team is playing very well. Daphne.

0:17:17 > 0:17:21What is the real first name of the blues musician known as BB King?

0:17:24 > 0:17:27Crumbs. Erm...

0:17:27 > 0:17:30- Stanley.- No.- No?

0:17:30 > 0:17:33I thought they'd have put one starting with B in there

0:17:33 > 0:17:35to throw you off the scent even more.

0:17:35 > 0:17:38- It doesn't begin with B and it's not Stanley. It's Riley.- Oh, right.

0:17:38 > 0:17:41Riley King. You're in the lead, Steve.

0:17:41 > 0:17:43If you get it right, you've knocked out an Egghead,

0:17:43 > 0:17:46then we'll be playing four against two in the Final Round.

0:17:46 > 0:17:49Which American singer's UK hits include

0:17:49 > 0:17:54See You Again, Seven Things, and Party In The USA? Is it...

0:17:58 > 0:18:02Ooh, OK. I know my children would know this.

0:18:03 > 0:18:06Miley Cyrus is quite recent. Erm...

0:18:06 > 0:18:10Carrie Underwood I've heard of. LeAnn Rimes, er, I've not heard of.

0:18:12 > 0:18:17And I didn't recognise any of the subjects, the titles of the songs,

0:18:17 > 0:18:19so I won't ask you to repeat them.

0:18:19 > 0:18:20I'll go with Miley Cyrus.

0:18:20 > 0:18:23The answer is Miley Cyrus, Steve. Well done.

0:18:23 > 0:18:26You're in the Final Round. Playing well, you Handel With Cares.

0:18:26 > 0:18:30Daphne, you've been knocked out on Music. No musicals, you see.

0:18:30 > 0:18:32- No.- That's what happens when you don't get your musicals.

0:18:32 > 0:18:35Please, both of you, come back to the studio,

0:18:35 > 0:18:36and we will play that Final Round.

0:18:38 > 0:18:41This is interesting. This is what we've been playing towards.

0:18:41 > 0:18:42It is time for the Final Round

0:18:42 > 0:18:44which, as always, is General Knowledge.

0:18:44 > 0:18:47Those of you who lost your Head-to-Heads

0:18:47 > 0:18:49won't be allowed to take part in this round.

0:18:49 > 0:18:53So, Diana from Handel With Care. Sorry.

0:18:53 > 0:18:56And also Barry, Daphne and Dave from the Eggheads.

0:18:56 > 0:18:59Would you please leave the studio?

0:19:00 > 0:19:02So Rosaleen, Clive, Steve and Jim,

0:19:02 > 0:19:05you are playing to win Handel With Care £2,000.

0:19:05 > 0:19:08Chris and Kevin, you're playing for something that money can't buy,

0:19:08 > 0:19:12the Eggheads' reputation, which has been rather battered lately.

0:19:12 > 0:19:15As usual, I will ask each team three questions in turn.

0:19:15 > 0:19:17This time the questions are all General Knowledge.

0:19:17 > 0:19:18You are allowed to confer.

0:19:18 > 0:19:21So, Rosaleen, Clive, Steve and Jim,

0:19:21 > 0:19:25the question is, can your four brains overwhelm the Eggheads' two?

0:19:25 > 0:19:29- And would you like to go first or second?- First, please, Jeremy.

0:19:31 > 0:19:32OK.

0:19:32 > 0:19:34Good luck, Handel With Care. Here we go.

0:19:34 > 0:19:37What name is often given to an academic examination in which

0:19:37 > 0:19:42questions and answers are provided in spoken form? Is it...

0:19:45 > 0:19:48- I'm almost certain...- It's Viva Voce.- Definitely.- Viva Voce.

0:19:48 > 0:19:51- Or a Viva.- Viva Voce.

0:19:51 > 0:19:54Viva Voce or Vi-va Voce. What do we call it? We just call it a Viva?

0:19:54 > 0:19:57- ALL: Yeah, Viva.- Viva. OK.

0:19:57 > 0:20:00That's correct. Well done. First one to you. Eggheads.

0:20:00 > 0:20:03- Looking a bit lonely, the two of you there.- We'll survive.

0:20:03 > 0:20:05We haven't had this many knocked out for a while.

0:20:05 > 0:20:08- It's a while.- You were on a great streak, then it came to an end.

0:20:08 > 0:20:10Oh, dearie, dearie me.

0:20:10 > 0:20:14What are bobby pins normally used to hold in place? Is it...

0:20:16 > 0:20:18- Hair.- It's hair, isn't it?

0:20:18 > 0:20:21Yep. They're used to hold hair.

0:20:21 > 0:20:23Hair is the right answer.

0:20:23 > 0:20:25The questions may get harder.

0:20:26 > 0:20:31The fashion designer Julien MacDonald was born in which town?

0:20:34 > 0:20:38- He's a MacDonald, so...- MacDonald is Scottish.- MacDonald sounds Scottish.

0:20:38 > 0:20:42- Do any of you know anything about this?- No, I'm sorry.

0:20:42 > 0:20:46- I don't know anything.- We'll have to just extract from the question,

0:20:46 > 0:20:48MacDonald is Scottish. Does that help?

0:20:48 > 0:20:52Well, it might do. Might be the wrong answer.

0:20:52 > 0:20:55I think it's unlikely Merthyr Tydfil...

0:20:55 > 0:20:58- being fashion. - It's not the hotbed of fashion.

0:20:58 > 0:21:01- I'm sorry, I don't know anything about fashion.- Why Motherwell?

0:21:01 > 0:21:05I only wear wellingtons and dirty anoraks, you see.

0:21:05 > 0:21:08- Yeah. I'm not a fashion man at all.- No.

0:21:08 > 0:21:11Motherwell sounds a bit more romantic, doesn't it?

0:21:11 > 0:21:14- Yeah, let's go for Motherwell. - Yes.- We don't know.

0:21:14 > 0:21:16- All right.- Yes.- We don't know, but we'll go for Motherwell.

0:21:16 > 0:21:18OK. Motherwell is your answer.

0:21:18 > 0:21:20Anyone know about this fellow, Julien Macdonald?

0:21:20 > 0:21:23I think he's Welsh. I think it's Merthyr Tydfil.

0:21:23 > 0:21:25I'm not certain but I think it's Merthyr Tydfil.

0:21:25 > 0:21:27- Merthyr Tydfil is the answer.- OK.

0:21:28 > 0:21:30Eggheads. Your question.

0:21:30 > 0:21:34In the human body, the hormone glucagon is formed

0:21:34 > 0:21:36in which glandular organ? Is it...

0:21:40 > 0:21:44- The pancreas is insulin.- Yeah.

0:21:44 > 0:21:46Liver's not really a glandular organ.

0:21:46 > 0:21:49Well, no, it is a gland.

0:21:49 > 0:21:51And the liver has more...

0:21:51 > 0:21:55- components, in that sense, than any other organ, virtually.- Yeah.

0:21:55 > 0:21:57Lots of things come from the liver.

0:21:57 > 0:21:59The liver performs so many functions.

0:21:59 > 0:22:02- But it could... I don't think it's pancreas.- No.

0:22:02 > 0:22:05That's insulin.

0:22:05 > 0:22:08- Spleen doesn't really sound right to me.- No.

0:22:08 > 0:22:11- I'd... I don't know it.- Well, if the liver's multi-functional,

0:22:11 > 0:22:14- it's probably the liver. - I don't know it, but I'd say liver.

0:22:14 > 0:22:18- But I don't know it.- I don't either, so we'll go with it.

0:22:18 > 0:22:20We don't know it, but we'll go for the liver on the basis

0:22:20 > 0:22:24- that more things happen there. - Good logic, but wrong.- OK.

0:22:24 > 0:22:26- Pancreas is the answer.- Right.

0:22:26 > 0:22:28Third question. You're still in the game. One point each.

0:22:28 > 0:22:30They've let you off the hook there.

0:22:30 > 0:22:32Do try and get this one right.

0:22:32 > 0:22:36Businessman Dave Whelan took control of which football club in 1995?

0:22:36 > 0:22:37Is it...

0:22:41 > 0:22:45- I'm almost 100% certain, but we'd better discuss.- I think we had.

0:22:45 > 0:22:47- What do we think?- I think it's Wigan.

0:22:47 > 0:22:53That would've been the time of Quinn and so on at Sunderland.

0:22:53 > 0:22:56And Fulham is the Harrods man.

0:22:56 > 0:23:00- I'm sure it's Wigan.- I would've thought Sunderland, but...- No.

0:23:00 > 0:23:02- Are you sure? - I would put money on Whelan.

0:23:02 > 0:23:05- So that would be...- Right, OK.

0:23:05 > 0:23:07- It is putting money on it.- Yeah.

0:23:08 > 0:23:11- Wigan. Final answer. - Wigan is your answer?

0:23:11 > 0:23:14- Wigan is the right answer. - Yes.- Well done.

0:23:14 > 0:23:16Dave Whelan, Wigan.

0:23:16 > 0:23:18So, Eggheads. You get this one wrong,

0:23:18 > 0:23:20the contest is over and you've lost.

0:23:20 > 0:23:24In 1982, who did Arthur Scargill succeed

0:23:24 > 0:23:28as President of the National Union Of Mineworkers?

0:23:31 > 0:23:33- Joe Gormley.- The others weren't involved with the miners.

0:23:33 > 0:23:36- No.- That was Joe Gormley.

0:23:36 > 0:23:39Joe Gormley is the right answer. So you're equal after three questions.

0:23:39 > 0:23:40We go to Sudden Death.

0:23:40 > 0:23:43Gets a bit harder. I don't give you alternatives. Jackpot, £2,000.

0:23:43 > 0:23:46Here we go. Which member of the Monty Python team

0:23:46 > 0:23:49made his debut as an opera director

0:23:49 > 0:23:52with a production of The Damnation Of Faust

0:23:52 > 0:23:55at the English National Opera in 2011?

0:23:55 > 0:23:59- Now...- OK.- The Monty Python team. - 2011.- Cleese?

0:23:59 > 0:24:02- Idle.- Chapman's dead.

0:24:02 > 0:24:05- Terry Gilliam is the most likely. - Idle could be. Gilliam.

0:24:05 > 0:24:08- Because he's a film director. - Yes. The Damnation Of Faust.

0:24:08 > 0:24:11That could be Gilliam. Or, of course...

0:24:11 > 0:24:14- Michael Palin.- No, the other one's Jones.- Jones is an intellectual.

0:24:14 > 0:24:19- Yeah.- He does sort of ancient stuff. - And he did...- But Gilliam...

0:24:19 > 0:24:22- Was he an original Python?- It must be Gilliam, because he's so visual.

0:24:22 > 0:24:25- I would think so, yeah. - Yes. We'll go for Gilliam.

0:24:25 > 0:24:28- I'm happy with that.- Terry Gilliam. - Terry Gilliam is the right answer.

0:24:28 > 0:24:29Good stuff.

0:24:29 > 0:24:33Eggheads, you're under pressure. Get this wrong, you will have lost.

0:24:33 > 0:24:36Which TV personality, who presented the Eurovision Song Contest

0:24:36 > 0:24:39several times in the 1960s and '70s,

0:24:39 > 0:24:45was born the daughter of an Italian Marquis in Florence in 1926?

0:24:45 > 0:24:47- That's Katie Boyle. - Yeah, Katie Boyle.

0:24:47 > 0:24:51We think she was the most frequent presenter of Eurovision

0:24:51 > 0:24:53at that period. Katie Boyle.

0:24:53 > 0:24:55Katie Boyle is right.

0:24:55 > 0:25:01She was born Caterina Irene Elena Maria Imperiali di Francavilla.

0:25:01 > 0:25:03- And she changed her name to Katie Boyle.- Yeah.

0:25:03 > 0:25:05Lovely Katie Boyle. OK,

0:25:05 > 0:25:09Handel With Care. Erdbeere

0:25:09 > 0:25:12is the German word for which type of fruit?

0:25:12 > 0:25:15Earth, erd.

0:25:15 > 0:25:21- Erde, earth.- Is it blackberry? - Fruit. Fruit.

0:25:21 > 0:25:23Is it blackberry?

0:25:23 > 0:25:29- (Erdbeere.)- Does anyone know German for other fruits?

0:25:29 > 0:25:31I got a zero on German O level.

0:25:31 > 0:25:34I took technical German but didn't get far.

0:25:34 > 0:25:37- Erdbeere.- What about you, Clive? - No. No German at all.

0:25:37 > 0:25:42- And it's a fruit? - It's a berry.- It's a berry.

0:25:42 > 0:25:44- Beere, berry.- Blackberry.

0:25:44 > 0:25:47- How about...- I think it's quite... - What about strawberry?

0:25:47 > 0:25:49- OK.- Strawberry grows on the earth. - On the ground.

0:25:49 > 0:25:53Hmm, low to the ground. Erdbeere. Could be, couldn't it?

0:25:53 > 0:25:57- I think we go for that. - Go for strawberry. Yeah.

0:25:57 > 0:25:59- Go for strawberry. That's the nearest, isn't it?- (Erdbeere.)

0:25:59 > 0:26:03Earth berry. We'll go for strawberry.

0:26:03 > 0:26:06Strawberry is your answer. I remember my German O level

0:26:06 > 0:26:11and A level, but "erd," is that "earth" in German? Could be straw,

0:26:11 > 0:26:13- cos the answer's right. - CHEERING

0:26:13 > 0:26:17Strawberry's the answer. Well done. Well done, you.

0:26:17 > 0:26:21OK, Eggheads. You get this one wrong, you've been beaten. In 1976,

0:26:21 > 0:26:25the first winter Paralympics took place in which country?

0:26:28 > 0:26:31- I just don't know. - I don't know either.

0:26:31 > 0:26:33Erm...

0:26:33 > 0:26:37So, the actual Winter Olympics that year were held in Innsbruck.

0:26:37 > 0:26:41- Ah.- But the co-location...

0:26:41 > 0:26:44- The Paralympics is at the same place, isn't it?- Not necessarily.

0:26:44 > 0:26:48I don't know about the winter ones. They didn't used to with the summer ones.

0:26:48 > 0:26:52It was a while before they co-located them. So...

0:26:54 > 0:26:57I don't know. Shall we try...

0:26:57 > 0:27:00- Try Austria? But I don't know. - It's the best we'll come up with.

0:27:00 > 0:27:03- It's going to turn out to be... - If the regular Winter Olympics

0:27:03 > 0:27:05- were in Austria that year, at Innsbruck.- Yeah.

0:27:05 > 0:27:10- Ah...it was just starting out? - They were just starting out.

0:27:10 > 0:27:12- It's possible.- They wouldn't have the full circus.

0:27:12 > 0:27:16- It'd be an adjunct of the Winter Olympics.- It's the only thing to cling on to.

0:27:16 > 0:27:21We haven't got the faintest idea, but the only thing cling on to,

0:27:21 > 0:27:26and it's very tenuous, because the idea of co-locating

0:27:26 > 0:27:29Olympics and Paralympics, whether summer or winter,

0:27:29 > 0:27:33is a much more recent invention. But...

0:27:33 > 0:27:38THE Winter Olympics in 1976 were held in Innsbruck.

0:27:38 > 0:27:42And, therefore, on that basis, we would hope that,

0:27:42 > 0:27:44since it was the first Winter Paralympics,

0:27:44 > 0:27:48they would use it as an adjunct. So we'll try Austria.

0:27:48 > 0:27:50But we haven't got the faintest idea.

0:27:50 > 0:27:52You're thinking it's in the same country

0:27:52 > 0:27:55- that the other Olympics were held? - I've got severe doubts about that.

0:27:55 > 0:27:59Because with the Summer Olympics they didn't do it till much later.

0:27:59 > 0:28:02But if we don't go for Austria, then we're picking a random country.

0:28:02 > 0:28:05- It could be anywhere.- There's a lot of tension behind you, I must say.

0:28:05 > 0:28:08The logic's good. And also to pick out Austria

0:28:08 > 0:28:11as the place where the Winter Olympics were held,

0:28:11 > 0:28:14the main ones were held, er...

0:28:14 > 0:28:16It's wrong. The answer is Sweden.

0:28:16 > 0:28:20So we say congratulations, Challengers. You have won!

0:28:20 > 0:28:21Wow!

0:28:26 > 0:28:29- You've never quizzed together before?- No.- And you've just beaten

0:28:29 > 0:28:33- two Mastermind champions. - We've just sung together. - How about that?- Yes.

0:28:33 > 0:28:34Thank you very much. It's been great fun.

0:28:34 > 0:28:37You've won £2,000. Congratulations to you.

0:28:37 > 0:28:40And you are now officially cleverer than the Eggheads.

0:28:40 > 0:28:43Join us next time on Eggheads to see if a new team of Challengers

0:28:43 > 0:28:46will be just as successful. Till then, goodbye.

0:29:07 > 0:29:11Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd