Episode 52

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0:00:03 > 0:00:07These people are amongst the greatest quiz players in Britain.

0:00:09 > 0:00:15Together, they make up the Eggheads, arguably the most formidable quiz team in the country.

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

0:00:23 > 0:00:27Welcome to Eggheads, where a team of five quiz challengers pit their wits

0:00:27 > 0:00:32against possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain. They are the Eggheads.

0:00:32 > 0:00:39Challenging our resident quiz champions today are Aunt Sally from Gloucestershire.

0:00:39 > 0:00:45They have won many local charity quizzes, including the Chipping Sodbury Festival. Let's meet them.

0:00:45 > 0:00:49I'm Clive. I'm 64 and I'm a retired schoolteacher.

0:00:49 > 0:00:53Hello. I'm Keith, I'm 68 and a retired IT specialist.

0:00:53 > 0:00:59Hello. I'm Jen, I'm 62 and I'm a retired primary school teacher.

0:00:59 > 0:01:02Hello. I'm Pete, I'm 58 and a retired bank manager.

0:01:02 > 0:01:06Hi, I'm Keith, I'm 61 and I'm a retired chemical engineer.

0:01:06 > 0:01:13Welcome to you, Aunt Sally. From Chipping Sodbury to the Eggheads! Just the tiniest step up in class.

0:01:13 > 0:01:18- Absolutely!- Now the team name. Will you allow the Eggheads to throw things?

0:01:18 > 0:01:23Not really. Sally was the lady who started the team 25 years ago.

0:01:23 > 0:01:30- OK. And not with you now? - No, because 20 years ago she decided to emigrate to Vancouver Island.

0:01:30 > 0:01:35- She now lives on Vancouver Island. - Was it something you lot said?

0:01:35 > 0:01:41- I think it was!- Do you stay in touch with Sally?- Certainly. She's with us in spirit today.

0:01:41 > 0:01:47- She knows exactly what's going on and is certainly supporting us. - Well, best of luck.

0:01:47 > 0:01:51Every day there's £1,000 of cash up for grabs for our challengers.

0:01:51 > 0:01:56But if they fail to defeat the Eggheads, the prize money rolls over to the next show.

0:01:56 > 0:02:02The Eggheads have won the last four games. That means £5,000 says you can't beat the Eggheads.

0:02:02 > 0:02:06Let's see what our first round is. It's Arts and Books.

0:02:06 > 0:02:09Choose a player and an Egghead.

0:02:09 > 0:02:14- Arts and Books. - We discussed this at some length.

0:02:14 > 0:02:18- I don't mind being the sacrificial lamb. - Don't you?

0:02:18 > 0:02:22- We're all sacrificial lambs on it! - We've got some specialisms.

0:02:22 > 0:02:25- You're happy with that, are you? - I'll take it.

0:02:25 > 0:02:27Well done. Very nobly done!

0:02:27 > 0:02:31OK, Clive. Very nobly done there.

0:02:31 > 0:02:35- Choose an Egghead. Any one. - JEN: Oh, who do you choose?

0:02:35 > 0:02:39I'd like to take on Pat, champion of champions.

0:02:39 > 0:02:43OK, it's going to be Clive and Pat playing Arts and Books.

0:02:43 > 0:02:49Could I ask you to go to the Question Room to make sure you can't confer with your teammates?

0:02:49 > 0:02:53- Clive, first or second? - First, please, Dermot.

0:02:56 > 0:03:01And off we go. Best of luck, Clive. Snuff, published in October 2011,

0:03:01 > 0:03:05is the 39th entry in a series of books by which author?

0:03:09 > 0:03:13Snuff? Now that's an interesting series.

0:03:13 > 0:03:19I'm familiar with Patricia Cornwell. Rick Riordan not so.

0:03:19 > 0:03:26And I know Terry Pratchett's been in the news lately because he's suffering from the early stages

0:03:26 > 0:03:32of Alzheimer's. But I think he's the man. Terry Pratchett is my answer.

0:03:32 > 0:03:35He is indeed. Right answer. Good start, Clive.

0:03:35 > 0:03:37Pat,

0:03:37 > 0:03:42Bacchus and Ariadne is an early-16th-century painting by which artist?

0:03:44 > 0:03:48Early 16th. That's the 1500s. The early 1500s.

0:03:48 > 0:03:53It doesn't sound like ideal subject matter for El Greco.

0:03:53 > 0:03:58Rembrandt certainly painted some classical material,

0:03:58 > 0:04:02although he is more famous for his self-portraits.

0:04:02 > 0:04:06It seems to be right up Titian's street, though.

0:04:06 > 0:04:13He painted all sorts of mythological and classical figures. So of those three...

0:04:13 > 0:04:16- I think I'll have to go for Titian. - Which is correct.

0:04:16 > 0:04:18It's one apiece. Back to Clive.

0:04:18 > 0:04:24The Narrative of John Smith, which was finally published in September, 2011,

0:04:24 > 0:04:26was the first novel by which author?

0:04:29 > 0:04:36Yes, em... I seem to remember a Dickens one having to be completed.

0:04:36 > 0:04:41I'm sure from the early stages he was all right. Walter Scott...

0:04:42 > 0:04:47I can't think of anything lately issued by him. I'm going to go

0:04:47 > 0:04:49for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

0:04:49 > 0:04:54Arthur Conan Doyle is the right answer! The Narrative of John Smith.

0:04:54 > 0:04:56OK, well,

0:04:56 > 0:05:04Pat, your second question. Yasmina Reza's play Art was originally written in which language?

0:05:05 > 0:05:12I think it's a play in which some sort of a near-blank canvas features.

0:05:12 > 0:05:16I have a faint suspicion that she's based in Paris.

0:05:16 > 0:05:19That's all I've got to go on, really.

0:05:19 > 0:05:24But in the absence of any other ideas, I'll have to assume French.

0:05:24 > 0:05:28Paris will do if it leads you to the right answer. It is French.

0:05:28 > 0:05:30OK, third question apiece.

0:05:30 > 0:05:35Lady Catherine de Bourgh is a character in which Jane Austen novel?

0:05:38 > 0:05:42Jane Austen is, I don't feel, a very masculine area.

0:05:42 > 0:05:46I can't think I've ever read any of these three,

0:05:46 > 0:05:49so why not have a sensible guess.

0:05:49 > 0:05:51Lady Catherine de Bourgh.

0:05:52 > 0:05:55Pride and Prejudice, Dermot.

0:05:55 > 0:06:01When you said a sensible guess, I thought you were setting it up for Sense and Sensibility!

0:06:01 > 0:06:04But you got the right answer.

0:06:06 > 0:06:11So Pat needs to get this then. In May, 2010, a novel by which author

0:06:11 > 0:06:17was awarded the Lost Man Booker Prize, a one-off award for books published in 1970

0:06:17 > 0:06:20which were not considered at the time?

0:06:23 > 0:06:28I think Coetzee and Carey have both won two Bookers.

0:06:28 > 0:06:34I think the novel was Troubles and I think it was by an author who drowned off the coast of Ireland

0:06:34 > 0:06:36and that was JG Farrell.

0:06:36 > 0:06:41OK, JG Farrell with Troubles. The late JG Farrell.

0:06:41 > 0:06:45It's the right answer. Well done, Pat.

0:06:45 > 0:06:50This is a very good opening round. So good we make it more difficult.

0:06:50 > 0:06:56To sort out a winner, we remove the choices and it becomes sudden death.

0:06:56 > 0:07:00Who wrote the 1894 novel The Prisoner of Zenda?

0:07:00 > 0:07:04Yes, I read that I think in the third form at grammar school.

0:07:06 > 0:07:09Just waiting for some inspiration, Dermot.

0:07:09 > 0:07:12I'm going to go for Jack London.

0:07:12 > 0:07:16OK, Jack London with The Prisoner of Zenda. It's not.

0:07:16 > 0:07:21Your memory playing tricks there. You read it a little while ago.

0:07:21 > 0:07:25- Pat, do you know? - I think it's Anthony Hope.- It is!

0:07:25 > 0:07:27Anthony Hope.

0:07:27 > 0:07:29It doesn't matter.

0:07:29 > 0:07:34We don't pass the questions. Pat has to get this one right to win.

0:07:34 > 0:07:40Who wrote the sonnet known as Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3rd, 1802?

0:07:40 > 0:07:45I think that might be the sonnet that opens with, "Earth has nothing so fair..."

0:07:45 > 0:07:50and it might be Wordsworth. I'll go for William Wordsworth.

0:07:50 > 0:07:58William Wordsworth. "Earth has not anything to show more fair," to be precise, Pat!

0:07:58 > 0:08:03It's by William Wordsworth, Pat. You are through.

0:08:03 > 0:08:06Clive, bad luck. You were very good at that subject,

0:08:06 > 0:08:13but caught out with The Prisoner of Zenda. Both please come back and join your teams.

0:08:13 > 0:08:17A mighty clash there, but Aunt Sally lost out.

0:08:17 > 0:08:21Clive will miss the final round. All the Eggheads still there.

0:08:21 > 0:08:24Our second Head To Head is Geography.

0:08:24 > 0:08:27Who wants to play this? Not Clive.

0:08:27 > 0:08:30Do you want to go for Geography?

0:08:30 > 0:08:33Whoever wants it. We've Keith here.

0:08:33 > 0:08:39- Keith was the main person we discussed in our meeting. - That's fine.

0:08:39 > 0:08:44- Keith's got a lot of travelling experience.- I'm quite happy, yes.

0:08:44 > 0:08:48Now which of the Eggheads would you like to take on?

0:08:48 > 0:08:51- CJ isn't here, is he? - No, he's not!

0:08:51 > 0:08:54- I'd like...- Up to you.- Chris.

0:08:54 > 0:08:58I'd like to take on Chris, please.

0:08:58 > 0:09:04OK, a bit of deliberation there. Keith deciding to take on Chris. I heard you were missing CJ.

0:09:04 > 0:09:09His geography is so bad, he probably got lost on the way to the studio.

0:09:09 > 0:09:15OK, well, it's going to be Keith M and Chris contesting this one. Into the Question Room, please.

0:09:17 > 0:09:22Well, Keith, a well-travelled man as I heard your colleagues saying.

0:09:22 > 0:09:26- How would you like to start? First or second?- First, please.

0:09:29 > 0:09:34OK, then. Your wish will be granted. First question coming your way.

0:09:34 > 0:09:40At their closest point, the Canary Islands are located approximately 100km off which continent?

0:09:43 > 0:09:46Right. The Canary Islands.

0:09:47 > 0:09:51I feel they're a way away from Asia.

0:09:51 > 0:09:55And they're a little bit closer to Africa than South America.

0:09:55 > 0:09:59- I'm going to go for Africa. - A little bit closer!

0:09:59 > 0:10:03- Just the odd...- A few thousand miles!- It's the right answer.

0:10:03 > 0:10:07Well done. Africa. Much closer to that continent.

0:10:07 > 0:10:14Chris, San Jose, one of the USA's most populous cities, is located in which state?

0:10:15 > 0:10:18Well, it's not Florida.

0:10:18 > 0:10:24And there probably is a San Jose somewhere in Texas, as the Spanish gave religious names to places,

0:10:24 > 0:10:28but the big San Jose is in California.

0:10:28 > 0:10:30California is correct, yes.

0:10:30 > 0:10:32Straight back to you, Keith.

0:10:32 > 0:10:36What is the official monetary unit of Kuwait?

0:10:40 > 0:10:41Ah!

0:10:42 > 0:10:45Rial...Dinar...Shekel.

0:10:46 > 0:10:50I'm not really sure here, Dermot, but I'll have a guess.

0:10:50 > 0:10:55I somehow don't think it's the Shekel.

0:10:56 > 0:11:00And I think I'm going to plump for the Kuwaiti Rial.

0:11:00 > 0:11:03OK, the Rial in Kuwait.

0:11:03 > 0:11:11It's not the Shekel, or the Rial. It's the Dinar. I knew you were tossing up between those two.

0:11:11 > 0:11:13You turned it into a 50/50.

0:11:13 > 0:11:16Let's see what Chris does.

0:11:16 > 0:11:22Mupe Bay and St Oswald's Bay are part of which area on the south coast of England?

0:11:24 > 0:11:31Well, Bognor Regis and Eastbourne are both on pretty straight pieces of coast.

0:11:31 > 0:11:37Bognor Regis tends down towards Selsey Bill and Eastbourne is along the flat coast by Pevensey.

0:11:37 > 0:11:43So there is a Lulworth Cove in Dorset, so it must be Lulworth.

0:11:43 > 0:11:47OK. Going for Dorset and Lulworth. It's the right answer. Yes, Chris.

0:11:47 > 0:11:49Good knowledge there.

0:11:49 > 0:11:53You need to get this, Keith. The city of Ballarat,

0:11:53 > 0:12:00the site of the 1854 armed rebellion known as the Eureka Stockade, is in which Australian state?

0:12:03 > 0:12:07Not one I know the answer to immediately, Dermot, I'm afraid.

0:12:07 > 0:12:09This is going to have to be a guess.

0:12:09 > 0:12:12Ballarat.

0:12:15 > 0:12:16I...

0:12:16 > 0:12:19I think I'm going to guess at Victoria.

0:12:19 > 0:12:23It is the right answer! Well done! Victoria.

0:12:23 > 0:12:25So, still in it,

0:12:25 > 0:12:32but Chris has an opportunity here to win the round. What is the approximate population of Poland?

0:12:35 > 0:12:38Now Poland's quite large.

0:12:39 > 0:12:44They did lose a hell of a lot of their population in World War Two.

0:12:44 > 0:12:48It's not eight million. I don't think it's recovered to 68 million,

0:12:48 > 0:12:52so I'll go down the middle for 38 million.

0:12:52 > 0:12:54For a place in the final round.

0:12:54 > 0:12:58You've booked it. It is the right answer.

0:12:58 > 0:13:00The approximate population.

0:13:00 > 0:13:02We have to bid farewell to Keith.

0:13:02 > 0:13:06Would you both please come back and join your teams?

0:13:06 > 0:13:13Not a lot of luck so far for Aunt Sally. The Eggheads are all there, two of your team have gone.

0:13:13 > 0:13:18But we have two more Head To Heads to play, so a lot can happen in the next couple of rounds.

0:13:18 > 0:13:20Next is Film and Television.

0:13:20 > 0:13:23Who'd like to play this?

0:13:23 > 0:13:25Jen, Pete or the other Keith?

0:13:25 > 0:13:31Do you fancy it? Your knowledge of film is quite extensive.

0:13:31 > 0:13:34- You going to try, Pete?- Yeah?

0:13:34 > 0:13:39- - You know more than I will.- Yeah. - - Which Egghead do you fancy?

0:13:39 > 0:13:45- Are you after a scalp of any sort? Or are you...? - Who have you got left?

0:13:45 > 0:13:48Barry, Judith or Daphne remain.

0:13:48 > 0:13:51- Shall I got for Judith?- Yes, go on.

0:13:51 > 0:13:53- Of course.- Judith, please.

0:13:53 > 0:13:58OK, Judith. Going for a scalp again as Clive was saying there.

0:13:58 > 0:14:02Pete trying to get Judith's scalp. Into the Question Room, please.

0:14:03 > 0:14:10- Well, Pete, choose for me. First or second for you? - I'll go first, please, Dermot.

0:14:13 > 0:14:20First question on Film and TV for Pete. Kara Tointon played the role of Dawn Swann in which TV soap?

0:14:23 > 0:14:28I think she was the lady who was in Strictly Come Dancing as well.

0:14:28 > 0:14:31I don't think it's Emmerdale.

0:14:31 > 0:14:37I don't think it's Coronation Street. I think - I've only seen it a couple of times -

0:14:37 > 0:14:42- she's in EastEnders. So that's my answer. - It's the right answer. EastEnders.

0:14:42 > 0:14:44Kara Tointon there.

0:14:44 > 0:14:50Judith, in which decade was the TV sitcom Open All Hours first broadcast?

0:14:52 > 0:14:57That was the one with Ronnie Barker and David Jason, wasn't it?

0:14:57 > 0:14:59And it's ages ago.

0:14:59 > 0:15:01So, um...

0:15:01 > 0:15:07If it's the one I'm thinking of, David Jason was very young. He was a kind of boy in it,

0:15:07 > 0:15:10- so it must be the '70s.- '70s?- Yeah.

0:15:10 > 0:15:18David Jason's thanking you for saying that! A boy, a young man. 1970s is correct, well done.

0:15:18 > 0:15:20Open All Hours.

0:15:20 > 0:15:26Second questions each. Pete, which actor played Phil in the Hangover films

0:15:26 > 0:15:29and Sack Lodge in Wedding Crashers?

0:15:31 > 0:15:37I think I've seen that one. There's only one name that I recognise there.

0:15:37 > 0:15:41And that's Owen Wilson. So I'll say Owen Wilson.

0:15:41 > 0:15:47In the Hangover films and The Wedding Crashers. No, it's not! Judith,

0:15:47 > 0:15:51- you're a big fan of the Hangover films.- I haven't seen them.

0:15:51 > 0:15:54- I don't know. Bradley Cooper. - It is!

0:15:54 > 0:15:59Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn weren't in the Hangover films.

0:15:59 > 0:16:06A chance for the lead. How many years fell between the initial release of Titanic and Avatar?

0:16:08 > 0:16:13I think Avatar was released in 2009 or 2010, one of those.

0:16:13 > 0:16:18So 12 years from that would be...'97.

0:16:18 > 0:16:24Or nine would be... Oh, dear. I can't do maths any more.

0:16:25 > 0:16:26Help!

0:16:26 > 0:16:29I don't know.

0:16:29 > 0:16:34- 12 years ago.- 12 years? - 12 years between them.- OK. That's what we want to know.

0:16:34 > 0:16:382009 for Avatar, as you were thinking,

0:16:38 > 0:16:41and it was...

0:16:41 > 0:16:441997 for Titanic, which is the right answer!

0:16:44 > 0:16:48- Gosh! Maths worked a bit. - It did. Well done.

0:16:48 > 0:16:50Judith has the lead, then.

0:16:50 > 0:16:57You have to get this, Pete. Who directed the films The Fighter, Three Kings and I Heart Huckabees?

0:17:01 > 0:17:03That's a very difficult question.

0:17:03 > 0:17:06I'm not 100% sure.

0:17:06 > 0:17:08I'm afraid it'll have to be a guess.

0:17:08 > 0:17:11And I will say...

0:17:11 > 0:17:13David O Russell.

0:17:13 > 0:17:17- David O Russell. Is that just a complete guess?- Absolutely.

0:17:17 > 0:17:22Good on you! You've got it. You deserve it.

0:17:22 > 0:17:29The onus now on Judith. If she gets this, she wins the round. If not, we go into sudden death.

0:17:29 > 0:17:35Judith, Teri Hatcher plays the role of Paris Carver in which James Bond film?

0:17:38 > 0:17:44This is exactly my point about James Bond. They've all, more or less, got the same kind of title.

0:17:44 > 0:17:50It usually has the word "die" in it. Die Another Day, Tomorrow Never Dies...

0:17:50 > 0:17:52I can't remember which is which!

0:17:54 > 0:17:56I think The World Is Not Enough.

0:17:57 > 0:18:02OK, The World Is Not Enough. When you were saying that,

0:18:02 > 0:18:07I was thinking you're absolutely right. They get all confused in your head.

0:18:07 > 0:18:12- Exactly.- She was with Pierce Brosnan, wasn't she?

0:18:12 > 0:18:16It is Tomorrow Never Dies. Not The World Is Not Enough.

0:18:16 > 0:18:18So it stays all square,

0:18:18 > 0:18:22which is great news for you, Pete. We go to sudden death,

0:18:22 > 0:18:26which is perhaps not the greatest news if you have to guess.

0:18:26 > 0:18:32Harry Tasker, Julius Benedict and Captain Ivan Danko

0:18:32 > 0:18:36are the names of film characters played by which actor?

0:18:36 > 0:18:39I have absolutely no idea.

0:18:39 > 0:18:40Um...

0:18:43 > 0:18:47I have no idea. I'll have to make it a pass. I'm sorry.

0:18:47 > 0:18:52- No guess?- No, no idea. - No idea?- No idea.

0:18:52 > 0:18:55- Do you want to guess, Judith? - No idea.- Other Eggheads?

0:18:55 > 0:19:00- We have an inkling it's Sean Connery.- No, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

0:19:00 > 0:19:02OK, Judith, another chance for you.

0:19:02 > 0:19:08Which English singer was replaced as a judge on the 2011 US version of The X Factor

0:19:08 > 0:19:10by Nicole Scherzinger?

0:19:10 > 0:19:13I thought that was Cheryl Cole.

0:19:13 > 0:19:15Yeah, that's my answer.

0:19:15 > 0:19:18Cheryl Cole...is correct!

0:19:18 > 0:19:21It means you are through,

0:19:21 > 0:19:26depriving Pete of a place. Both please come back and join your teams.

0:19:26 > 0:19:30Well, still not going well. Three brains gone now, no Eggheads.

0:19:30 > 0:19:33So let's get rid of one. Last chance.

0:19:33 > 0:19:37Our last Head To Head and this one is Sport.

0:19:37 > 0:19:40Jen or Keith?

0:19:40 > 0:19:45I think, Jen, you'd be better with general knowledge, so I'll take it.

0:19:45 > 0:19:50All right. So long as it's Welsh rugby, you'll be all right!

0:19:50 > 0:19:55OK, well, choose from the remaining Eggheads, who are... I'm forgetting!

0:19:55 > 0:19:57Barry and Daphne.

0:19:57 > 0:19:59I think Daphne, yes.

0:19:59 > 0:20:06All right, Daphne. It's going to be Keith J from Aunt Sally against Daphne

0:20:06 > 0:20:10from the Eggheads. Would you both please go to the Question Room?

0:20:10 > 0:20:17- Well, Keith, hoping for rugby, are you?- Yes, I really only follow rugby and golf.

0:20:17 > 0:20:19Anything else will leave me cold.

0:20:19 > 0:20:25- Well, let's hope you find them! Would you like first or second? - I'll go first, please.

0:20:28 > 0:20:33Here's your first question, then. Hilario, Ramires and Juan Mata

0:20:33 > 0:20:38represented which Premier League football team during the 2011-12 season?

0:20:40 > 0:20:43Oh, not rugby or golf, then.

0:20:43 > 0:20:47- Not as such, no. - I don't really follow football,

0:20:47 > 0:20:53but I have a feeling that I heard the name Ramires associated with Liverpool,

0:20:53 > 0:20:57- so Liverpool is my answer. - OK, Liverpool.

0:20:57 > 0:21:02- It's not. Do you know, Daphne? - No! Chelsea?- It's Chelsea.

0:21:02 > 0:21:04But it was a 50/50 for you there.

0:21:04 > 0:21:06Oh, dear, Keith.

0:21:06 > 0:21:12In which year did Gavin Henson first play test match rugby union for Wales?

0:21:15 > 0:21:18I can't even think how old he is.

0:21:21 > 0:21:23I'll guess at 2001.

0:21:23 > 0:21:3120001 for Gavin Henson's first appearance in the Wales international side. It is right!

0:21:31 > 0:21:36Keith having to bite his lip there! He wanted rugby,

0:21:36 > 0:21:40wanted Welsh rugby and there's one going to Daphne.

0:21:40 > 0:21:44- Sorry, Keith! - OK, Keith, try this for size.

0:21:44 > 0:21:49Which role is most associated with the Sri Lankan cricketer Lasith Malinga?

0:21:52 > 0:21:56There's nothing jumping out at me at the moment.

0:21:56 > 0:21:59Opening batsman...wicketkeeper...

0:22:01 > 0:22:07I think us wicketkeepers tend to be less in the public eye

0:22:07 > 0:22:09and I really haven't heard the name.

0:22:09 > 0:22:13- I'll go for wicketkeeper. - Wicketkeeper.

0:22:13 > 0:22:15It's not.

0:22:15 > 0:22:20- Daphne?- Opening batsman?- No! Other Eggheads, what do you think(?)

0:22:20 > 0:22:23- I think he'll be a fast bowler! - He's got an extraordinary action.

0:22:23 > 0:22:26He's the Slinger.

0:22:26 > 0:22:30- Malinga the Slinger.- His arm's almost horizontal to the ground.

0:22:30 > 0:22:35The authorities have had a very close look at whether it's legal.

0:22:35 > 0:22:38- Not Muralitharan?- Very unusual.

0:22:38 > 0:22:45- Spinning. This is fast bowling. Just whispering to Judith. - Oh, is he a slow bowler?

0:22:47 > 0:22:50Yeah, OK. Well, we were looking for fast bowler there.

0:22:50 > 0:22:54Not wicketkeeper or opening batsman.

0:22:54 > 0:22:56Which means, well,

0:22:56 > 0:23:00a chance for Daphne to knock you for six here, Keith.

0:23:00 > 0:23:07Frank Sedgman, Lew Hoad and Ashley Cooper, who all won the Men's Singles at Wimbledon in the 1950s,

0:23:07 > 0:23:09represented which country?

0:23:11 > 0:23:13I loved cricket then.

0:23:13 > 0:23:17Oh, sorry! I loved tennis.

0:23:17 > 0:23:18Sorry!

0:23:18 > 0:23:24- And I used to watch Wimbledon and they were Australian.- Yeah.

0:23:24 > 0:23:27You also loved cricket as well!

0:23:27 > 0:23:31Sedgman, Hoad and Cooper - all Australians. Daphne is through.

0:23:31 > 0:23:36Would you both please come back and join your teams?

0:23:36 > 0:23:41So this is what we've been playing towards - the final round, which is General Knowledge.

0:23:41 > 0:23:44But those of you who lost

0:23:44 > 0:23:50will not be allowed to take part, so Clive, the two Keiths and Pete from Aunt Sally,

0:23:50 > 0:23:53please leave the studio now.

0:23:53 > 0:23:56So, Jen, you're playing to win Aunt Sally £5,000.

0:23:56 > 0:24:01Daphne, Chris, Barry, Pat and Judith are playing for something money cannot buy -

0:24:01 > 0:24:04the Eggheads' reputation.

0:24:04 > 0:24:08I ask each team three questions. They're all general knowledge.

0:24:08 > 0:24:15You are allowed to confer. So, Jen, is your one brain better than the Eggheads' five?

0:24:15 > 0:24:19- Jen, do you want to go first or second?- First, please.

0:24:22 > 0:24:26Good luck to you, Jen. Let's see if you can do it for Aunt Sally.

0:24:26 > 0:24:29The coyote is a mammal native to which part of the world?

0:24:32 > 0:24:35I'm pretty sure it's not Europe.

0:24:35 > 0:24:38And I'm tossing up between the other two.

0:24:38 > 0:24:42- I'm coming down on the Americas. - The Americas.

0:24:42 > 0:24:46Yes, of course, it's right. Great start. Eggheads,

0:24:46 > 0:24:50King William IV was a member of which Royal house?

0:24:53 > 0:24:54Hanover.

0:24:54 > 0:24:59Yes, we're all agreed. He was in the Royal house of Hanover.

0:24:59 > 0:25:03Hanoverian is the right answer. OK, Eggheads. Back to Jen.

0:25:03 > 0:25:09What is the approximate height in metres of the Leaning Tower of Pisa?

0:25:14 > 0:25:16Right.

0:25:16 > 0:25:21I don't think it's as tall as 256 because...

0:25:21 > 0:25:26that would be about 1,000 feet. Well, not as much, but rather a lot.

0:25:27 > 0:25:31I don't think it's as low as 56.

0:25:31 > 0:25:36- I actually think - I hope it is - 156.- OK.

0:25:36 > 0:25:40156. Have you seen it in the flesh? Or in stone?

0:25:40 > 0:25:44I haven't. I've only seen pictures, so it's difficult to guess.

0:25:44 > 0:25:49Yeah, OK. 156 metres high for the Leaning Tower of Pisa. What do you think, Eggheads?

0:25:49 > 0:25:52- It's lower.- 56, I think.

0:25:52 > 0:25:58If it was 156, it would have fallen over. It is 56.

0:25:58 > 0:26:00Didn't I read somewhere,

0:26:00 > 0:26:06- not too long ago, that...- Big Ben. - ..Big Ben is starting a similar pattern?

0:26:06 > 0:26:08Big Ben, yeah.

0:26:08 > 0:26:13- But it would take hundreds of years...- Hundreds of years.

0:26:13 > 0:26:19- They'll prop it up, I'm sure. - Well, 56 then and not 156 for the Leaning Tower of Pisa.

0:26:19 > 0:26:26Let's see what the Eggheads do. "I heard that you're settled down, that you found a girl

0:26:26 > 0:26:30"and you're married now," are the opening lyrics to which Adele song?

0:26:35 > 0:26:39- Someone Like You, Barry. - I think it's Someone Like You.

0:26:39 > 0:26:42- That's the latest hit. - Yes, I think it is.

0:26:42 > 0:26:46All happy with Someone Like You?

0:26:46 > 0:26:49That wonderful emotional song Someone Like You.

0:26:49 > 0:26:54Someone Like You by Adele. It's the right answer!

0:26:54 > 0:26:56Very up on your Adele hits.

0:26:56 > 0:27:01Some might not have expected that, but you're full of surprises.

0:27:01 > 0:27:08Jen, you need to get this. In Greek mythology, Artemis turned Actaeon into what type of creature

0:27:08 > 0:27:10after he had seen her bathing?

0:27:13 > 0:27:18Now I like Greek mythology, but I'm not aware of this story, which is a shame.

0:27:18 > 0:27:23I should think possibly it must be to do with water.

0:27:23 > 0:27:25I may be completely wrong.

0:27:25 > 0:27:32And I'm not sure she'd be bathing in the sea, so actually I'm going to guess a swan.

0:27:32 > 0:27:35OK, a swan. Is that right?

0:27:35 > 0:27:40No, it's a stag, which was then set upon by his own hounds.

0:27:40 > 0:27:46- Oh.- And killed.- Not very nice. - Torn to pieces by his own hounds. - That's what happens!

0:27:46 > 0:27:51- Right...- Maybe in your world. - Let that be a lesson to you.

0:27:52 > 0:27:57Which means it's not a swan, it is a stag.

0:27:57 > 0:28:00Which means, Eggheads, you've won!

0:28:05 > 0:28:09Well, bad luck, Jen. It's tough on your own there.

0:28:09 > 0:28:15We hope you enjoyed yourself and I think Aunt Sally will be proud of you when she sees this show.

0:28:15 > 0:28:22All of you did tremendously well, in spite of how it turned out. Some very good Head To Heads there.

0:28:22 > 0:28:27But the Eggheads have done what comes naturally to them.

0:28:27 > 0:28:33You won't be going home with £5,000. So the money rolls over to the next show.

0:28:33 > 0:28:36Eggheads, congratulations. Who will beat you?

0:28:36 > 0:28:42Join us next time to see if a new team can defeat the Eggheads. £6,000 says they don't.

0:28:42 > 0:28:44Until then, goodbye.

0:29:00 > 0:29:02Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd