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  • Play Your Cards Right

    A rather basic synopsis of what I regarded to be the start of the autumn weekend as a child... (Almost like an extension to the Don Amott advert thread if you like...)

    Home from school for the weekend - it's Friday and so no school tomorrow which was great. A complete ITV (Central region) diet of TV programmes; the afternoon repeat of Rainbow (first seen at 12.10 pm) ; Emu's World (or was it called the Pink Windmill Show?); Diff'rent Strokes, Happy Days or Blockbusters at 5.15 pm; the News at 5:45 (at 5.45 pm, natch), and an hour long Bob Warman edition of Central News from Birmingham, i.e. no Crossroads. Then it's this...

    The LWT logo makes its first network appearance of the weekend (the grey background LWT ident made its very first network appearance on PYCR in the 1986). The magical A-K-Q-J-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2 on top of the card suits, and a kaleidoscope playing card opening sequence plays to what was the best "start the weekend" show that a Thatcher-era child could experience - Play Your Cards Right. Cue the late Bruce Forsyth (just after he got that excess hair) appear from the left of the screen (just like the good characters appear on stage). "You have cheered me up" or "what a lovely, lovely audience - you're so much better than last week's" said Forsyth, depending on: A) which week it actually was, and: B) whether or not "this week's" audience was indeed the same as "last week's", aka the same audience used to record the previous episode early on that day. Brucie gives honorary mentions to elderly audience members such as pensioner Kitty on the front row who was apparently "full of gin", and also does some tired joke starting: "I was just standing at the back there waiting to come on... ", and ending: "...so I walked away and left him - lying there". And only then did he do his "nice to see you" bit.

    After the "I'm the leader of the pack, which makes me such a lucky jack..." rhyming couplets, and then he brings on what was the three or four Dolly Dealers who were not really household names apart from in modelling circles - (just like Countdown and the like, they had several women doing the same job), although for the 1990s revival, it went down to two. In the 1990s version (Sophie Allistone and Vicky Brattle in colour-coordinated short dresses), the two Dolly Dealers used to be stooges to Forsyth and play a small part in his act. Then the contestants (married, or at least engaged) come on.

    Forsyth tries to find something ironic about their names and where they come from: "you're John and Mary Walker - oh, I love your crisps". or "you're from Worcestershire - oh, I love your sauce". And "fetch me one of my pills - the pink ones". As well as the standard "tell me about how you two met" and "tell us about the honeymoon". If the husband is a police officer, Brucie insists doing the "warm night" thing. Forsyth goes a bit "Jim Davidson" when it come to members of the armed forces in their military uniform comes on the show. And of course the "I'll make a note of that... - geriatric" catchphrase, bringing a silver pen and card from the inner-lining of his jacket pocket.

    Bruce moves to the other couple, saying: "sorry to keep your waiting" and interviewed the other couple with similar questions. Depending on whether they will be a tie-breaker and it being "sudden death" depends on how much of the interview can be aired. And then, after we are asked whether we saw the couple cut the cards, we get to the meat in the sandwich: "we want you to predict whether each of the cards is higher or lower than the preceding one - the first couple to turn the last card correctly will win the game and a Brucie Bonus!" The audience go "ooh!". "But you cannot win a game or a Brucie Bonus until you have won a question, and all of our questions are based on a poll of a 100 people, etc." I believe that one person actually represents 1% of the people asked.

    We are under way - Brucie reads a question from what seems to be the same size as an ordinary-sized playing card: "we asked 100 single men in their 30s - if a woman wolf-whistled you when you walked down the street, would you be embarrassed?" The red couple guesses 32, which means that the blue couple would go "higher". The blue couple win so they kick off - the first card is an 8 so that they can change it, but they get a 9 half way along so they decide to freeze. Repeat until one couple wins a Brucie Bonus or until "it's sudden death". If it's another 5 after the previous 5, then you don't say "snap" but it would be "you don't get anything for a pair..." "...not in this game", the over 50s audience reply in unison (other trade unions are available).

    By the time the commercial break comes along, one couple have won two straight games, or it's a "tie breaker", so "don't touch the pack, we'll be right back!" A couple of minutes later, we come back, and have the third and final game if both games had been won by both couples - otherwise, the losing couple leave with a hamper (brought on in the 1980s by male model and actor John Maloney), and flowers and all that for the woman of the couple. "We'll come and have a drink upstairs" vouched Brucie afterwards.

    And then there is the final part - contestants go to the opposite side of the stage where they were in the first half of the show where Forsyth gives the couple 200 points (or pounds in the 1990s) - he will ask them a multiple choice question with three possible answers, although it is as easy as pie of course. He can add 50 to the 200 if they get it right, or he will have to take 50 away if they don't. The £50 was like a deposit, and it helped the contestant to save themselves that £50 on a good card while using that £50 on a not-so-good card. No problem - they get it right. "Points make prizes" is the name of the game. LWT's answer to Alan Dedicoat - Robin Houston announces lovely prizes that the couple can win such as a mahogany wall unit; a home computer (internet not included); a hi-fi (probably no CD player); his and hers sheepskin coats; a colour TV; a holiday to Las Vegas, and to top it all, the start prize is a car - probably a Metro or a Mini! But they need 4,000 points (or pounds) to get there!

    Bruce offers a base card, but they can change it if they want to - they bid just £50 on the 6 to 9s, but all except £50 on the 2s, 3s, Kings and Aces. "We will give you another £200" as soon as the card journey reaches the next row up. A card trips them up, and so it's "double or bust", otherwise they go all the way there and win the car, which was "parked" right of the stage layout from the viewers perspective, and let's assume they do. Forsyth goes around the set to take them to their new car "registration number: PYCR 1 - (that's Papa, Yankee, Charlie, Romeo - One)" just before the show ends.

    And as it ends, we see Brucie saying "it could be a good night if you Play Your Cards Right - good night!" waving at the audience, walks back to where he came from at the start of the show 26 minutes before, waves one last time, turns right (to our left) and disappears behind the square pattern walls, going full circle with the start of the show, and leaving behind an empty stage with the lights dimming as the credits scroll up the screen (Sound: "Roger Knight" or "Jon Matthews" depending on which series) etc, as if we were already mourning his absence. It still gives lovely shivers down the spine when I see the closing sequence of the show on YouTube - it was so magical seeing Forsyth take his exit at the end. I had always assumed that Bruce would be on his way back to his dressing room to change into another outfit in preparation for hosting the next recorded episode nearly an hour later.

    It did ruin it a bit when some series were on Sunday nights (after Highway) which meant the opposite of the "no school tomorrow" approach as Friday nights had indicated. Going on YouTube and seeing an 1984 episode of the show (still called Play Your Cards Right over there) they had some Manchester, UK -born Pommie called "Ugly" Dave Gray hosting it who I believe did a bit of acting Down Under as well - Cue Gray on screen wafting a lit cigar all over the place which doesn't look very politically correct or Health and Safety conscious to do over the past the decades. The New Zealand host back then seems a fascinating chap as well.

    Not only is it a travesty that Forsyth is no longer alive, but the Emmerdale-ism of ITV evening scheduling since 2000 means that we will never get any more ITV game shows again, not for a number of years into the future I assume. I think that the show worked well with a slightly aging host, and it certainly wouldn't work with some young person such as Stephen Mulhern or Rylan Clark-Neal. They were going to think of doing a revival with a Keith Lemon-alike host, but probably for all the obvious reasons, it didn't get too far. It was for the best of course.

    The Dolly Dealers have also intrigued me over the years as well - hardly any of them have gone onto greater fame after working on the show. I saw Sophie Allistone appear in a Head and Shoulders advert in around 1997 but that was about it - most of them are either in the theatre or had some modelling contract somewhere.

    Was Play Your Cards Right the start to your weekend as soon as you went home from school on Friday evenings, or were you a Blankety Blank or even a Wogan person on Friday evenings?
    I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
    There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
    I'm having so much fun
    My lucky number's one
    Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

  • #2
    Re: Play Your Cards Right

    Loved me some Brucey and Play Your Cards Right, always remember the "i'm the leader of the pack, which makes me such a lucky chap, here they are they're so appealing, okay dollies do your dealing!" opener.

    Back then, this, Bullseye, 321, Telly Addicts and Strike it Lucky were the best game shows on TV for me.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Play Your Cards Right

      Always thought the cards were rigged, it was amazing how many times the sequence of cards would go 2,queen,3, king, 2, ace. I've never worked out the odds but i imagine they would be pretty slim ....Best part? Dolly dealers
      Ejector seat?...your jokin!

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Play Your Cards Right

        I really enjoyed Play Your Cards Right with Brucey but the question about was this show the start of my weekend during the mid 80's on Friday evenings the answer would be no as Wogan was always on first at 7pm and I think if I'm right PYCR aired later at 8pm? I'm sure Blankety Blank was shown initially on a Thursday night.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Play Your Cards Right

          Play Your Cards Right did air at around 8.00 pm or 8.30 pm in autumn 1981 because of American imports such as Spiderman being on at 7.00 pm - I am certain that some regions may have shown it at different times for that series according to old TV schedules. It wouldn't have clashed with Wogan until 1985 however.
          I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
          There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
          I'm having so much fun
          My lucky number's one
          Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Play Your Cards Right

            You know, Geogre 1978, you should write a book of these amazing 'capsule reviews' of classic TV shows - absolute genius!

            I used to enjoy Play Your Cards Right when it was on ITV, way back then. The moment that the opening sequence with the jaunty theme tune and the animated cards started, you knew that you were in for 30 minutes of quality, cosy entertainment with Brucie.

            Looking at it now as an adult, I do wonder if my dad watched it at the time for the entertainment or the 'dolly dealers'. They were all stunning, in that 1980s way. None of them could match Isla St Clair from The Generation Game, but they were a close second.

            And, you are right, it was one of those shows that really felt like 'the start of the weekend'. The wonderful 'flowing scarf' of the LWT ident and then Play Your Cards Right. It was a Friday night tradition until I got my ZX Spectrum and I started to foresake Brucie for computer games with my friends.

            Sorry, Brucie.

            Attached Files

            REMEMBER: cream first, jam second...


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            • #7
              Re: Play Your Cards Right

              I probably would have written a book about it if it wasn't for the publishing costs involved!

              Great picture of Brucie - it looks as if it was from 1982, just after he got that "reverse haircut" if you know what I mean.
              I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
              There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
              I'm having so much fun
              My lucky number's one
              Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Play Your Cards Right

                Originally posted by George 1978 View Post
                I probably would have written a book about it if it wasn't for the publishing costs involved!

                Great picture of Brucie - it looks as if it was from 1982, just after he got that "reverse haircut" if you know what I mean.
                Now that's a topic: great 'IT'S NOT A TOUPEE' celebrities of the 1980s. Even though it plainly was.

                Three that spring to mind are Paul Daniels, Brucie and Jimmy Tarbuck. Jimmy might not have been a 'wearer', but I remember thinking, way back, watching Winner Takes All that his hair looked somewhat suspicious.

                REMEMBER: cream first, jam second...


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                • #9
                  Re: Play Your Cards Right

                  I don't know about Tarby, but Lennie Bennett (with his Kevin Keagan perm if you watch old episodes of Punchlines) and Russ Abbot also springs to mind. And of course, Wogan was the king of them all.

                  I wondered why Paul Daniels went "bald" all of a sudden in the mid 1980s as back then I wasn't too aware of wigs and toupees and all that.
                  I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
                  There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
                  I'm having so much fun
                  My lucky number's one
                  Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Play Your Cards Right

                    Now that you have set my memory off, Leslie Crowther seems suspect, in retrospect. His 'COME ON DOWN!' hair was always a little too perfect and laquered. Perhaps Ted Rogers as well? It could be that the stress of learning that elaborate '3-2-1' finger gesture gave him hair loss?

                    Quite possibly Julian Pettifer, from Busman's Holiday. Which was a magnificent idea for a game show. Three butchers vs. three traffic wardens vs. three shop assistants. Winning a holiday where they basically go overseas and do their job. Nice work, Granada!

                    REMEMBER: cream first, jam second...


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                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Play Your Cards Right

                      Nice memories guys - enjoyed reading all of these, but George's post was as good as seeing an episode!

                      Never forget that we were lucky to have seen these shows when we did - no-one re-watching the repeats will ever get the nostalgia and appreciate them like we did and I seriously doubt we will ever see anything half as good on TV again.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Play Your Cards Right

                        Originally posted by Disco_Puppy View Post
                        Now that you have set my memory off, Leslie Crowther seems suspect, in retrospect. His 'COME ON DOWN!' hair was always a little too perfect and laquered. Perhaps Ted Rogers as well? It could be that the stress of learning that elaborate '3-2-1' finger gesture gave him hair loss?

                        Quite possibly Julian Pettifer, from Busman's Holiday. Which was a magnificent idea for a game show. Three butchers vs. three traffic wardens vs. three shop assistants. Winning a holiday where they basically go overseas and do their job. Nice work, Granada!
                        Richard Whiteley also springs to mind - "one from the top" could have been a reference to his syrup and not the numbers combination; Ernie "you can't see the join" Wise; Bob Monkhouse, etc...

                        Back on topic: A PYCR question could be something like: "we asked 100 men who wore wigs - if a woman complimented you on your new hairstyle, would you be suspicious?" If would be over 50 (the number of people, rather than age of the person), and the other contestant would say, "higher!"
                        I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
                        There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
                        I'm having so much fun
                        My lucky number's one
                        Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Play Your Cards Right

                          News reader Reginald Bosenquet was another wig wearer, not because of baldness as such, but apparently had problems with an inflamed scalp which meant he had to shave his hair very short. Being a middle aged skinhead wouldn't have done his chances of appearing on TV much good!

                          We could also add Frankie Howerd to the list.
                          The Trickster On The Roof

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                          • #14
                            Re: Play Your Cards Right

                            At risk of angering the ghost of Brucie, technically 'Play Your Cards Right' is grammatically incorrect. It should have been something like 'Play Your Cards Correctly'. Stll, I know that 'play your cards right' is a common phrase, so I'll let that one stand. You got off lightly, LWT.

                            Thinking about PYCR, it makes a lot of modern game shows seem generic and stale. It seems that most weekend entertainment these days is noisy talent shows or noisy reality shows or noisy bland game shows. Do we have to have a screaming audience in everything these days? Watching the modern hosts run their opening repertee with the audience just feels flat and slate to me. Brucie was a natural with the crowd and it felt far more natural. Hell, Jim Bowen had more charisma with the audience that most modern hosts.

                            The opening banter with the guests was also magical. Partly scripted, of course, but you can see Brucie run with it where the guests took him. It was always respectful, whereas I always found the likes of Micheal Barrymore in the Strike it Lucky era to be more insulting to the guests in his attempts to be funny.

                            When I watched it as a kid, I got genuinely excited about the cards, and guessing 'HIGHER!' or 'LOWER!'. I used to guess and yell at the TV with my parents, always feeling slightly smug when I was right and the contestants guessed incorrectly.

                            Good prizes, too. A 1982 showroom new Ford Fiesta? Nice!

                            And let's not forget Brucie's traditional sign off: 'It's not too late to still be a big night if you play your cards right...'

                            I only watched it during the '80s, but I had forgotten how long PYCR ran for. It popped up occasionally in the '90s and even in the early 2000s.

                            REMEMBER: cream first, jam second...


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                            • #15
                              Re: Play Your Cards Right

                              There is no such phrase as "play your cards correctly", is there? - I have always associated that phrase with the game show.

                              I think that nearly everything on TV in the 1980s was magical to someone who was young at the time such as myself - as I mentioned in the 1980s Celebrities thread, it was a magical, community spirited world where all celebrities seem to know each other and would appear on each other's shows and so on. And Christmases were even more magical - perhaps it did so for me as a 1980s child?

                              Michael Barrymore was probably a bit like a 1960s version of Forsyth - the "alright" catchphrase he did with audience participation obviously has similarities with Brucie's "nice to see you" when he did it at the start of each show, not to mention the banter with the contestants they both had prior to the game starting. I believe that Barrymore was influenced by Forsyth.
                              I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
                              There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
                              I'm having so much fun
                              My lucky number's one
                              Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

                              Comment

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