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University Challenge is a long-running British television quiz show. The format is based on quiz bowl or College Bowl and is licensed and produced by Granada Television.
At its inception in 1962 it was hosted by Bamber Gascoigne. When audience figures began to fall, changes to the long-standing format of the
programme only made things worse and it was taken off the air in 1987. It was eventually
revived in 1994 by the BBC (although still produced by
Granada), using the original format (with minor differences) and presented by Jeremy Paxman.
Teams consist of four members and represent a single university or Oxford,
Cambridge, Wales or London college.
"Starter" questions are answered individually "on the buzzer", and are worth 10 points. The team answering a starter correctly
gets a set of "bonus" questions worth a potential fifteen points, over which they can confer. An incorrect interruption of a
starter results in a five point penalty. In the course of a game there are two "picture rounds" and one "music round"; if a
picture or music starter is not correctly answered, the accompanying bonus questions are held back until a normal starter is
correctly answered. The pace of questioning gradually increases through the show, becoming almost frantic in the last minute or
so before the "gong" which signals the end of the game.
Since the revival of the programme, an increasing number of teams have featured mature students, who are thought to have the
advantage of a greater breadth of general knowledge. The Open University won the 1999 series with a team whose age
averaged 46, and included one member (Lance Haward) who had only applied to study for his distance-learning degree in order to
appear on the show. The 2003 final was contested between two teams of mature students, with
Birkbeck College, London, defeating Cranfield University. The producers of the programme have taken this development to its logical
conclusion by making two series without any student participants: University Challenge Reunited (2002) brought former teams back together, while University Challenge: The Professionals (2003 and 2004) matched occupational groups such as civil
servants, architects and doctors against each other. The former was won by the 1979 team
from Sidney Sussex College,
Cambridge, the latter in 2003 by a team from the UK tax office (the Inland Revenue).
University Challenge India started in Summer 2003, culminating in a match in March 2004 between the Indian
winners, Sardar Patel College of Engineering (SPCE), Mumbai, and finalists from the UK show, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. UC India is produced by BBC World India, and Synergy communications,
co-owned by Siddhartha
Basu, who also hosts the show.
Winners
Original Series
| Year |
University/College |
| 1963 |
Leicester |
| 1965 |
New College, Oxford |
| 1966 |
Oriel College, Oxford |
| 1967 |
Sussex |
| 1968 |
Keele |
| 1969 |
Sussex |
| 1970 |
Churchill College, Cambridge |
| 1971 |
Sidney Sussex College,
Cambridge |
| 1972 |
University College, Oxford |
| 1973 |
Fitzwilliam College,
Cambridge |
| 1974 |
Trinity College, Cambridge |
| 1975 |
Keble College, Oxford |
| 1976 |
University College, Oxford |
| 1977 |
Durham |
| 1978 |
Sidney Sussex College,
Cambridge |
| 1979 |
Bradford |
| 1980 |
Merton College, Oxford |
| 1981 |
Queen's University, Belfast |
| 1982 |
St. Andrews |
| 1983 |
Dundee |
| 1984 |
The Open University |
| 1985 |
Jesus College, Oxford |
| 1986 |
Keble College, Oxford |
New Series
| Year |
Winners |
Runners-up |
| 1995 |
Trinity College, Cambridge |
New College, Oxford |
| 1996 |
Imperial College, London |
London School of Economics |
| 1997 |
Magdalen College, Oxford |
The Open University |
| 1998 |
Magdalen College, Oxford |
Birkbeck College, London |
| 1999 |
The Open University |
Oriel College, Oxford |
| 2000 |
Durham |
Oriel College, Oxford |
| 2001 |
Imperial College, London |
St John's College, Oxford |
| 2002 |
Somerville College, Oxford |
Imperial College, London |
| 2003 |
Birkbeck College, London |
Cranfield University |
| 2004 |
Magdalen College, Oxford |
Gonville and Caius
College, Cambridge |
Specials
| Year |
Special Event |
Winners |
Runners Up |
| 1993 |
Celebrity match |
Celebrity Past Contestants (John Simpson, Charles Moore, Stephen Fry,
Alastair
Little) |
Keble College, Oxford, 1987 |
| 1997 |
College Bowl Challenge |
Michigan |
Imperial College, 1996 |
| 1998 |
College Bowl Challenge |
USA |
UK |
| 1998 |
Mastermind Challenge |
Magdalen College, Oxford, 1997 |
Imperial College, London, 1996 |
| 1998 |
Red Dwarf Universe Challenge |
Fans |
Actors |
| 1999 |
Journalists Special |
Tabloids |
Broadsheets |
| 1999 |
Challenge |
Magdalen College, Oxford, 1998 |
Leicester, 1963 |
| 2002 |
University Challenge: Reunited |
Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, 1979 |
Keele, 1968 |
| 2003 |
University Challenge: The Professionals |
The Inland Revenue |
Royal Meteorological Society |
| 2003 |
Comic Relief match |
The Townies: (Jeremy Beadle, Danny Baker, Johnny Vaughan, Gina Yashere) |
The Gownies: (David Baddiel, Frank Skinner, Stephen Fry, Clive Anderson) |
| 2004 |
International "Grand Final": UK vs India |
Sardar Patel College of Engineering (SPCE), Mumbai |
Gonville and Caius
College, Cambridge: (Laura Ashe, Darren Khodaverdi, Lameen Souag, Edward Wallace) |
External Links
Sean Blanchflower's
University Challenge pages
University Challenge India: [1]
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