Animal, Vegetable, Mineral?
Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? was a popular television game show which ran from 1952 to 1959.[1] In the show, different archeologists, art historians, and natural history experts were asked to identify interesting objects or artifacts from museums and other faculties, including university collections.[2]
Occasionally the presenter would try to fool the panel with a corroded modern artefact e.g. a part of a pram or a bicycle. The prospect of such an event enlivened the programme.
The quiz show was presented by the BBC, continuing a long history of bringing contributors to archaeology into the media limelight.
History
The UK television show was modelled on an American TV show called What in the World? and included appearances by archaeologists such as Glyn Daniel and Sir Mortimer Wheeler. Wheeler was voted TV personality of the year in 1954, providing the world of archaeology with its first media star.[3]
Legacy
Sixty years later Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? is still concerned with events in archaeology. In September 2011, University College London announced that they were bringing back the popular 1950s show for one night. The panel of experts included Claire Thomson (Scandinavian Studies), Ryan Nichol (Physics and Astronomy), Tom Stern (Philosophy) and Sam Turvey (Institute of Zoology). It was hosted by Joe Flatman (Institute of Archaeology) and consisted of a visit to the UCL museum, where the experts tried to identify some of the objects there.[4]
The show and its format were also often referenced in comedy shows: Not Only...But Also, At Last the 1948 Show, Do Not Adjust Your Set and The Complete and Utter History of Britain each contained sketches with experts analyzing a "mystery object", often with totally wrong conclusions or, in At Last the 1948 Show, the items getting destroyed.
Episodes
Only four episodes exist in the BBC's archives,[5] three of which are available to watch from the BBC iPlayer.[6] The fourth one is mute, because its audio track has been lost.[7]
Some (incomplete) episode information follows:
Date | Host | Challenger | Panel | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
28 October 1954 | Glyn Daniel, Froelich Rainey | Manchester Museum | Geoffrey Bushnell, Froelich Rainey, Sir Mortimer Wheeler, Glyn Daniel | Daniel and Rainey swapped roles for part of the show. Final score 14/20. |
11 November 1954 | Glyn Daniel | Sheffield City Museum | Adrian Digby, Hugh Shortt, Edward Wenham | |
3 May 1956 | Glyn Daniel | National Museum of Prague | V. Gordon Childe, Seán P. Ó Ríordáin, Sir Mortimer Wheeler | Final score 22/20. |
17 May 1956 | John Betjeman | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City | Stephen Bone, Sir Gerald Kelly, Dr. Mary Woodall | |
1 October 1958 | Glyn Daniel | Victoria & Albert Museum | Thomas Bodkin, Hugh Shortt, Sir Mortimer Wheeler | Final score 19/20. |
15 October 1958 | Glyn Daniel | Imperial War Museum | Lt.-Col. C. B. Appleby, Charles Thomas, Sir Mortimer Wheeler |
Additional information
The person responsible for choosing the artefact for each episode was David Attenborough,[8] who was also the camera director. However, on the Christmas special, Glyn Daniel and Mortimer Wheeler selected the item for Attenborough to examine. Mortimer Wheeler often "cheated" by investigating beforehand which objects had been removed from their next location, and looking up the relevant information about the corresponding items in catalogues.[9] On one occasion, a fake item (a stone axe made by the forger 'Flint Jack') was presented to the panel.[8] The signature music for the series was Partita #3 in E by J S Bach.
Cast and crew
Name | Appeared As | Episodes |
---|---|---|
David Attenborough | Producer | Unknown Episodes |
John Betjeman | Panellist | Unknown Episode[11] |
Anthony Blunt | Panellist | One episode, 1956[11] |
Thomas Bodkin | Panellist | Unknown episode |
Geoffrey Bushnell | Panellist | Unknown episode |
V. Gordon Childe | Panellist | Unknown episode |
Norman Cook | Panellist | Unknown episode[12] |
Glyn Daniel | Chairman | Unknown episode |
Adrian Digby | Panellist | One episode, 1952[12] |
Lionel Hale | Panellist | Episode 1, 1952 |
Jacquetta Hawkes | Panellist | Unknown episode |
Julian Huxley | Panellist | Unknown episodes |
Kathleen Kenyon | Panellist | One episode, November 1955[13] |
James Laver | Panellist | One episode, 1952[12] |
Seán P. Ó Ríordáin[14][15] | Panellist | Unknown episodes |
Froelich Rainey | Panellist | Unknown episode |
Hugh Shortt | Panellist | Unknown episode |
John Summerson | Panellist | Unknown episode[11] |
W.E. Swinton | Panellist | Unknown episode |
Nancy Thomas | Presenter | Episode 1, 1952 |
Mortimer Wheeler | Panellist | One episode, 1 October 1958 |
References
- Clack/Brittain. (2007, p. 18). Archaeology and the Media . Left Coast Press.
- Henson, D. (n.d.). Television Archeology: Education or Entertainment . Retrieved 21 March 2012, from Institute of Historical Research: http://www.history.ac.uk/resources/history-in-british-education/first-conference/henson-paper.
- Staff. (n.d.). Animal, Vegetable, Mineral . Retrieved March 2012, from UK Game Show: http://www.ukgameshows.com/ukgs/Animal,_Vegetable,_Mineral
- Staff. (2011, 11). UCL . Retrieved from Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? Mystery Object Panel Game: http://harngroup.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/avm.pdf
- Staff, I. (n.d.). Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? Retrieved 21 March 2012, from Imdb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0247850/fullcredits#cast
Notes
- ↑ Clack/Brittain. (2007). Archaeology and the Media . Left Coast Press.
- ↑ (http://www.ukgameshows.com/ukgs/Animal,_Vegetable,_Mineral)
- ↑ Henson, D. (n.d.). Television Archaeology: Education or Entertainment. Retrieved 21 March 2012, from Institute of Historical Research: http://www.history.ac.uk/resources/history-in-british-education/first-conference/henson-paper.
- ↑ Staff. (n.d.). Animal, Vegetable, Mineral . Retrieved March 2012, from UK Game Show: http://www.ukgameshows.com/ukgs/Animal,_Vegetable,_Mineral Staff. (2011, 11). UCL . Retrieved from Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? Mystery Object Panel Game: http://harngroup.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/avm.pdf
- ↑ "Animal, Vegetable, Mineral". ukgameshows.com.
- ↑ "BBC - Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? - Episode guide". BBC.
- ↑ "Lost Shows - Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? (incomplete episode information)".
- 1 2 Sir David Attenborough, Personal Histories http://www2.arch.cam.ac.uk/personal-histories/attenborough/Site/Home_files/FinalAttenboroughTranscript.pdf
- ↑ Paul Bahn, The Bluffer's guide to archaeology (London 1989) 59.
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0247850/fullcredits#cast
- 1 2 3 Anthony Blunt: His Lives, Miranda Carter, p373
- 1 2 3 IMDB http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0247850/fullcredits?ref_=tt_cl_sm#cast
- ↑ Miriam C. Davis, 2008, Dame Kathleen Kenyon: Digging Up the Holy Land, p. 135
- ↑ Professor Sean O Riordain: An Appreciation. Daniel, Glyn. University Review, 1960, Vol.2(1), pp.59-61
- ↑ University College Dublin profile http://www.ucd.ie/archaeology/schoolhistorydetails/professorseanporiordain/