Mrs M and I saw last night's recording and it was excellent.
I hadn't realised there were different tickets, Priority and Normal, the Priority ones allowed recipients to go straight into the marquee to wait in the warmth whereas those holding Normal tickets had to queue outside in the cold and icy conditions. Guess which tickets I had? OK, after about half an hour queuing in the cold right by the honeywagon, the powers that be stared to let a few of us plebs into the inner sanctum where we could spend a small fortune on tea, coffee and various snacks. I’d guessed that recording would start at about 6pm but no, it was nearer to 7.30 when we finally started being escorted to the theatre, along the way seeing such iconic sights as the 007 Stage, Broccoli Road, Goldfinger Avenue etc.
The set for the programme was good, about 400 in the audience and several dozen officials, ushers, technicians etc milling around, a far cry from the last TV show I saw being recorded... at the BBC Studios in Gosta Green, Birmingham, black and white days with those revolving lenses on the front of the cameras about 50 years ago!
The warm up guy, Jeff, did an excellent job all through the evening with jokes, giveaways, competitions, and all manner of daft stuff and, along the way, we learned that he’d been the comic at Rodney’s stag do on Only Fools as well as playing Louis in Bugsy Malone some 35 years ago in the very same studio.
As mentioned above, it’s hard to mention the acts and routines without giving things away too soon but they were all good, some better than others which showed in the eventual voting at the end. Three sections involving the public out on the streets had been pre-recorded earlier that week and we saw two of them on video but not the third as it hadn’t been edited in time.
Lenny Henry worked hard with plenty of ad lib stuff in between takes and it was clear to see that despite all the magicians and celebrities being well known names, they all took notice of the floor manager and when he said ‘Jump’, they all jumped!
Many parts were recorded out of sequence due to set construction and breakdown times but it all seemed vaguely logical after a while. Lenny recorded some face to camera links for the earlier programmes which we knew nothing about but we all laughed, applauded etc on cue which made me realise we weren’t just an audience, we were sometimes part of the overall illusion and colluded with performers and presenters to give the effect required even though we knew otherwise – not in a bad way, more along the lines of having seen and heard something twice already but reacting as though we hadn’t, just like all good magicians. The recording was supposed to finish by 10pm, we actually left at 11.20pm but we were given a free bottle of Harrogate Mineral water and a bag of crisps to keep us going – oooh, the high life!
There’s a website -
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcone/magicians/ - which will be more active and important to visit once the programmes are aired. Last night’s was the third one and references were made to the earlier programmes but once or twice it was said that the series starts on January 1st and last night’s was to be the first one. Dunno about that, will have to wait and see.
Anywho, all in all the programmes will be worth watching; three sets of excellent magicians make it unmissable from my point of view. Scott Penrose was seem working behind the scenes, probably as advisor, so you can be sure it’s all high quality stuff.