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Encyclopedia > The Adventure Game
Main title caption.

The Adventure Game was a game show, aimed at children but with an adult following, which was originally broadcast on UK television channels BBC1 and BBC2 between 1980 and 1986. The story in each show was that the three celebrity contestants had travelled by space ship to the planet Arg. Their overall task varied with each series. For example, the team might be charged with finding a crystal needed to power their ship to return to Earth. The programme is often considered to have been a forerunner of The Crystal Maze. Image File history File links Adventuregame. ... Image File history File links Adventuregame. ... “Quiz show” redirects here. ... British television broadcasting has a range of different broadcasters, broadcasting multiple channels over a variety of distribution media. ... BBC One (or BBC1 as it was formerly styled) is the oldest United Kingdom, and indeed, the world. ... BBC Two (or BBC2 as it was formerly styled) was the second UK television station to be aired by the BBC. History The channel was scheduled to begin at 7:20pm on April 20, 1964 and show an evening of light entertainment, starting with the comedy show The Alberts and... This article does not cite any references or sources. ...


The programme came about because Patrick Dowling (who also introduced episodes of series 2) had an interest in Dungeons and Dragons and wanted to televise a show that would capture the mood. The programme shares a similar sci-fi feel to the work of Douglas Adams. Patrick asked Douglas Adams to write the show but Douglas had already agreed to write a TV series of his own radio show The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The first two series were written and produced by Patrick Dowling and directed by Ian Oliver. The final two series were written and produced by Ian Oliver after Patrick had retired from the BBC. The University of Surrey (UniS) received its charter on September 9, 1966, and was at that time situated near Battersea Park in south-west London. ... The original Dungeons & Dragons set Dungeons & Dragons (abbreviated as D&D or DnD) is a fantasy role-playing game (RPG) published by Gary Gygax and David Arneson in January 1974. ... Sci-fi is an abbreviation for science fiction. ... Douglas Noël Adams (11 March 1952 – 11 May 2001) was an English author, comic radio dramatist, and musician. ... The cover of the first novel in the Hitchhikers series, from a late 1990s printing. ... The British Broadcasting Corporation, which is usually known as the BBC, is the largest broadcasting corporation in the world in terms of audience numbers, employing 26,000 staff in the United Kingdom alone and with a budget of more than GB£4 billion. ...

Contents

The characters

Arg was inhabited by shapeshifting dragons known as Argonds. As a reference to this, most proper nouns in the programme, including Argond, were anagrams of the word dragon. All Argonds shifted shape within the first few minutes before the contestants arrived, most to human form to avoid scaring them. Tsarevna Frog by Viktor Vasnetsov: a frog metamorphoses into a princess Shapeshifting is a common theme in mythology and folklore, as well as in science fiction and fantasy. ... It has been suggested that European dragon be merged into this article or section. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ...


Notable characters within the game included:

  • The Rangdo, who was the ruler of planet Arg and referred to as 'Uncle' by the other Argonds. In the first series, his human form was played by Ian Messiter, who appeared as an old professor in a velvet jacket, but in later series he became the only one of the Argonds not to appear as a dragon. In series 2 and 3, he became an aspidistra atop an elegant plant stand; he could move around the room and roared and shook when he was angry (the Rangdo was controlled by Kenny Baker, who was also responsible for R2-D2). Any human meeting the Rangdo had immediately to placate him with a bow or curtsey while uttering the phrase "Gronda!, Gronda!". In the last series, the Rangdo changed into a teapot instead, spouting steam when displeased.
  • Darong (series 1, played by actress Moira Stuart, who later became a BBC newsreader).
  • Gnoard (series 1 - 3, played by Charmian Gradwell), whose job it was to explain the initial stages of the game to the contestants.
  • Dorgan (series 4, played by Sarah Lam), who took over from Gnoard in the final season.
  • Gandor (series 1 - 4, played by Chris Lever), an ancient, half-deaf butler who took the contestants through most of the puzzles and refereed the Vortex and Drogna games. He could only hear when he was wearing his glasses, which he continually (and conveniently) misplaced.
  • Rongad (series 3 & 4, played by Bill Homewood), because he was Australian, spoke English backwards and could only understand the contestants if they did the same. His Australian accent was a mild clue to help the contestants realise he was speaking backwards. Noted for habitually singing Waltzing Matilda in reverse, and exclamations of "Doog yrev!" when the contestants did well.
  • Lesley Judd, known as the Mole (series 2), who pretended to be one of the regular contestants but was actually working against them. She had been a genuine contestant in the the first series.

The look of the characters in Argond form was quite different in each of the series: Ian Cassan Messiter (Born 2 April 1920 in Dudley, Worcestershire, died 22 November 1999 in London) was a BBC Radio producer, and the creator of the panel game Just a Minute. ... Species See text. ... Kenny Baker at a science fiction convention Kenny Baker (born August 24, 1934) is a British actor best known as the man inside of R2-D2 in the popular Star Wars film series. ... R2-D2 (called R2, or Artoo for short), is a fictional character in the Star Wars universe. ... A teapot with floral design A Chinese Yixing Zisha teapot A Chinese Zisha teapot - Melon A modern teapot A teapot is a vessel used for steeping tea leaves or a herbal mix in near-boiling water. ... Moira Stuart OBE (born 1952) was the first Afro-Caribbean female newsreader on British television. ... Charmian Gradwell is a British actress, best known for her role in the television game show The Adventure Game. ... Sarah Lam is a British actress, noted for her television roles. ... The butler is a senior servant in a large household. ... Waltzing Matilda is usually sung in informal settings, but it was played with a 90 piece orchestra and the 100 voice Melbourne Chorale at the 2005 Classical Spectacular Waltzing Matilda is Australias most widely known folk song, and one that has been popularly suggested as a potential national anthem. ... Lesley Judd (born 20 December 1946, London, UK) is a British actress and TV presenter best known as a long-serving host of the BBC childrens programme Blue Peter. ... A mole is a spy who works for an enemy nation and works within his nations government. ...

  • Series 1: they looked like dragons, and each was rather distinct
  • Series 2: they didn't look much like dragons, but were furry, with no tails and mask-like faces, and primarily differed in colour
  • Series 3 & 4: they returned to looking like dragons, with ruffs, and were almost identical to each other

Notable contestants included Keith Chegwin, Sue Cook, astronomer Heather Couper, John Craven, Paul Darrow, Noel Edmonds, Sarah Greene, Bonnie Langford and Richard Stilgoe. Keith Cheggers Chegwin Keith Chegwin (born 17 January 1957 in Liverpool) is an English television presenter and former sitcom actor. ... Sue Cook is a British journalist and broadcaster. ... Heather Couper (born June 2, 1949) is a British astronomer who popularised astronomy in the 1990s and 2000s on British Television, often alongside Patrick Moore on the programme The Sky at Night. ... John Craven OBE (born in Leeds, England on 16 August 1941) is a BBC television presenter and former news anchor, best known for his pioneering work in the field of childrens news programmes. ... Paul Darrow (born May 2, 1941) is a British character actor best known for his portrayal of Kerr Avon in the BBC science fiction television series Blakes 7. ... Noel Ernest Edmonds (born 22 December 1948 in Ilford, Essex) is a British television presenter, DJ and executive who made his name on BBC Radio 1 in the UK. He is more recently known as the presenter of the television gameshow Deal or No Deal. ... Sarah, alongside her husband Mike Smith (left) and Michael Parkinson (right) on Ghostwatch Sarah Greene (born 24 October 1958, in London, England) is a British television presenter. ... Bonita Melody Lysette Bonnie Langford (July 22, 1964) is an English actress and entertainer. ... Richard Stilgoe OBE. Richard Stilgoe OBE (b. ...


The credits for the series listed the human characters as being played by Argonds, rather than the other way round.


Common tasks

The Vortex

The contestants had to complete a number of tasks in order to achieve their overall goal (e.g. regain their crystal and return to their ship). Many tasks involved the drogna, a small transparent plastic disc containing a solid geometric figure, which was the currency of Arg. The value of a drogna was its numbered position in the visible spectrum multiplied by the number of sides of the figure. For example, a red circle is worth one unit, an orange circle is worth two units, a red triangle and a yellow circle are both worth three, and so on. Image File history File links The_Adventure_Game. ... Image File history File links The_Adventure_Game. ... The visible spectrum (or sometimes optical spectrum) is the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to (can be detected by) the human eye. ...


Tasks which often appeared included:

  • A simple computer game where Dogran, a Liverpudlian-accented 'dog', had to be guided around a 3D maze.
  • Belts around the contestants' waists attached to cords tying them to the wall; there was a predictable function governing the maximum distances of all the cords, which had to be discovered by induction.
  • The Drogna Game, which came in the middle of the programme, giving the contestants their opportunity to regain the crystal. The game is played by two players: one would be a contestant and the other would be a creature known as the Red Salamander of Zardil. This game became so popular that Acornsoft released a version for the BBC Micro home computer.
    • The floor is marked out with symbols similar to those described above on drognas; the players stand at opposite sides of the board, and the crystal is placed in the centre.
    • There is a rule determining whether a user is allowed to move from a particular drogna to another drogna. (One common example is: A player may move to any drogna with the same colour or shape as the one on which they started the turn. For example, you may move from a red triangle to any red shape or a triangle of any colour.)
    • A player may only move to an adjacent drogna. However, a player may move across multiple drognas in one turn provided they all meet the given criteria. Hence, the drogna on which the player started the turn is not necessarily the drogna they have immediately left.
    • If a player breaks the movement rule, the crystal retracts such that it cannot be taken.
    • If a player becomes adjacent to the crystal and it is not taken or retracted, the player may take the crystal.
    • If, during the move of the player not carrying the crystal, that player can legally step onto a drogna currently occupied by the player holding the crystal, they may take the crystal from their opponent. This is known as the Hargreaves Rule.
    • A player wins by reaching the edge of the board while carrying the crystal.
  • How many Argons around the pond. This was a game played just before the Vortex (possibly a time filler, if the contestants completed the whole game too fast, as it was not always played every show) The winner(s) (everyone had a chance to win) received a Green Cheese roll to triumphant fanfare. This Green cheese roll was of use when playing the Vortex (see below). Gandor would compere the game, it would start on a table with a number of drogna inside a velvet bag with draw strings. He would shake the bag and withdraw some drogna and place them on the table, then asking the first contestant "How many Argons are around the pond?" The contestants would start by adding the sides or points of the solid geometric figure that the drogna's had and fail to guess the right number. The key was that Gandor would place his fingers on the table top as he said "How many Argons are around the pond?" The number of fingers he would place down on the table would be the correct answer. Most people did not guess the answer or they would just happen to get it right by mistake.
  • The Vortex (series 2 - 4). This was the last task in the programme. To return to their ship, the players had to jump between a grid of points, taking turns with the Vortex, another "player" (shown by a video effect generated pulsating column in series 2, and a computer-generated flashing column in series 3 & 4). If the human player jumped into the Vortex, it would explode and the human, who would lose the game, was said to have been "evaporated", meaning a long trip back home which had to be walked by foot along the interplanetary highway (Earth is a long way from Arg!). The important difficulty was that the human player could not see the position of the Vortex on the grid. Players would sometimes be permitted to buy Green cheese rolls or food with their leftover drognas, and this food could be thrown onto suspect squares to test for the presence of the Vortex. Players would sometimes put their Arg Crystal down to test the suspect square, except the Arg Crystal was never evaporated and not a good indicator of the vortex's position. Milk used in this way would, of course, become evaporated milk.

This article is about the city in England. ... Suborders Cryptobranchoidea Salamandroidea Sirenoidea Salamander is the common name applied to approximately 500 species of amphibians with slender bodies, short legs, and long tails. ... Acornsoft was the software arm of Acorn Computers Ltd, and was a major publisher of games for the BBC Micro. ... The BBC Microcomputer System was a series of microcomputers and associated peripherals designed and built by Acorn Computers Ltd for the BBC Computer Literacy Project operated by the British Broadcasting Corporation. ... Vortex created by the passage of an aircraft wing, revealed by coloured smoke A vortex (pl. ... Evaporation is the process whereby atoms or molecules in a liquid state (or solid state if the substance sublimes) gain sufficient energy to enter the gaseous state. ... Evaporated milk is a shelf-stable canned milk product with about 60% of the water removed from fresh milk. ...

Episodes

Where known, and applicable, the contestants are listed below in the order in which they played the Vortex game: [E] = evaporated, [S] = survived, [n/a] = didn't play.


Series 1

Originally broadcast in 1980 on BBC1 on Saturday mornings. Repeated in 1980 on BBC2 on Saturday mid-afternoons. Note: The final game of series 1 was not the Vortex - The travellers had to recross a grid of different coloured shapes in a particular path or they would be "vapourised". Where known, the contestants are listed in order in which they crossed and if they were Vapourised [V] or Survived [S].

  • Episode 1: 24 May 1980, 9:29am-9:55am (repeated 27 September 1980, 3:12pm-3:38pm); 26 minutes; Elizabeth Estensen [S], Fred Harris [S], Mark Dugdale [S]
  • Episode 2: 31 May 1980, 9:32am-10:09am (repeated 4 October 1980, 4:30pm-5:07pm); 37 minutes; Liza Goddard, Michael Rodd, Stephen Cox
  • Episode 3: 7 June 1980, 9:46am-10:23am (repeated 11 October 1980, 4:42pm-5:19pm); 37 minutes; Pat Cater [V], Maggie Philbin [V], James Burke [V]
  • Episode 4: 14 June 1980, 9:35am-10:04am (repeated 18 October 1980, 4:00pm-4:29pm); 29 minutes; Denise Coffey, Dr. Garry Hunt, Toby Freeman [final game not played]
  • Episode 5: 21 June 1980, 9:09am-9:54am (repeated 25 October 1980, 3:40pm-4:25pm); 45 minutes; Lesley Judd [V], Robert Malos [V], Paul Darrow [V]

Elizabeth Estensen (born 10 August 1949, in Stockton-on-Tees) is a British actress, mainly on television. ... Fred Harris is a former British comedian and childrens television presenter. ... Liza Goddard (born 20 January 1950, in Smethwick, West Midlands, England) is a television and stage actress best known for her work in the 1970s and 1980s. ... Michael Rodd is a professional communicator who became familiar face to millions in Britain through his work on BBC Television’s Screen Test and Tomorrows World. ... Maggie Philbin (born 23 June 1955 in Manchester, England) is a former British TV presenter. ... James Burke James Burke (born November 22, 1936) is a British science historian, author and television producer best known for his documentary television series called Connections, focusing on the history of science and technology leavened with a sense of humour. ... Denise Coffey playing the part of Juliet in Do Not Adjust Your Set Denise Coffey (born 12 December 1936 in Aldershot) is a British actress. ... Lesley Judd (born 20 December 1946, London, UK) is a British actress and TV presenter best known as a long-serving host of the BBC childrens programme Blue Peter. ... Paul Darrow (born May 2, 1941) is a British character actor best known for his portrayal of Kerr Avon in the BBC science fiction television series Blakes 7. ...

Series 2

Originally broadcast in 1981 on BBC2 on Monday early-evenings. Repeated in 1982 on BBC1 on Friday late-afternoons.

  • Episode 1: 2 November 1981, 6:04pm-6:49pm (repeated 28 May 1982, 4:53pm-5:38pm); 45 minutes; Graeme Garden [n/a], Carol Chell [E], Nicolas Hammond [E]
  • Episode 2: 9 November 1981, 6:04pm-6:49pm (repeated 4 June 1982, 4:52pm-5:37pm); 45 minutes; Madeline Smith [E], David Yip [E], Derek Gale [n/a]
  • Episode 3: 16 November 1981, 6:05pm-6:50pm (repeated 11 June 1982, 5:52pm-6:37pm); 45 minutes; David Singmaster, Sue Cook, Philip Sheppard
  • Episode 4: 23 November 1981, 6:05pm-6:49pm (repeated 18 June 1982, 4:54pm-5:38pm); 44 minutes; Tessa Hamp, Nerys Hughes, Derek Griffiths
  • Episode 5: 30 November 1981, 6:08pm-6:53pm (repeated 25 June 1982, 4:53pm-5:38pm); 45 minutes; John Craven, Bill Green, Kirsty Miller

Graeme Garden, as a Beefeater in The Goodies (TV series) episode The Tower of London David Graeme Garden (born February 18, 1943) is a British comedy writer and performer. ... Carol Chell is a British childrens television presenter, remembered for her appearences on the BBC childrens programme Play School. ... Nicolas Hammond (born August 3, 1964) is a British author, Rubiks cube expert, bridge player and businessman. ... Madeline Smith (born on 2 August 1949) is a British actress/comedienne who was a model in the 1960s and appeared in many 1960s/1970s comedy films ( including several Carry_On_films ) and TV series and Hammer horror films. ... David Yip is a British actor of Chinese ethnicity, born in Liverpool on 4 June 1951. ... David Singmaster is a professor of Mathematics at Londons South Bank University. ... Sue Cook is a British journalist and broadcaster. ... Nerys Hughes (born August 11, 1941 in Rhyl, Denbighshire), is known primarily as a television actress. ... Derek Griffiths (born Woking, July 15, 1946) was a star of numerous childrens television programmes in the 1960s to 1980s. ... John Craven OBE (born in Leeds, England on 16 August 1941) is a BBC television presenter and former news anchor, best known for his pioneering work in the field of childrens news programmes. ...

Series 3

Originally broadcast in 1984 on BBC2 on Thursday early-evenings. Repeated in 1985 on BBC2 on Thursday early-evenings.

  • Episode 1: 2 February 1984, 5:39pm-6:18pm (repeated 5 September 1985, 6:49pm-7:28pm); 39 minutes; Sarah Greene, Anne Miller, Richard Stilgoe
  • Episode 2: 9 February 1984, 5:40pm-6:18pm (repeated 12 September 1985, 6:50pm-7:28pm); 38 minutes; Sue Nicholls, Duncan Goodhew, Emma Disley.
  • Episode 3: 16 February 1984, 5:39pm-6:19pm (repeated 19 September 1985, 6:49pm-7:29pm); 40 minutes; Sandra Dickinson, Chris Searle, Adam Tandy
  • Episode 4: 23 February 1984, 5:40pm-6:19pm (repeated 26 September 1985, 6:50pm-7:29pm); 39 minutes; Paul McDowell, Bonnie Langford, Christopher Hughes
  • Episode 5: 1 March 1984, 5:39pm-6:18pm (repeated 3 October 1985, 6:49pm-7:28pm); 39 minutes; Janet Fielding [E], Nigel Crocket [S], Neil Adams [n/a - was evaporated earlier by the Rangdo when he presented His Royal Highness with salt, which annoyed him.]
  • Episode 6: 8 March 1984, 5:40pm-6:25pm (repeated 10 October 1985, 6:49pm-7:34pm); 45 minutes; Fern Britton, Noel Edmonds, Ray Virr

Sarah, alongside her husband Mike Smith (left) and Michael Parkinson (right) on Ghostwatch Sarah Greene (born 24 October 1958, in London, England) is a British television presenter. ... Richard Stilgoe OBE. Richard Stilgoe OBE (b. ... The Honourable Susan Frances Harmar Nicholls (born 23 November 1943 in Walsall, Staffordshire) is a British actress, most known today for her long-running role as Audrey Roberts on Coronation Street. ... Duncan Goodhew (born March 27, 1957) is one of the most respected and instantly recognisable UK swimming athletes. ... Sandra Dickinson (born 20 October 1948) is a American actor, born in Washington DC. She has often played the dumb blonde. ... Bonita Melody Lysette Bonnie Langford (July 22, 1964) is an English actress and entertainer. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... Janet Fielding (publicity portrait). ... Neil Adams, MBE (born September 27, 1958) is a British-born judoka who won numerous Olympic and Judo World Championship medals in judo. ... Fern Britton (born July 17, 1957 in Ealing, London) is a well-known English television presenter. ... Noel Ernest Edmonds (born 22 December 1948 in Ilford, Essex) is a British television presenter, DJ and executive who made his name on BBC Radio 1 in the UK. He is more recently known as the presenter of the television gameshow Deal or No Deal. ...

Series 4

Originally broadcast in 1986 on BBC2 on Tuesday early-evenings. Repeated in recent years on the digital TV channel Challenge. Challenge is a British digital TV channel owned by Virgin Media Television. ...

  • Episode 1: 7 January 1986, 6:49pm-7:28pm; 39 minutes; Sheelagh Gilbey [S], Roy Kane [E], Ian McNaught-Davis [S]
  • Episode 2: 14 January 1986, 6:50pm-7:29pm; 39 minutes; Johnny Ball [E], Barbara Lott [E], Liz Hobbs [E]
  • Episode 3: 21 January 1986, 6:49pm-7:28pm; 39 minutes; David Sandeman [E], Fiona Kennedy [E], Ian McCaskill [S]
  • Episode 4: 4 February 1986, 6:52pm-7:30pm; 38 minutes; Prof. Heinz Wolff [S], Deborah Leigh Hall [E], Ruth Madoc [S]
  • Episode 5: 11 February 1986, 6:50pm-7:28pm; 38 minutes; Joanna Munro [S], Val Prince [S], George Layton [S]
  • Episode 6: 18 February 1986, 6:49pm-7:28pm; 39 minutes; Heather Couper [E], Keith Chegwin [E], Adam Gilbey [E] (The broadcast of this episode was postponed from 28 January 1986 due to coverage of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.)

Ian McNaught-Davis is most recognised nowadays for presenting the BBC TV series The Computer Programme, Making the Most of the Micro and Micro Live in the 1980s. ... Johnny Ball circa 1998 - Birmingham Johnny Ball (born May 23, 1938) originally came from Bristol, spending his primary years there and later in his childhood moved to Bolton, Lancashire. ... Barbara Lott (1920 to 2002) was a British actress probably best remembered as Ronnie Corbetts characters mother in the comedy series Sorry!. She also appeared in Coronation Street, Survivors, Z Cars, and 2 point 4 children amongst others. ... Ian McCaskill (born July 28, 1938) is a former BBC weatherman. ... Professor Heinz Wolff is a scientist, and television and radio presenter. ... Ruth Madoc (born 16 April 1943 in Norwich, Norfolk, England, brought up in Llansamlet in south Wales) is a Welsh actress and singer. ... Joanna Munro is a former television presenter who appeared in the 1980s on Thats Life! (television) with Esther Rantzen. ... George Layton (born March 2, 1943 at Bradford, Yorkshire, England) is a British actor who studied acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. ... Heather Couper (born June 2, 1949) is a British astronomer who popularised astronomy in the 1990s and 2000s on British Television, often alongside Patrick Moore on the programme The Sky at Night. ... Keith Cheggers Chegwin Keith Chegwin (born 17 January 1957 in Liverpool) is an English television presenter and former sitcom actor. ... The iconic image of Space Shuttle Challengers smoke plume after its breakup 73 seconds after launch. ...

Signature tune

Ferdinando Maria Meinrado Francesco Pascale Rosario Carulli (February 9, 1770–February 17, 1841) was one of the most famous composers for classical guitar and the author of the first complete classical guitar method, which continues to be used today. ... Madame Villa-Lobos and Julien Bream at the presentation of the Villa-Lobos Gold Medal, officially awarded to Julian Bream in 1976. ... John Christopher Williams (born 24 April 1941) is one of the worlds best-known classical guitarists. ... Edvard Grieg Edvard Hagerup Grieg (15 June 1843 – 4 September 1907) was a Norwegian composer and pianist who composed in the romantic period. ... A brass band a musical group consisting mostly or entirely of brass instruments, often with a percussion section. ...

Missing episodes

Master tapes of the following episodes no longer exist - the tapes were deliberately wiped by the BBC in order to reuse them:

  • Series 1, Episode 2 - Saturday 31 May 1980. Liza Goddard, Michael Rodd, Stephen Cox.
  • Series 1, Episode 5* - Saturday 21 June 1980. Paul Darrow, Lesley Judd, Robert Malos.
  • Series 2, Episode 2* - Monday 9 November 1981. Madeleine Smith, David Yip, Derek Gale.
  • Series 2, Episode 4 - Monday 23 November 1981. Tessa Hamp, Nerys Hughes, Derek Griffiths.

*Off air recordings of these episodes have been returned to the BBC (they would still be interested in obtaining better quality versions).


External links


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