Celebrity Catchphrase

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Catchphrase
GenreGame show
Based on
Catch Phrase
by Steven Radosh
Presented by
Theme music composer
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series
  • 17 (Original)
  • 13 (Revival)
No. of episodes
  • 348 (Original)
  • 121 (Revival)
Production
Production locations
Running time
  • 30 minutes (1986–2004)
  • 45–60 minutes (2013–)
Production companies
Original release
NetworkITV
Release12 January 1986 (1986-01-12) 
23 April 2004 (2004-04-23)
NetworkITV
Release7 April 2013 (2013-04-07) 
present
Related
Family Catchphrase

Catchphrase is a British game show based on the short-lived American game show of the same name. It originally aired in the United Kingdom between 12 January 1986 and 23 April 2004.[4] A revival premiered on ITV1 on 7 April 2013 and is still running as of 2026.[5] Steve Radosh created the American series from which the British programme is derived.

In the game, two or three contestants have to identify a familiar phrase represented by a piece of animation. The show's mascot, a golden robot called "Mr. Chips", appears in many of the animations. The contestants then earn money based on the amount of phrases they guess correctly.

Catchphrase was presented by Northern Irish comedian Roy Walker from its 1986 premiere until 1999. Nick Weir took over hosting the programme in 2000 and hosted it until the end of series 16 on 23 April 2004. Mark Curry replaced Weir for the final series, which moved to a daytime slot and ran from 24 June to 19 December 2002. In 2012, the series was revived with new host Stephen Mulhern and later commissioned for a full series broadcast in 2013.[6] The original format remains, although there are now three contestants instead of two, and the show has also been updated with new 3D graphics and a new concluding game.[7]

Format

Note: The description in this section primarily refers to the game played in most recent series of Catchphrase. The format has considerably changed and evolved throughout the show's forty years on air.

Main game

In the main game, at the start of each standard round, one contestant stopped a randomiser consisting of money amounts by hitting their button. The value landed on would be the amount earnt for correctly guessing the catchphrases in that round. The potential prizes increase over the rounds.

For the first round, the large screen in front of the contestants would slowly draw a visual representation of the catchphrase answer accompanied by background music (primarily using CGI). When most of the catchphrase has been revealed, contestants can then buzz in and try to guess the answer. If the player that buzzed in guessed incorrectly, the other player would be offered the chance to guess. If a player guessed correctly, they would win the predetermined amount and then have a chance to solve the bonus catchphrase.

Bonus Catchphrase

A correct answer won the contestant the predetermined money amount, plus a chance to solve the bonus catchphrase, which was hidden behind nine squares. The contestant chose a square by hitting their buzzer to randomly select one of them. That square was then removed, and the contestant had five seconds to come up with an answer. If they were right, they won the amount of money in the bonus bank, a sum of money accumulated over the contestants answering the regular catchphrases. If they were wrong, then they would have another catchphrase to guess, and the rounds cycle.

Quickfire round

Following a set amount of standard rounds, a penultimate "quickfire round" takes place. This round followed a similar structure to a standard round, except that all catchphrases were worth a fixed amount of money (originally £50) and there was no bell, so the contestants could buzz in and answer them whenever they wished and as many times until the puzzle is solved or time runs out.

The player with the most money following this round won the game and then plays the Super Catchphrase. Other contestants who do not have the most money keep their winnings, but do not move forward in the game.

Super Catchphrase

For this round, the screen displays 15 numbered squares in the form of a pyramid (with 15 at the top) with each row, starting at the bottom, being worth a higher amount of money increasing exponentially, the largest being £50,000. Number 11 in the middle is starred and correctly answering it awards a bonus prize. (In the celebrity specials, correctly answering this catchphrase doubles the amount of money won by the other two celebrities for their chosen charities.) Starting from the bottom level, the winning player has 60 seconds to reach the highest level possible. Each square still contains a catchphrase; answering a catchphrase in a level correctly clears that level and allows the player to move to the next level. At the end of the round, the player receives the prize money of the level they have last cleared, plus the bonus prize (if Square 11 is cleared), along with their main game winnings.

Transmissions

Original

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
112 January 1986[8]18 May 1986[8]18
24 January 1987[8]17 May 1987[8]20
39 January 1988[8]14 May 1988[8]19
431 December 1988[8]13 May 1989[8]19
52 September 1989[8]10 February 1990[8]22
61 September 1990[8]2 March 1991[8]25
719 October 1991[8]14 December 1991[8]9
827 June 1992[8]24 October 1992[8]15
930 October 1993[8]29 January 1994[8]18
30 September 1994[8]28 October 1994[8]
104 November 199427 January 199517
2 March 199623 March 1996
1130 March 199627 April 199619
27 September 199627 December 1996
123 January 19989 May 199816
1 November 1998
1321 November 199827 February 199916
3 October 199913 November 1999
147 January 200018 August 200026
1513 January 200112 May 200116
16[c]24 November 200221
5 May 20037 September 2003
5 April 200423 April 2004
1724 June 200230 August 200252
17 December 200219 December 2002

Revival

Regular

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodesRecorded
17 April 20132 June 20139[9]2012[9]
229 December 201313[9]2013[9]
16 March 201422 June 2014
314 December 201413[9]2014[9]
14 June 201519 July 2015
7 November 201512 December 2015
42 July 201620 August 20168[9]2015[9]
524 June 201719 August 201710[9]2016[9]
6 January 2018
618 March 201825 March 201810[9]2017[9]
8 June 201927 July 2019

Celebrity

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodesRecorded
117 June 201812 January 20196[9]2018[9]
219 January 201926 January 20194[9]
24 November 2019
3 October 2020
331 August 201910 November 20197[9]2019[9]
8 December 2019
26 September 2020
422 December 201919 September 20208[9]
10 October 2020
524 December 202029 May 202110[9]2020[9]
64 September 202126 December 202113[9]2021[9]
4 March 2023
71 January 20222 April 202210[9]
812 June 2022102022
1 January 202325 February 2023
31 August 2024
924 December 202210
22 October 2023
6 January 2024
7 September 202419 October 2024
1010 June 2023122023
30 December 2023
23 March 20251 June 2025
117 December 202510[10]2025
3 January 2026
21 March 2026TBD 2026

Notable moments

"Snake Charmer" (1994)

One of the most famous moments in the show's history included a Bonus Catchphrase where the puzzle was uncovered in a way which made Mr. Chips and a snake appear to be performing a sexual act. The audience, the contestants and host Roy Walker laughed uncontrollably as the puzzle was revealed. Originally broadcast on 30 December 1994 as the ninth episode of series ten,[11] this was edited in the original ITV broadcast, but it did appear uncensored two years later on the out-take show It'll Be Alright on the Night.[12]

"Dicing With Death" (2014)

On the 2014 Mother's Day celebrity special, one of the Bonus Catchphrases caused a very similar incident to 1994's "Snake Charmer" puzzle. The first piece revealed was of a hand moving up and down in a rapid motion near the person's waist, making it look like the person may have been masturbating. Like the aforementioned "Snake Charmer" incident, this caused the entire studio to break out in laughter as the picture was revealed in a similar manner.[13]

"The Tail Wagging The Dog" (2019)

On another celebrity edition featuring the Bonus Catchphrase, which was originally broadcast on 12 January 2019 on ITV, the first selected square revealed an animation of a dog's head shaking very vigorously with a large grin on its face and hanging in the air. This caused the same reaction for the audience of this episode while the contestants and host Stephen Mulhern grimaced at this picture as it was revealed in a very humorous looking sort of way.

Theme music

Catchphrase's original theme tune and incidental music were composed by television composer Ed Welch, whose original version of the theme was used for the TVS incarnation of the show, until 28 October 1994. It was also used on Family Catchphrase in 1994.

The show returned on 4 November 1994 with a brand new look and now being produced by Action Time for Carlton Television. The show's theme and incidental music was re-tuned, and was composed by Simon Etchell whose version was used from 1994 to 1999, with some slight alterations made in late 1998.

From 2000 to 2002, a third version of the Catchphrase theme music was used. It was a re-mixed and "jazzed-up" version of the previous theme, composed by Simon Etchell and rearranged by Tim Laws and was used alongside a revamped title sequence followed by a new studio set with animations designed by Sam Bailey with storyboards beginning with John Perkins, art directing by Loraine Marshall and question writing beginning with Mark Holloway and Laura Beaumont.

From 2013 onward, a fourth version was introduced, based on Ed Welch's original theme and composed by Marc Sylvan and Richard Jacques. A new title sequence, logo and studio set was also created for the series.

Mr Chips & other mascots

The series' original mascot is a golden robot called "Mr Chips". The figure often appeared in the animations for the catchphrases. He was repurposed from the original US version of the programme where he was known as "Herbie".

As the animation styles used in the show changed throughout the year, the design of Mr Chips changed as well; eventually transitioning from a taller figure to becoming much smaller. Variations of the mascot sometimes appeared in the animations, such as Mr Chips with a lemon for a head (for the catchphrase "lemonheads").

After Nick Weir took over as presenter and the change of graphics, Mr Chips was semi-retired and replaced with the "Catchphrase Family", consisting of a father, mother, son and two other men. These characters were also featured in the opening sequence which showed the family trying to catch the letters of the word "Phrase" (essentially serving as a catchphrase for "Catchphrase" itself) ending with the family themselves becoming the letters of "Catch" above "Phrase". The family was not as popular as Mr Chips, but despite this, the family appeared until the series finished in 2002.

Mr Chips returned to appearing in the Catchphrases again throughout the series hosted by Mark Curry in 2002, as well as for the revival version hosted by Stephen Mulhern in 2013 where he is animated in 3D computer animation, as with the catchphrases themselves.

See also

  • Waffle (1998 game show hosted by Weir before his stint on Catchphrase that has been compared to Catchphrase)

Notes

  1. Co-produced by Meridian (1993–94)
  2. Known as STV Productions from 2013–2020; In association with Digital Rights Group/NENT Studios UK (2013–2022) and All3Media International (2022–)
  3. Series 16 was recorded before Mark Curry's series, but it went unaired until the episodes were scattered on random days within the ITV schedule following the conclusion of it.

References

  1. Walker, James (18 October 2014). "Filming of ITV show Catchphrase, hosted by Stephen Mulhern, will begin next month at Maidstone Studios in New Cut Road". Kent Online. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  2. "Ex-ITV Regional Studios". TV Studio History. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  3. "dock10 welcomes Catchphrase". Dock10. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  4. "CATCHPHRASE (Series 16, Episode 21)". ITN Source. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  5. "'Catchphrase' returning for second series on ITV". Digital Spy. 21 August 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  6. Jeffery, Morgan (9 October 2012). "'Catchphrase': ITV orders full series with Stephen Mulhern". Digital Spy. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  7. "Catchphrase to make comeback on ITV!". Digital Spy. 24 May 2012.
  8. "CATCHPHRASE". TV Brain. Retrieved 22 September 2025.
  9. "Catchphrase". All3Media. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  10. "ITV commissions 11th series of Celebrity Catchphrase". STV Studios. 6 March 2025. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
  11. "CATCHPHRASE (Series 10, Episode 9)". ITN Source. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  12. Snake charmer (Television production). United Kingdom: Action Time for Carlton. 30 December 1994. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  13. Wightman, Catriona (28 March 2014). "Catchphrase: Is this the rudest clue ever? Watch David Walliams gasp". Digital Spy. Retrieved 30 March 2014.