- The Museum of Curiosity
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The Museum of Curiosity
John Lloyd and Bill Bailey hosting an episode from the first series of The Museum of Curiosity.Other names The Professor of Curiosity (unbroadcast pilot) Genre Panel game Running time 30 minutes Country United Kingdom Languages English Home station BBC Radio 4 Starring John Lloyd
Bill Bailey (Series 1)
Sean Lock (Series 2)
Jon Richardson (Series 3)
Dave Gorman (Series 3-4)Creators John Lloyd
Dan Schreiber
Richard TurnerProducers Richard Turner
Dan SchreiberAir dates 20 February 2008 to 14 June 2010No. of series 3 No. of episodes 18 + 1 unbroadcast pilot Opening theme Bill Bailey (Series 1)
House of Strange (Series 2 onwards)Ending theme Bill Bailey (Series 1)
House of Strange (Series 2 onwards)Website BBC Homepage The Museum of Curiosity, formerly titled The Professor of Curiosity,[1] is a comedy panel game on BBC Radio 4 that was first broadcast on 20 February 2008.[2] It stars John Lloyd as "The Professor of Ignorance at the University of Buckingham" and owner of the fictional "Museum of Curiosity". In the show a panel comprising three guests - typically a comedian, an author and an academic - attempt to donate a range of objects that they personally find curious to the museum.
Bill Bailey acted as co-host of the programme in the first series,[3] under the title of curator of the museum. Bailey left the show after he initially decided to "retire" from panel games,[4] and was replaced by Sean Lock in the second series. Each subsequent series has seen a different comedian take over as the sidekick-curator, with Jon Richardson and Dave Gorman assuming the role in the third and fourth series respectively. (Gorman also stood in for Richardson for one edition of the third series after the latter was left stranded due to the volcanic eruption of Eyjafjallajökull.)
The departures of previous curators are explained with bizarre claims. It was said that Bailey had been headhunted by the Cumberland Pencil Museum,[5] while Lock was apparently attempting to locate and remove a mustard seed that had been accidentally placed in the room intended to contain nothing (submitted by Frank Close in series 1).
The programme has often been compared to the television panel game QI. Both were co-created by Lloyd, several of the Museum's 'curators' and comic guests have appeared regularly on QI and the QI Elves receive a credit for providing some of the research. As a result, some critics consider the radio show to be a spin-off of the TV programme.[3] [6] Some have ventured that The Museum of Curiosity is not as good as its forerunner.[7] However, most reviewers are positive about the show.[8][9]
Contents
Format
In series one, the programme began with Bailey introducing the show, playing the theme tune to the programme in a slightly different way in each episode. Subsequent series have the theme tune played normally. The host/professor and the curator/sidekick introduce themselves. They then give a short guide to the museum, before introducing the "advisory committee", a guest panel made up of a mixture of celebrities and academic experts, with Lloyd reading out their CVs.[5]
Afterwards, each member of the committee attempts to donate something to the museum. The donation can be anything, no matter how large, expensive, intangible, or possibly nonexistent. Examples of donations include a yeti,[10] the Battle of Waterloo,[11] and absolutely nothing.[12] Lloyd and the curator decide whether it is worthy to enter the museum. In series one, the programme ended with Lloyd and Bailey looking through the audience's suggestions for things the museum could exhibit or asking the audience curious questions. Bailey then finished by giving a humorous comment on a Bertrand Russell quote. Both of these ideas were dropped in series two.[5]
Production
The series was first recorded as a pilot in 16 April 2007 called The Professor of Curiosity, in which the guests were Alastair Fothergill, Victoria Finlay and Simon Munnery. This pilot, recorded at the Rutherford Room at the institute of Physics, has yet to be broadcast.[13] The first series was recorded at the Pleasance Theatre in Islington and the second at the BBC Radio Theatre.[13] The series was co-created by Lloyd, Richard Turner and Dan Schreiber. Turner and Schreiber are the producers of the show. The show's researchers are James Harkin, Xander Cansell (for series one) and Molly Oldfield (from series two onwards).[3][13]
Episodes
Series 1
Episode Air date Advisory committee Exhibits donated 1 20 February 2008 - The giant hornet of Chang Jiang. (Fortey)
- Curators of the Natural History Museum. (Fortey)
- A yeti or Sasquatch. (Blessed)
- The modern scarf knot, or the "Sean Lock neck knot". (Lock)[14]
2 27 February 2008 3 5 March 2008 - Arthur Cravan (Smith)
- Nothing (Close)
- Father Christmas (Hutton)[16]
4 12 March 2008 - Pliny the Elder (Finlay)
- The Battle of Waterloo (Day)
- An hairy angler fish (Fothergill)[17]
5 19 March 2008 - The Nottingham Alabasters (Miller)
- Phlogiston (Ball)
- The Monster (du Sautoy)[18]
6 26 March 2008 - The Big Bang (Gribbin)
- Epping Forest (Davies)
- Silence (Reeves)[19]
Series 2
Episode Air date Advisory committee Exhibits donated 1 4 May 2009 - A British Railyways bridge plate (Donald)
- Grímsvötn (Eno)
- The urge to press red buttons that you know you shouldn't press (Gorman)
2 11 May 2009 - Gavin Pretor-Pinney
- Simon Singh
- Tim FitzHigham
- A Kelvin-Helmholtz cloud (Pretor-Pinney)
- The Holmdel Horn Antenna (Singh)
- Don Quixote (FitzHigham)
3 18 May 2009 - Helen of Troy (Hughes)
- Alan Shepard's six iron (Addison)
- A sheep rolling over a cattlegrid (Sheldrake)
4 25 May 2009 - A chimpanzee rain dance (Uhlenbroek)
- Complete world knowledge (Hodgman)
- Matt Ridley's nameplate from his office door at Northern Rock (James)
5 1 June 2009 - The Holy Grail (Adie)
- Hannah Hauxwell (Richardson)
- The perfect English Spot rabbit (Law)
6 8 June 2009 - A P-51 Mustang (James)
- Tempting fate (Minchin)
- Inventions being used for things they were not designed for. (Pullman)
Series 3
Episode Air date Advisory committee Exhibits donated 1 10 May 2010 - Marcus Chown
- Terry Pratchett
- Shappi Khorsandi
- The Omega Point (Chown)
- Charlie Chaplin (Khorsandi)
- A procrastinator (Pratchett)
2 17 May 2010[fn 1] - The Great Exhibition (Suggs)
- 10,000 tigers (Padel)
- Spider-Man (Francis)
3 24 May 2010 - The Milgram Experiment (Wiseman)
- The ten worlds (Eldon)
- A gay bomb (Ronson)
4 31 May 2010 - Michael Welland
- Sarah Bakewell
- Simon Evans
- Singing sand dunes (Welland)
- Michel de Montaigne's medallion (Bakewell)
- A total eclipse (Evans)
5 7 June 2010[fn 2] - Ronni Ancona
- Daniel Tammet
- Robin Hanbury-Tenison
- Barry Marshall (Ancona)
- Humphrey Davy (Ancona)
- Saul Bellow (Tammet)
- Nyapun (Hanbury-Tenison)
6 14 June 2010 - Pictures of animals in clothes (Millican)
- International Ignorance Day (Eagleman)
- Jack Benny's vault (Gaiman)
Series 4
Episode Air date Advisory committee Exhibits donated 1 3 October 2011 - Francesca Stavrakopoulou
- Alex Bellos
- Jimmy Carr
- God (Stavrakopoulou)
- A Curta calculator (Bellos)
- A book containing all the jokes in the world (Carr)
2 10 October 2011 - Graham Linehan
- Helen Scales
- Rory Sutherland
- A cassette tape (Linehan)
- A tank full of seahorses (Scales)
- A single Shreddie shown from angle of 45° (Sutherland)
3 17 October 2011 - Roger Highfield
- Robin Ince
- Gareth Edwards
- An invisibility cloak (Highfield)
- The essential trifle (Ince)
- The first story ever told (Edwards)
4 24 October 2011 - David McCandless
- Natalie Haynes
- David Crystal
- The super-ego (McCandless)
- TV detectives (Haynes)
- A waffle generator (Crystal)
5 31 October 2011 - Alain de Botton
- Sara Wheeler
- Alex Horne
- A High Street psychotherapist (Botton)
- A carved walrus baculum (Wheeler)
- The word "dord" (Horne)
6 7 November 2011 - Lucie Green
- Harry Enfield
- Alan West
- A invisible coronal mass ejection (Green)
- A stupid German (Enfield)
- A tot of rum (West)
Reception
Reaction to the series was mixed. Phil Daoust in The Guardian described the show as being "unusual" and "eclectic".[22] Chris Campling, who wrote a preview of the first episode, highlighted it in his "Radio Choice" column for The Times.[8] Gillian Reynolds highlighted the programme as one of her radio choices in the Daily Telegraph.[23] Rosanna Chianta in Scotland on Sunday compared the show positively to QI, also created by Lloyd,[24] while Frances Lass from the Radio Times said it was better than it claiming it was, "QI with even more jokes. Made me bark with laughter",[25] that, "Lord Reith would be so proud" and the programme was, "Pornography for the brain!"[26]
Miranda Sawyer of The Observer criticised the show, saying that, "it's no QI, because the joy of that programme rests almost entirely in the host, Stephen Fry, and his subversion of the prissy, clever character we're familiar with (in QI, Fry is clever, but relaxed). The Museum of Curiosity is presented partly by Bill Bailey and mostly by John Lloyd, producer of QI (are you getting a theme?). Lloyd may well be a nice chap, but we haven't a clue who he is, and, on the evidence of this, he isn't a big or witty enough character for us to feel desperate to get to know him."[7]
Nicholas Lezard in The Independent on Sunday was lukewarm about the show, saying it "more or less worked." He wrote:
I try to envisage the pitch. Imagine if you or I went up to the Head of What Goes Out at 6.30 on Radio 4 and said: "It's a show where we ask guests to bring along an item of interest for us to put in an imaginary museum. They get to tell us some anecdotes, and we make the odd quip." The Head of What Goes Out at 6.30 on Radio 4 puts the tips of his fingers together and says: "Is that it?" "Well, basically, yes." "And will your guests be famous?" "Well, we thought for the first show we'd have Brian Blessed, who is an enormous pain in the arse but undoubtedly very well known; a comedian not too many people have heard of like, say, Sean Lock, and then we'd have a completely off-beam choice, perhaps Richard Fortey, who is a world expert on trilobites and a member of the Royal Society." This sounds a bit mad, no? As I said, if you or I pitched this idea we'd hardly have time to eat our free BBC biscuit before being shown the door. But as the hosts are Bill Bailey and John Lloyd (who had the idea for, among many other things, QI), then they get the green light. Good for them.[6]
Kate Chisholm in The Spectator commented positively: "I've at last found myself laughing at a Radio Four comedy programme, transforming that 6.30 graveyard slot, which in recent years has become synonymous with smutty jokes and banal innuendo, into something a little different. The Museum of Curiosity (Wednesdays) is a bit like Paul Merton's Room 101, but without the ego."[9]
Elisabeth Mahoney in The Guardian was critical of the second series. While praising the discussion between the guests as, "funny and flowing, and quite endearingly quirky", she also said: "But, peculiarly, the programme fizzled away when it reached what ought to have been its crux: the donation of kooky items to the imaginary museum. Instead, we had a reminder of what they were, and then a sudden ending that was both limp and abrupt."[27]
Footnotes
- ^ Richardson was unable to attended the recording as he was stranded in Australia due to the air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption. His role was taken over for the show by Dave Gorman.[20]
- ^ For this episode, the museum was looking for "new members of staff", so all the donations were curious people.[21]
References
- ^ "Pilot". The Professor of Curiosity.
- ^ Lavalie, John (2008-03-30). "The Museum of Curiosity". epguides.com. http://epguides.com/MuseumofCuriosity/. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
- ^ a b c "Curious commission: R4 to make QI spin-off". Chortle.co.uk. 2007-12-11. http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2007/12/11/6146/curious_commission. Retrieved 2007-12-11.
- ^ Maxwell, Dominic (2008-11-11). "Bill Bailey: I don't mock the weak". The Times. http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/stage/comedy/article5124673.ece. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^ a b c Wolf, Ian. "A Guide Around The Museum". British Comedy Guide. http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/radio/museum_curiosity/about/. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^ a b Lezard, Nicholas (2008-02-24). "The Museum of Curiosity, Radio 4: Try pitching this to the boss". The Independent on Sunday. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/film-and-tv/tv-radio-reviews/the-museum-of-curiosity-radio-4-786385.html. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
- ^ a b Sawyer, Miranda (2008-02-24). "Whatever the Doctor does is fine by me". The Observer. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/24/radio. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
- ^ a b Campling, Chris (2008-02-20). "Backstage at the Brits; The Museum of Curiosity - Radio Choice". The Times. http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article3398486.ece. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
- ^ a b Chisholm, Kate (2008-03-05). "An English malady". The Spectator. http://www.spectator.co.uk/the-magazine/arts/539981/part_2/an-english-malady.thtml. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ^ "Episode 1". The Museum of Curiosity. 2008-02-20. No. 1, season 1.
- ^ "Episode 4". The Museum of Curiosity. 2008-03-12. No. 4, season 1.
- ^ "Episode 3". The Museum of Curiosity. 2008-03-05. No. 3, season 1.
- ^ a b c Wolf, Ian. "The Museum of Curiosity - Production Details, Plus Regular Cast and Crew". British Comedy Guide. http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/radio/museum_curiosity/details/. Retrieved 2008-05-04.
- ^ "Images from the Museum of Curiosity, 20 February.". BBC. 2008-02-20. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/comedy/museumofcuriosity_gallery.shtml. Retrieved 2008-02-28.
- ^ "Images from the Museum of Curiosity, 28 February.". BBC. 2008-02-28. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/comedy/museumofcuriosity_gallery_20080228.shtml. Retrieved 2008-02-28.
- ^ "Images from the Museum of Curiosity, 5 March.". BBC. 2008-03-05. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/comedy/museumofcuriosity_gallery_20080305.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ^ "Images from the Museum of Curiosity, 12 March.". BBC. 2008-03-12. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/comedy/museumofcuriosity_gallery_20080312.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
- ^ "Images from the Museum of Curiosity, 19 March.". BBC. 2008-03-19. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/comedy/museumofcuriosity_gallery_20080319.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-19.
- ^ "Images from the Museum of Curiosity, 26 March.". BBC. 2008-03-26. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/comedy/museumofcuriosity_gallery_20080326.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-26.
- ^ Wolf, Ian. "The Museum of Curiosity - Meeting Fourteen: The Great Exhibition, 10,000 Tigers, Spider-Man". British Comedy Guide. http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/radio/museum_curiosity/episodes/3/2/. Retrieved 10 May, 2010.
- ^ Wolf, Ian. "The Museum of Curiosity - Meeting Seventeen: Barry Marshall, Humphrey Davy, Saul Bellow, Mapun". British Comedy Guide. http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/radio/museum_curiosity/episodes/3/5/. Retrieved 7 June, 2010.
- ^ Daoust, Phil (2008-02-20). "Pick of the Day". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv_and_radio/story/0,,2258119,00.html. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
- ^ Reynolds, Gillian (2008-02-20). "Wednesday's TV & radio choices". Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2008/02/20/nosplit/bvtv20.xml. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
- ^ Chianta, Rosanna (2008-02-17). "Radio". Scotland on Sunday. http://scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com/sos-review/Radio.3784233.jp. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
- ^ Lass, Frances (2009-04-28). "The Museum of Curiosity". Radio Times.
- ^ Lass, Frances (2010-05-10). "The Museum of Curiosity". Radio Times.
- ^ Mahoney, Elisabeth (2009-05-05). "Radio review". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2009/may/05/radio-review-elisabeth-mahoney. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
External links
- The Museum of Curiosity at BBC Programmes
- The Museum of Curiosity at epguides.com
- The Museum of Curiosity at the British Comedy Guide
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