All Together Now (British series 1)

All Together Now is a British reality television music competition which first aired on BBC One on 27 January 2018. It is presented by Rob Beckett and Geri Halliwell (credited as Geri Horner). Michael Rice was crowned the winner of the first series on 3 March 2018. A second series was announced on 28 March 2018.[1]

All Together Now
Series 1
Presented byRob Beckett
JudgesSee The 100
WinnerMichael Rice
Runner-upJames Thompson
Release
Original networkBBC One
Original release27 January (2018-01-27) 
3 March 2018 (2018-03-03)
Series chronology

The Performers

The Performers are a mix of soloists and groups. They were cast to include a diverse range of ages, backgrounds and genres, including pop, rock, soul, jazz, musicals, and classical. The casting was open to all and the show attracted performers with minimal public performance experience through to seasoned performers who have appeared on major stages and theatres.

Performances

Result's colour key
     Artist advanced to the final with the highest score
     Artist did not score enough points to place inside the Top 3
     Artist advanced to the sing-off in 2nd and 3rd place

Heat 1 (27 January)

Michael advanced to the final.

Sing-Off details
Name Song Score Result
Chrissy Caine "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" by Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell 10 Eliminated
The Sundaes "Shout" by The Isley Brothers 92 Advanced

Heat 2 (3 February)

Running order

Tabi advanced to the final.

Sing-Off details
Order Name Song Score Result
1 Valentina "I Will Always Love You" by Whitney Houston 32 Eliminated
2 Karl Lewis "Wonderwall" by Oasis 82 Advanced

Heat 3 (10 February)

Running order

Jodie advanced to the final.

Sing-Off details
Name Song Score Result
Chloe Griffiths "Get Here" by Oleta Adams 31 Advanced
Norbert Bondin "Next to Me" by Emeli Sandé 18 Eliminated

Heat 4 (17 February)

Running order

Victoria advanced to the final.

Sing-Off details
Name Song Score Result
Rachael Hawnt "Alone" by Heart 97 Advanced
Scott Dale "Fly Me to the Moon" by Kaye Ballard 7 Eliminated

Heat 5 (24 February)

End Song: The Edge of GloryLady Gaga

Running order

James advanced to the final.

Sing-Off details
Order Name Song Score Result
1 Lee England "Mr. Brightside" by The Killers 68 Eliminated
2 Rachel Lee Stephens "Run" by Snow Patrol 94 Advanced

The Final (3 March)

Running order
Sing-Off details
Order Name Song Score Result
1 Victoria Ouwari "Tonight" by Ferrante & Teicher 43 Third place
2 James Thompson "Never Too Much" by Luther Vandross 84 Runner-up
3 Michael Rice "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen 94 Winner

The 100

Members of the 100 include:

  • Geri Horner, a member of Spice Girls.
  • Andy McGeoch, a jingle writer and lead singer with rock band Tasty.
  • Kelly Wilde, an 80's singer and UK cabaret artist.
  • Daisy Dance, formally known as Daizy Agnew, a singer-songwriter and member of UK girlband Girls Can't Catch.
  • Lindsay Dracass, who represented the United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001.
  • Gabz, a rapper who was previously on Britain's Got Talent in 2013.
  • Divina de Campo (Owen Farrow), a drag artist who runs a cabaret bar in Manchester called Kiki, as well as being the runner up on RuPaul's Drag Race UK
  • Paulus, a moody cabaret compere.
  • James Lomas, the West End's original Billy Elliot in the musical.
  • Lili Davies, a Romanian-born pub singer going by the name ‘Magic Betty’.
  • Lili La Scala, a cabaret singer.
  • Oriana Curls, a French jazz singer.
  • Harry Kersley, an operatic tenor
  • Maria Grimsley and Tracey Richley, sisters that are a wedding-singer duo.[2]
  • Mark James, a vocal coach and performer.
  • Georg Tormann, a BRIT School vocal coach, who helped launch Ella Eyre's career, and founder of The London Concert Chorus.
  • Jason Butler, an Open Mic UK finalist and karaoke bar owner from Wigan.
  • Aaron Sokell, a singer/songwriter and vocal coach who has worked with the likes of Tom Jones and Beverley Knight.
  • Simon Kindleysides, a singer-songwriter. The first wheelchair user judge on BBC One, and the first paralysed man to walk the London Marathon, in 2018.
  • Lizzie Capener, an opera singer, and the first blind female TV judge.
  • Harmesh Gharu, Director of Commercial Music at Tring Park School for the Performing Arts.
  • Sandy Grigelis, a singer/songwriter/musician and West End performer.
  • Mr Fabulous, aka Jay Kamiraz, a gospel choir director, Prince's Trust ambassador and Pride of Britain award winner.
  • Tina T (her real name), a Motown & Soul singer, and a Tina Turner & Whitney Houston Tribute Act.
  • Dylan Hutchinson, a musical theatre teacher and singer.
  • Donna Marie Trego, a singer who won ITV's Moon & Stars) and an award-winning Lady Gaga tribute & impersonator.
  • Ed and Emma Saklatvala, married opera singers and singing teachers from Croydon.
  • Kiki deVille, a vintage cabaret artiste.
  • Maxine Brooks, the founder and director of Birmingham Community Gospel Choir.
  • Milad Shadrooh, the 'Singing Dentist', who is famous for his song parodies.
  • Nathaniel Morrison, a West End performer.
  • Larissa Eddie, a supporting singer for Peter Andre.[3]
  • Nigel Murfitt, a singer at the London tourist attraction the Medieval Banquet.[4]
  • Georgia Bray, who would the following year make it to Knockouts of The Voice UK series 8
  • Rob King, a singer and barman, who two years later would compete on Britain's Got Talent.

Ratings

Episode Air date Viewers
(millions)
BBC One
weekly ranking
Viewing share
Episode 1 27 January 2018 3.88 26 TBA
Episode 2 3 February 2018 3.90 29 TBA
Episode 3 10 February 2018 3.90 21 TBA
Episode 4 17 February 2018 3.83 23 TBA
Episode 5 24 February 2018 3.18 30 TBA
Episode 6
(final)
3 March 2018 4.03 30 TBA
Celebrity Special 24 December 2018 5.09 30 TBA
gollark: We could put in *hyper*sentient regices I guess.
gollark: My mental architecture is immune to memetic kill agents anyway.
gollark: We should clearly devise a better digital protocol.
gollark: Computers can just directly feed PCM to speakers.
gollark: Yes, newer CC:T versions take a different approach to Computronics.

References

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