Crosswits

Crosswits is a British game show produced by Tyne Tees in association with Cove Productions and Action Time and filmed from their City Road studios in Newcastle upon Tyne. It was first shown on 3 September 1985 originally hosted by Barry Cryer for the first 2 series, then comedian Tom O'Connor took over from series 3 until the show ended on 23 December 1998. The show consisted of two members of the public competing against each other to solve simple crossword puzzles. Each member of the public was helped out by a "celebrity" partner. The announcers for the show were generally Tyne Tees continuity announcers such as Judi Lines, Jonathan Morrell and Bill Steel.

Crosswits
GenreGame show
Created byJerry Payne
Presented byBarry Cryer (1985–86)
Tom O'Connor (1987–98)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original language(s)English
No. of series12
No. of episodes435
Production
Running time30 minutes (inc. adverts)
Production company(s)Tyne Tees in association with Cove Productions and Action Time
DistributorITV Studios
Release
Original networkITV
Picture format4:3
Original release3 September 1985 (1985-09-03) 
23 December 1998 (1998-12-23)
Chronology
Related showsThe Cross-Wits (US version)

Gameplay

Basically, the game was the same as its American counterpart, except that there were two players (one celebrity and one contestant) on each team instead of three. As in the American version, teams took turns solving words in a crossword puzzle (by virtue of clues), all of which are clues to a master puzzle. Each correct answer keeps control and earns one point per letter in the answer plus a chance to solve the master puzzle for 10 bonus points. On the first two series, which had been transmitted weekly, the teams played for pounds. Later in the run, teams always took turns whether they were right or wrong.

There were also special rounds in the game:

  • Anagram round - the first letter of every clue word make a key word.
  • Mystery round - finding a keyword after one clue without assistance from a clue word wins the contestant a small prize such as a cordless phone or a pocket TV.
  • Song round - all clues were lyrics to a well-known song.

The team with the most points when time runs out, wins the game and plays the same Crossfire round as the American version. The other player received a dictionary and thesaurus.

Crossfire round

The winning team was shown one last crossword puzzle, with 10 words none of which are clues to a master puzzle. The host reads rapid-fire clues to each of the 10 words. Each correct words brings the winning team extra closer to a holiday for the contestant, and if they can solve all ten in 60 seconds or less, they'll win the holiday, otherwise the winning player wins a gold pen and pencil set.

Transmissions

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodesRecorded
13 September 19853 December 1985131985
25 January 198730 March 1987131986
327 October 198717 December 1987241987
425 April 198817 June 1988401988
515 May 198914 July 1989451989
69 April 199025 May 1990351990
729 April 199121 June 1991401991
813 April 199226 June 1992551992
917 May 199318 June 1993251993
104 April 19948 July 1994701994
1121 October 199613 December 1996401996
126 January 199823 December 1998351997

Regional transmissions information

1985

The first series aired on Tuesday afternoons at 3pm, with the exception of TVS who aired the series on Thursday afternoons at the same time.

Early 1987

The second series aired on Monday evenings at 6:30pm in the Tyne Tees region. The rest of the regions aired the series on Tuesday afternoons at 3pm.

Late 1987

The third series aired on Tuesday to Thursday afternoons at 2pm, with the exception of TVS who aired the series on Monday afternoons at 3pm, but did not air all the episodes, and Channel who aired the series on Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons at 3pm.

1988–94

From the fourth series up until the tenth series, the show aired on Monday to Friday mornings at 9:25am, just after TV-am/GMTV had finished.

1996

The eleventh series aired on Monday to Friday afternoons, but was not networked. Depending on the region, it aired at random times in certain areas.

  • Carlton, Central, Tyne Tees, Westcountry and Yorkshire had shown the series at 1:25pm.
  • Ulster aired the episodes at 1:55pm.
  • Grampian put the shows out at 2:50pm.
  • Scottish aired the episodes at 2:20pm, but only four times a week.
  • Border and Granada aired the episodes at 5:10pm most days.
  • Anglia and Meridian aired the episodes on most days at 12:55pm. Anglia continued to broadcast more episodes, finishing on 24 January 1997.
  • HTV aired over half the episodes at 2.25pm, but did not complete the run.

1998

The twelfth series aired on Tuesday to Thursday afternoons at 1:50pm for the first 32 episodes from 6 January to 19 March. The last 3 episodes aired from 21 to 23 December 1998.

gollark: It's probably just a Markov chain with lots of weird training data.
gollark: I think you just need to put quotes around multiple-word arguments.
gollark: It's some internet meme with what looks like a big worm-type thing (which is apparently just a stomach or something from an animal of some kind), captioned with some text about not feeding it tap water because something something fluoride.
gollark: Have you not seen a garloid before?
gollark: Running at high temperatures does cause throttling and maybe possibly reduces lifespan, though.
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