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Format of the show The show was presented by comedian Jim Davidson and former snooker player, later commentator, John Virgo, who was known for being the butt of many of Davidson's jokes. The show's theme song is The Snooker Song, from the musical The Hunting of the Snark composed by Mike Batt and performed by Captain Sensible. The show was renowned for its light-hearted and comedic tone for many reasons. One of which was the chemistry between Davidson and Virgo, in which Davidson would frequently mock Virgo for his dress-sense or his personality. This made many viewers sympathetic for Virgo. However, Virgo would occasionally come back with wisecracks and insults, one example involved Davidson telling Virgo he would talk very slow because Virgo was a northerner, before Virgo said "Well, Jim, I know you're a southerner, so I'm not going to listen.". Other comic aspects were the occasional contestant who failed to understand many of the questions they were asked, and the light-hearted personality of snooker players, most notably Dennis Taylor. The show's set consisted of a snooker table and three pairs of chairs at the side of the studio, with Virgo standing on the opposite side of the snooker table and the question board which would be revealed in the second round.The show began with Davidson giving a short monologue and then introducing Virgo who would enter the set with a bag of snooker balls which would be used in the first round. All contestants would go home with at least a snooker cue and Big Break trophy, regardless of which round they reached. Red Hot After introducing and chatting to each contestant, they would randomly select a ball from a bag Davidson was holding. The bag contained a red ball, a yellow ball and a blue ball, which Davidson once described as "the thing you get on a colour TV" even though the colours on a TV screen are red, blue and *green* not yellow. Each coloured ball represented a professional snooker player who Virgo would introduce. (Virgo could have randomly chosen a player himself as players had no indication what colour they were. However, he could occasionally be seen holding a card which could possibly have noted which colours the players represented.) After introducing the players, the first round, Red Hot, would be played. It would begin with a player having ten seconds added to a clock, and being asked three questions to gain ten seconds for each question answered correctly. The questions were usually riddles or trick questions, with the second question often asking the contestant which two words sound the same by answering clues. (For example, a number (four), and the opposite of against (for).) After the questions were answered, the snooker players had the rewarded amount of time to pot ten red snooker balls, which Davidson and Virgo described as being very complicated rules. Virgo's deadpan delivery of the line "Pot as many balls as you can" became a series highlight. The contestant whose player potted the fewest balls would be out of the game and play the next round for a consolation prize. Virgo's trick shot This mini-game consisted of Virgo setting up a trick shot for the losing contestant. After demonstrating the shot, Virgo would set the shot up again for the player to attempt, whilst Davidson would show what prize the player could win. Prizes included binoculars, clock radios and champagne. If they completed the shot successfully, they won the prize. If the contestant came close to winning but failed, Davidson or Virgo would often knock the snooker ball into the pocket. However, if the player lost, which was very rare, Davidson would offer an old record by an unpopular artist who the contestant wouldn't recognise. In the first episode of Big Break, Virgo performed the trick shot dressed as Willie Thorne. He would also occasionally mock various other players, including Jimmy White. Out-takes of Virgo's failed attempts at some trick shows were frequently seen on Auntie's Bloomers. Pocket Money In the next round, contestants would have the chance of winning money. Each snooker player had to play by traditional snooker rules for ninety seconds with the snooker balls being worth amounts of money. Each red ball was worth 10 when potted, with each coloured ball being worth 10 times the regulation point value of that ball, up to 70 for the black ball. In addition, each pocket had a designated colour; tf the player potted a coloured ball in the same colour pocket, the amount would be doubled for that pot. If the player missed, the contestant would have to answer a question on a specific subject, depending on what ball was missed. Categories included Pot Luck (Red), Past (Yellow), Music (Green), Places (Brown), People (Blue), Sports (Pink) and Screen (Black). If answered correctly, Davidson would shout "Play!" so the snooker player would continue. If the contestant answered incorrectly, Davidson would have to ask another question. If the player continually answered wrong, Davidson would either give the player clues, over-articulate the right answer or, if he got lost with the questions, give up and shout "Play!" anyway. Each player won the amount of money the snooker player gained, and the contestant with the most money went on to play the final round. Make or Break In Make Or Break, contestants could win a variety of prizes. Contestants would be given ninety seconds to answer five general knowledge questions asked by Davidson. Each correct answer allowed the snooker player to remove one red ball from the table. After the questions were answered, the remaining time was given to the snooker player to clear the snooker table with six reds minus one for each question answered correctly on the table. One red ball and each coloured ball represented a prize, ranging from champagne, short breaks, televisions, computers and games consoles. The black ball represented the Mystery Star Prize, often a holiday, though on occasion a booby prize. The snooker player would play by traditional rules to clear the table, with the support of having red balls removed. The player had the remaining time, left from when the contestant answered his or her questions, to pot all the balls. The first red potted won the player the first prize. However, the contestant could not win any more prizes until the player cleared all the reds from the table, and began potting the yellow ball up to the black ball. At the end of the programme, there is usually another familiar catchphrase - Davidson says "Say good night, JV.", to which Virgo replies, "Good night, JV." Celebrity Special A little seen episode of the show was the 1992 'Celebrity Special' where three sitcom favourites teamed up with some of the regulars, Su Pollard with Tony Knowles, Rob Bedding with Tony Meo and Gorden Kaye who doubled up with Tony Drago. Pollard was eliminated after the first round but not without controversy as Bedding (who had been drinking heavily with JV in the bar beforehand) gave her a playful slap to the backside as she exited, whilst shouting "Ho-de-ho, fancy potting the pink love?". The TV funnywoman erupted with rage and confronted Bedding wielding a cue extension. Kaye defused the situation with his trademark catchphrase from 'Allo Allo', 'You stupid woman!' During the Trick Shot round Bedding was challenged by Virgo to a particularly difficult shot involving the cue ball, the black, two reds and a goose. Bedding failed miserably killing the goose and ripping the baize fully five feet! The show ended early as Bedding was escorted off stage to 'boos' and 'cat-calls' from the studio audience. Transmissions Series Series Start date End date Episodes 1 30 April 1991 16 July 1991 12 2 11 January 1992 4 April 1992 13 3 12 September 1992 19 December 1992 15 4 4 September 1993 26 March 1994 27 5 9 September 1994 28 October 1994 8 6 7 January 1995 20 May 1995 19 7 2 September 1995 28 October 1995 7 8 2 March 1996 19 July 1996 20 9 3 January 1997 14 July 1997 20 10 9 January 1998 18 July 1998 19 11 13 February 1999 26 June 1999 15 12 4 December 1999 31 March 2000 22 13 28 April 2001 18 August 2001 12 14 22 June 2002 9 October 2002 8 Christmas Shows Date 24 December 1991 26 December 1992 27 December 1993 27 December 1994 28 December 1995 27 December 1996 26 December 1997 28 December 1998 Trick shot specials Date 22 August 1995 19 October 1995 3 August 1996 29 August 1996 27 June 1997 4 July 1997 23 December 1999 Stars of the future Date 3 July 1999 10 July 1999 17 July 1999 24 July 1999 11 December 1999 Snooker scrapbook Date 3 January 2000 External links Big Break at UKgameshows.com Categories: BBC television game shows | Snooker in the United Kingdom | British sports television programmes | Snooker films and television | 1991 in British television | 1991 television series debuts | 2002 television series endings | 1990s British television series | 2000s British television seriesHidden categories: Articles lacking sources from April 2009 | All articles lacking sources

Big Break - china Slurry Pump - slurry pump rubber liners

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