Bridge on TV: Celebrity Grand Slam

Sky Arts 2 and Sky Arts HD aired a brand new programme on bridge this April, featuring eight celebrity players. Bridge: Celebrity Grand Slam shows a side of bridge away from tournaments, complex bidding systems and double squeezes. This is social bridge, as played by hundreds of thousands of people in the UK, for fun and the love of the game.

All eight programmes will be repeated on Sky Arts in a single four-hour session on Monday 4 May, from 2 pm to 6 pm. From 14 May the programmes will be shown again, as they were the first time round, one episode per day.

Celebrities (L to R): Susan Hampshire, Mike Gatting, Sue Lawley, Pattie Boyd, Clive Anderson, David Rowntree, Val McDermid, James Mates and Kay Burley

Photo © Sky Arts

The eight players are:

Sue Lawley, radio and TV presenter, host of Desert Island Discs for 18 years.
Mike Gatting, former cricket captain of England and Middlesex.
Susan Hampshire, actress, most famous for her role as Fleur in The Forsyte Saga.
David Rowntree, drummer with pop group Blur.
James Mates, ITN journalist and newscaster.
Pattie Boyd, photographer and writer, former wife of George Harrison and Eric Clapton
Val McDermid, best-selling author of crime thrillers, including Wire in the Blood.
Kay Burley, Sky news anchor. Kay is a bridge novice who only started to learn to play Bridge three and a half weeks before the series was filmed.

The programmes are compered by Clive Anderson, who played bridge at university. He is assisted by bridge experts and England internationals Glyn Liggins and Andrew "Tosh" McIntosh who chose the hands. Andrew also taught Kay to play.

The Format
There are eight half hour programmes in the series. In each episode the celebrities play four hands with a new partner. Then they swap. Over the course of the series everyone ends up partnering everyone else with a special twist in the 8th and final show. The same deals are played at both tables, greatly reducing the element of luck, and aggregate scoring is used. Tosh and Glyn are in the control room with Clive Anderson, commenting on the bidding and play. Once the bidding is over they are joined by dummy to comment on the play of the hand.

The players competed for a £20,000 charity pot. The winner will donate £10,000 to his or her chosen charity, the runner-up £3,000, down to eighth place, who will donate £250. The real winners will be eight charities!

The players use a simple Acol system - weak no-trump, strong 2s, Stayman and Blackwood.

The programmes were filmed over two days at St Michael's Manor, a hotel in Hertfordshire. The series was the brainchild of bridge playing TV producer Hugh Dehn and was shot in High Definition TV using a multitude of cameras, including eight overhead cameras. "We are delighted to be bringing Bridge back to TV" comments James Hunt, acting channel manager. "We recognise the popularity of bridge across the UK and felt our programming should reflect that popularity, whilst aiming to bring an entirely new audience to the game."

Bridge: Celebrity Grand Slam will be shown on Sky Arts 2 (channel 257) at 7:00 PM every evening from April 20, ending with the grand final on Sunday 26 April. Sky Arts 2 is also available in Virgin Media's XL pack on channel 285

For updated information, please visit www.skyarts.co.uk/skyarts/bridge-celebrity-grand-slam/

And here is a hand from the series that you might like to consider. And another here.