examines an antique
cricket bat The programme began as a BBC documentary that aired in 1977, about a
London auction house doing a tour of the
West Country in
England. The pilot roadshow was recorded in
Hereford on 17 May 1977 and presented by contributor
Bruce Parker, a presenter of the news/current affairs programme
Nationwide, and antiques expert
Arthur Negus, who had previously worked on a similarly themed show, called
Going for a Song. The pilot was so successful that it was transmitted. The show has been running since 1979 and the format has remained almost unchanged over the decades but also endeavours to reflect ever evolving changes in the nature of the markets and collecting, by featuring 20th century items including, Barbie Dolls, modern ceramics, Star Wars and other film memorabilia. Negus appeared on
Antiques Roadshow until 1983. In the original BBC programme, various towns or famous places are advertised as venues. The show has since visited a number of other countries (including Canada in 2001 and
Australia in 2005) and has been imitated by other TV production companies around the world. In the United Kingdom, annual children's Christmas specials aired from 1991 until 2006, under the title
Antiques Roadshow: The Next Generation (except for the 1991 edition, which was titled
Antiques Roadshow Going Live) and used a specially reworked version of the regular theme music. However, there was no children's special in 2007; instead an edition was devoted to "antiques of the future" dating from the 1950s to the present day. Since then individually themed specials have been aired, though not every year. A spin-off programme,
20th Century Roadshow, focusing on modern collectibles, aired between April and June 2005. It was hosted by
Alan Titchmarsh. Two other spin-off programmes,
Antiques Roadshow Gems (1991) and
Priceless Antiques Roadshow (2009–10), revisited items from the show's history and provided background information on the making of the show and interviews with the programme's experts. Among the most valuable items ever to appear on the show were an
FA Cup trophy valued at over £1million and two other items each valued at £1million. The first was an original 1990s
maquette of the
Angel of the North sculpture by
Antony Gormley, owned by
Gateshead Council, featured on 16 November 2008 and valued by Philip Mould and the second was a Fabergé ornament, the property of an army unit, valued by Geoffrey Munn, filmed in 2017 and broadcast on 15 April 2018. Glassware expert Andy McConnell valued a collection of chandeliers at seven million pounds (their actual insurance value), noting as he did so that this beat Mould's record; however, these were fixtures of the building in which the show was being filmed (
Bath Assembly Rooms) rather than an item that had been brought in. The two most expensive objects to be actually sold, not merely valued, as a result of being discovered on the show are the 1932 camera found by Marc Allum, which realised over $600,000 (US) in 2013 and the Christofle et Cie Japonisme
jardiniere filmed by
Eric Knowles, which sold for £668,450 (including buyer's premium). A vase purchased at a car boot sale for £1 was identified in a 2008 show as by
Lalique and sold at auction for £32,450. Conversely, many items brought before the experts are without commercial value. Sometimes, an opportunity may be taken to explain the difference between real and fake items but not at the expense of the owner's reputation. Value is not the only criterion for inclusion; items with an
interesting story attached, or of a
provenance relevant to the show's location, will often be featured regardless of value. Items directly related to
The Holocaust may have their stories featured, but are not given valuations. An episode commemorating the end of the
First World War and featuring personal mementoes, included no valuations. All items are appraised, although most appraisals take place off-camera, with only the most promising items (around 50 on an average day) being filmed, of which about 20 appear in the final programme. Some significant items have been acquired by museums after being sold once their owners were appraised of their true value. An example is the watercolour painting ''The Artist's Halt in the Desert'' by
Richard Dadd, discovered and shown by
Peter Nahum in 1986 and purchased the next year by the
British Museum for £100,000. Another such item, later dubbed "Ozzy the Owl", is a
Staffordshire slipware jug, valued by
Henry Sandon on a 1990 show at £20,000 to £30,000, The original theme music was
Bach's
Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 (for several years in a
Moog synthesiser version by
Wendy Carlos), but was changed in the early 1990s to an original piece. This theme was written by
Paul Reade and Tim Gibson and published by Air Edel. In March 2023, for an edition from
Eden Project in Cornwall, the guest was
Camilla, Queen Consort. ==Format==