The show's first host was Canadian singer and record producer
Jackie Rae. Bob Monkhouse was a guest star on the tenth episode, and his autobiography reveals he did so fully intending to demonstrate to the producers that he should replace Rae as host. The plan worked, and Monkhouse took over as host from the 15th show onward. His quick wit, and willingness to revel in the show's chaotic nature led the Monkhouse era to be regarded as the show's golden age; by programme 26, the viewing figures were up by 50%. Because the programme was broadcast live (necessary because contestants took part over the telephone), Monkhouse often chatted to the participants to fill in whilst the crossbow was adjusted after the previous round. In January 1968, the show moved to Sunday afternoons at around 16:40.
Michael Grade has claimed that this resulted from a remark he made to his uncle,
Lew Grade, ATV's deputy chairman and joint managing director, that the cinemas were full on Sunday afternoons because there was nothing to watch on television. However, the Midlands and North weekend franchisee
ABC Television had been showing the programme in this slot since late September 1967, so Grade must share the credit with ABC's programme controller
Brian Tesler. The scheduling change coincided with a move of the production from
ATV Elstree near London, to the
Alpha Studios at
Aston in
Birmingham. Audience levels peaked at 16 million. The studio facilities in Birmingham, situated in a converted cinema, were rather run-down and unreliable (they dated from the start of ATV's franchise in 1956) and simply not well-suited to a fast-moving live show like
The Golden Shot; as such, technical failures were common, but Monkhouse was well able to cover for them through his quick-witted humour. From 1970, the show moved to the new
ATV Centre in Birmingham. During the ITV
Colour Strike of 1970-71, episodes 10 to 21 of series 3 were broadcast in black-and-white. In 1972, Monkhouse was spotted accepting a gift from
Wilkinson Sword representative Bob Brooksby. The following week, a Wilkinson Sword "his and hers" grooming kit was the bronze prize on the show. ATV's production controller Francis Essex suspected
collusion and fired Monkhouse, although publicly it was announced that he "was being released to find opportunities for his abilities elsewhere". The gift was in fact the collectable book
The Shy Photographer and there was no collusion; however Monkhouse's side of the story was not made public until his autobiography
Crying with Laughter was published in 1993. The next host was comedian and entertainer
Norman Vaughan, who was assisted by regular hostess
Anne Aston and for several months "Maid of the Month"
Cherri Gilham. In theory, Norman Vaughan was an ideal host for the show but the pressure of the live show seemed to overwhelm him and he was never as confident a host as Monkhouse. Audience figures began to drop and in late 1973, he was replaced by comedian (and former
footballer)
Charlie Williams along with hostess Wendy King. Williams, of Barbadian ancestry on his father's side and Yorkshire on his mother's side, was rather a novelty on British TV at the time, being a black man with a broad
Yorkshire accent. Despite his cheerfulness and amiability he proved unsuited to handling the pressure of a live TV show where things frequently went wrong. After six months, Williams was also replaced. On 20 March 1974, Francis Essex met with Bob Monkhouse to invite him back onto the show. Monkhouse had no hesitation in accepting the offer, though, his agent negotiated that he would only return if ATV took up an option on the American game show
The Hollywood Squares. This was agreed, and Monkhouse returned as host of the new season of
The Golden Shot on 14 July 1974. It was complete with a new theme song, "Golden Day", written by
Lynsey de Paul and
Barry Blue and sung by
Stephanie de Sykes and Rain. Very soon it was obvious that the show was back at its peak however, the last edition of the show was transmitted on 13 April 1975, with Monkhouse, Vaughan and Williams all hosting it together. ATV felt that the show had a long successful run, and it was retiring various old shows to make way for new ones, including Monkhouse's version of
Hollywood Squares,
Celebrity Squares, which debuted on 20 July 1975.
Bernie, the bolt! The show's catchphrase became
"Bernie, the bolt!" (originally
"Heinz, the bolt!", as Heinz had been brought over from Germany when the show was imported). The instruction was from the host to the armourer that the crossbow bolt should be loaded. Three people acted as "Bernie" on the show; Alan Bailey, Derek Young, and Johnny Baker (a film unit
grip). There was an element of mystery associated with the crossbow loaders, as they were not introduced by name and said nothing.
Revivals The programme was revived in two forms. In 1991, the idea was used for the final round, "The Dart Through the Heart", of the Bob Monkhouse gameshow for newly married couples, ''Bob's Your Uncle''. The winning couple would compete for a jackpot where one partner was blindfolded and the other guided them in trying to shoot a dart into a heart-shaped target. The armourer for this was female, and introduced by the request, "Donna, the dart". On 1 October 2005, as part of their
Gameshow Marathon celebrating 50 years of the
ITV network,
Ant & Dec hosted a one-off revival that was the only edition of the series to be broadcast live. The show was revived again as a one-off on
Vernon Kay's Gameshow Marathon on 28 April 2007. ==Parodies==