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Changing Rooms

 
Wikipedia: Changing Rooms
Changing Rooms
Format Lifestyle, DIY
Developed by Endemol
Starring Carol Smillie
Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen
Linda Barker
Anna Ryder Richardson
"Handy" Andy Kane
Graham Wynne and others
Country of origin  United Kingdom
Language(s) English
No. of series 15
No. of episodes 130+
Production
Running time 0:30 (per episode)
Broadcast
Original channel BBC Two then BBC One
Picture format 4:3, 16:9
First shown in  United Kingdom
Original run 1996 – 22 November 2004
Chronology
Related shows DIY SOS
60 Minute Makeover

Changing Rooms was a Do It Yourself Home Improvement show broadcast in the United Kingdom on the BBC between the years 1996 and 2004. The show was one of a number of home improvement and lifestyle shows popular in the late 1990s and early noughties. The show was later franchised, generally under the same name, for the local TV markets in the United States, New Zealand and Australia.

Contents

Format

The object of the show was for couples to swap houses with friends or neighbours with each pair doing up one room in each other's homes. This would lead up to a finale with both couples seeing their rooms, and meeting up again - almost invariably on still friendly terms. With the show including some top designers, their ideas could be a little over the top, which led to a few tears and tantrums. Changing Rooms was originally hosted by Carol Smillie, and assisting with the remodeling was Cockney carpenter, "Handy" Andy Kane.

History

The show's first episode was broadcast in 1996, and the final edition was broadcast on 22 November 2004 after a successful 8 year, 15 series run. The cancellation was announced on 27 August 2004. Former designer on the show Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen took over presenting the show from Carol Smillie in 2003 for series 14 and 15. Handy Andy has gone on to host his own DIY shows. The designers on the show throughout its run included:

Final episode

In November 2004, a special episode was taped in Boscastle, Cornwall for Christmas broadcast. Designers Anna Ryder Richardson, Graham Wynne, and Gordon Whistance took on the task of restoring the decor of homes and businesses damaged in the floods of August that year. The episode went out on 28 December 2004.

Disasters

On one episode, a Linda Barker room was being built to accommodate a large collection of teapots. Overnight, the shelves collapsed, demolishing the valuable collection.

The show gained popularity through the sometimes unusual designs of Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen and the reactions of some participants who disliked their newly designed rooms.

On another famous episode, Anna Ryder Richardson designed a room for a couple where she placed framed erotic French undergarments around the room. Upon entering the room, the woman screamed aloud, and shouted, "why would I want this shit in my room?! I've got children!" and burst into tears. Richardson appropriately blushed brightly.

One episode, after a room had been designed, it had to be redesigned because the owner of the room missed her old fireplace.

Overseas editions

The show has been franchised and variations of it appear in several other countries, sometimes with a different name - such as Trading Spaces in United States. The original Changing Rooms is also broadcast overseas, for example, on BBC America and featured in various US shows, Sex And The City episode Lights, Camera, Relationship being one example.

A New Zealand edition of the show was produced for several years, also called Changing Rooms. The show was identically formatted to the British series, with host Kerry Smith, "Handy" Andy Dye, and regular designers including Donald Grant Sutherland, Neil McLachlan, and Sally Ridge. A handful of international shows were produced, each featuring one couple in New Zealand and one in the United Kingdom.

Australia's Nine Network also produced a local version hosted by Suzie Wilks who was ably assisted by Peter Everett, James Lindsay, Catherine Morton and Tim Janenko-Panaeff. The show is now defunct.

MDF

Medium-density fibreboard was a material used frequently on the show. It would be untrue to say it gained cult status as a result of this, but it did become famous enough that it helped the Changing Rooms team make an appearance on British charity appeal Children in Need. During the show, which is essentially a televised variety show, the team performed "YMDF", a parody of YMCA.

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Changing Rooms" Read more