British television talent show since 2007 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Britain's Got Talent is a British television show on ITV and part of the Got Talent series. The programme is presented by Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly (colloquially known as Ant & Dec).
Britain's Got Talent | |
---|---|
Genre | Reality, talent show, entertainment |
Created by | Simon Cowell & Syco TV |
Presented by | Anthony McPartlin Declan Donnelly |
Starring | Marcus Bentley |
Judges | Simon Cowell Amanda Holden Piers Morgan David Hasselhoff Michael McIntyre Alesha Dixon David Walliams Ashley Banjo Bruno Tonioli |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 16 |
Production | |
Producer | SYCO TV in association with talkbackTHAMES |
Running time | 60–90 minutes (including tv adverts) |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 9 June 2007 – present |
There is one series each year; the most recent being the thirteenth series. The four judges of the current series are: Simon Cowell, Alesha Dixon, Amanda Holden and Bruno Tonioli.[1]
The winner of the programme performs in front of the king at The Royal Variety Show and receives a cash prize of £250,000.
The show started in 2007 with the original line-up Ant & Dec hosting and Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden and Piers Morgan as judges. The same format was kept until the end of Series 4, when Piers Morgan announced his departure from the show. In series 5, David Hasselhoff and Michael Macintyre joined the panel, but they both only stayed for one series. In 2012, they were replaced by David Walliams and Alesha Dixon. The current panel is made up of Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden, Alesha Dixon and Bruno Tonioli. Stephen Mulhern had been presenting the spin-off show Britain's Got More Talent from series 1 to Series 13, In March 2020, It was announced that Britain's Got More Talent was going to be axed.[2] The show has also featured different guest judges (judges who were not permanent and most likely filled in for an ill or late judge). In 2020, a judge from Dancing on Ice Ashley Banjo replaced Simon Cowell after he had a long injury because Cowell break the part of his back after a electric bike fall, Bruno Tonioli tookover Walliams.
Series | Host | Main Judge | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |||
1 | Ant McPartlin | Declan Donnelly | Simon Cowell | Amanda Holden | Piers Morgan | — |
2 | ||||||
3 | ||||||
4 | ||||||
5 | Michael McIntyre | David Hasselhoff | ||||
6 | Alesha Dixon | David Walliams | ||||
7 | ||||||
8 | ||||||
9 | ||||||
10 | ||||||
11 | ||||||
12 | ||||||
13 | ||||||
14 | ||||||
15 | ||||||
16 | Bruno Tonioli | |||||
17 |
Series | Start | Finish | Winner's prize | Winner | Second place | Third place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 9 June 2007 | 17 June 2007 | £100,000 | Paul Potts[3][4] | Connie Talbot2[4] | N/A2 |
2 | 12 April 2008 | 31 May 2008 | George Sampson[5][6][7] | Signature[7] | Andrew Johnston[7] | |
3 | 11 April 2009 | 30 May 2009 | Diversity[8][9] | Susan Boyle[10][11] | Julian Smith[8] | |
4 | 17 April 2010 | 5 June 2010 | Spelbound[12][13] | Twist and Pulse[12][13] | Kieran Gaffney[12][13] | |
5 | 16 April 2011 | 4 June 2011 | Jai McDowall[14][15] | Ronan Parke[15][16] | New Bounce[17] | |
6 | 24 March 2012 | 12 May 2012 | £500,000 | Ashleigh and Pudsey[18][19] | Jonathan and Charlotte[19][20] | Only Boys Aloud[19][20] |
7 | 13 April 2013 | 8 June 2013 | £250,000 | Attraction[21][22] | Jack Carroll[22][23] | Richard & Adam[22] |
8 | 12 April 2014 | 7 June 2014 | Collabro[24][25] | Lucy Kay[24][25] | Bars & Melody[24][25] | |
9 | 11 April 2015 | 31 May 2015 | Jules O'Dwyer & Matisse[26][27] | Jamie Raven[27] | Côr Glanaethwy[27] | |
10 | 9 April 2016 | 28 May 2016 | Richard Jones[28][29] | Wayne Woodward[29] | Boogie Storm[29] | |
11 | 15 April 2017 | 3 June 2017 | Tokio Myers[30][31] | Issy Simpson[31] | Daliso Chaponda[31] | |
12 | 14 April 2018 | 3 June 2018 | Lost Voice Guy[32][33] | Robert White[32][33] | Donchez Dacres[32][33] | |
13 | 6 April 2019 | 2 June 2019 | Colin Thackery[34][35] | X / Marc Spelmann[35] | Ben Hart[35] | |
14 | 11 April 2020 | 10 October 2020 | Jon Courtenay[36][37] | Sign Along with Us[36][37] | Steve Royle[36][37] | |
15 | 16 April 2022 | 5 June 2022 | Axel Blake[38][39] | Jamie Leahey[38][39] | Tom Ball[38][39] | |
16 | 15 April 2023 | 4 June 2023 | Viggo Venn[40][41] | Lillianna Clifton[42] | Cillian O’Connor[42] | |
17 | 20 April 2024 | 2 June 2024 | Sydnie Christmas[43][44] | Jack Rhodes[43][45] | Abigail & Afronitaaa[43][46] |
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