Who Do You Think You Are? (UK TV series)
Who Do You Think You Are? | |
---|---|
Genre | Documentary |
Narrated by |
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Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of episodes | 110 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) | Wall to Wall |
Release | |
Original network | |
Original release | 12 October 2004 – present |
External links | |
Website |
Who Do You Think You Are? is a British genealogy documentary series that has aired on the BBC since 2004. In each episode, a celebrity traces their family tree. It is made by the production company Wall to Wall. Twelve series have been broadcast, with the twelfth airing from August to October 2015.[1] The show has regularly attracted an audience of more than 6 million viewers.[2] More than ten international adaptations of the show have been produced.
Episodes
Series one and two were broadcast on BBC Two, and the first was the channel's highest-rating programme of 2004. This led to episodes being shown on BBC One from the third series onwards. The current narrator is Cherie Lunghi. Mark Strong took over from David Morrissey after the first series, which was nominated for "Best Factual Series or Strand" in the 2005 BAFTAs.
In the first series, the last ten minutes of each episode featured presenter Adrian Chiles and genealogical researcher Nick Barratt giving tips on tracing a family tree. In 2007, a special episode was broadcast in conjunction with the BBC's "Family Wanted" campaign featuring Nicky Campbell, who was adopted a few days after he was born.[3]
The theme tune was composed by Mark Sayer-Wade, who also provided the background music for earlier episodes. The music for later episodes is provided by Julian Hamlin and Edmund Jolliffe.
The episode featuring Boris Johnson was filmed and set to air in late 2007, but was pulled because at the time of transmission, Johnson was getting ready to run in the London Mayoral election, so the episode was moved to the following series in 2008.[4]
Series 1 (2004)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Bill Oddie | 12 October 2004 | 5.79 |
Oddie, brought up by his father and paternal grandmother, goes back to the Birmingham area to learn more about his mother's life and her struggles with manic depression and her mother-in-law. Then he learns more about his grandmother's life, her husband and family in Rochdale, Lancashire. He ends his journey learning more about his Oddie ancestors in Grindleton, Lancashire. | |||
2 | Amanda Redman | 19 October 2004 | 4.63 |
3 | Sue Johnston | 26 October 2004 | 4.25 |
4 | Jeremy Clarkson | 2 November 2004 | 4.95 |
5 | Ian Hislop | 9 November 2004 | 4.96 |
Hislop, who was 12 when his father died, never met his grandfathers. Hislop traces his family history by traveling to his late mother's native Jersey, where for five years of her childhood, the island was occupied by Nazi Germany. He travels to Clary, France, where his paternal grandfather fought with the 9th Highland Light Infantry against the Hindenburg Line. He then goes to South Africa, where his maternal grandfather fought with the Royal Lancaster Regiment in the Battle of Spion Kop during the Boer War. While in South Africa, he discovered his father's maternal great great grandfather had gone to South Africa in 1795 with the 72nd Regiment, Duke of Albany's Own Highlanders in an expedition to capture Cape Town from the Dutch. | |||
6 | Moira Stuart | 16 November 2004 | 5.35 |
7 | David Baddiel | 23 November 2004 | 4.60 |
8 | Lesley Garrett | 30 November 2004 | 4.41 |
9 | Meera Syal | 7 December 2004 | 3.97 |
10 | Vic Reeves | 14 December 2004 | 4.46 |
Series 2 (2006)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jeremy Paxman | 11 January 2006 | 5.48 |
2 | Sheila Hancock | 18 January 2006 | 5.43 |
3 | Stephen Fry | 25 January 2006 | 5.86 |
4 | Julian Clary | 1 February 2006 | 5.94 |
5 | Jane Horrocks | 8 February 2006 | 5.64 |
6 | Gurinder Chadha | 15 February 2006 | 3.96 |
Series 3 (2006)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Barbara Windsor | 6 September 2006 | 6.40 |
2 | Robert Lindsay | 13 September 2006 | 5.95 |
3 | Colin Jackson | 20 September 2006 | 5.19 |
4 | David Tennant | 27 September 2006 | 5.75 |
Tennant traces his paternal roots to the Isle of Mull, and is surprised to find his family came not from the lowlands but the Scottish Highlands. He discovers his maternal grandfather was a star player for Derry City F.C. in the 1930s, and expresses concern when he finds that other relatives were members of the Orange Order. He is disturbed to learn that his great-grandfather played a key role in suppressing Catholics in Derry, Northern Ireland, and that Catholic cousins came under fire on Bloody Sunday. | |||
5 | David Dickinson | 4 October 2006 | 5.80 |
6 | Nigella Lawson | 11 October 2006 | 6.15 |
She traced her ancestors to Ashkenazi Jews who originate from eastern Europe and Germany, leaving Lawson surprised not to have Iberian-Sephardi ancestry in the family as she had believed.[6] She also uncovered that her maternal great-great-great grandfather, Coenraad Sammes (later Coleman Joseph), had fled to England from Amsterdam in 1830 to escape a prison sentence following a conviction for theft. | |||
7 | Jeremy Irons | 18 October 2006 | 5.82 |
8 | Julia Sawalha | 25 October 2006 | 5.54 |
Adoption special (2007)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Nicky Campbell | 11 July 2007 | 4.32 |
Campbell traces his adoptive family's roots in Scotland and Australia. |
Series 4 (2007)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Natasha Kaplinsky | 6 September 2007 | 6.78 |
Kaplinsky follows her paternal line to Slonim in Belarus and is shown official documentation relating to her cousin's family. This includes the death of family members during the "liquidation" – massacre – of the Slonim Jewish ghetto by the Nazis and another's escape to the partisans and eventual immigration to Australia. Her maternal line included an apothecary to King George III. | |||
2 | John Hurt | 13 September 2007 | 5.80 |
3 | Griff Rhys Jones | 20 September 2007 | 5.75 |
4 | Carol Vorderman | 27 September 2007 | 6.53 |
Vorderman discovers that her father was an active member of the Dutch resistance during the Nazi occupation. He died while the programme was being filmed. Her great-grandfather Adolphe Vorderman played a key role in the discovery of vitamins. | |||
5 | Alistair McGowan | 4 October 2007 | 6.17 |
6 | Graham Norton | 11 October 2007 | 6.88 |
It was discovered that Norton's Walker ancestors were originally planters from Wentworth, South Yorkshire, who were sent over from England in the 17th century to take over Irish land. Some members of his family fought for the British monarchy during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and took part in the Carnew massacre. Another member of his family was later killed in battle by the United Irishmen. | |||
7 | Matthew Pinsent | 18 November 2007 | 6.57 |
Series 5 (2008)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Patsy Kensit | 13 August 2008 | 7.10 |
2 | Boris Johnson | 20 August 2008 | 7.04 |
3 | Jerry Springer | 27 August 2008 | 6.71 |
Springer, who was born in England but emigrated to the United States at a young age, travels to the UK to find out how his parents were allowed in as refugees from Nazi Germany in August 1939. He discovered that someone in England paid ₤50 as a guarantor to sponsor his parents, but the rest of the family was left behind. He travels to his great-grandfather's hometown of Neustettin (now Szczecinek, Poland), where his great grandfather, Abraham Springer, successfully appealed for outside help after anti-Semitic politician Ernst Henrici stirred up violence in 1881. Springer then travels to Łódź, where his maternal grandmother, Marie Kallmann, was deported in 1941. She was sent to the Chełmno extermination camp in May 1942. Springer's paternal grandmother, Selma Springer, died in Theresienstadt concentration camp. | |||
4 | Esther Rantzen | 3 September 2008 | 6.44 |
5 | Ainsley Harriott | 10 September 2008 | 6.70 |
6 | David Suchet | 17 September 2008 | 6.79 |
Suchet, who has a love of water, discovers that his maternal great-great-great-grandfather was captain of a brig which foundered off the east coast of England. His paternal ancestors were Russian Jews, and he traces their flight from Russia to Turkey, Prussia, South Africa, and then the United Kingdom. He learns about his grandfather and great-grandfather, both of whom were noted photographers. | |||
7 | Jodie Kidd | 24 September 2008 | 5.87 |
8 | Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen | 29 September 2008 | 4.72 |
Series 6 (2009)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Rory Bremner | 2 February 2009 | 6.44 |
2 | Fiona Bruce | 9 February 2009 | 5.86 |
3 | Rick Stein | 16 February 2009 | 5.64 |
4 | Zoë Wanamaker | 23 February 2009 | 5.82 |
5 | Kevin Whately | 2 March 2009 | 5.99 |
6 | Davina McCall | 15 July 2009 | 6.92 |
7 | Chris Moyles | 22 July 2009 | 5.23 |
8 | Kate Humble | 29 July 2009 | 5.19 |
9 | David Mitchell | 5 August 2009 | 4.55 |
10 | Kim Cattrall | 12 August 2009 | 6.27 |
Cattrall researches her maternal grandfather, George Baugh's mysterious disappearance in 1938. She discovers that he became a bigamist in 1939 and had four more children. The episode reveals that Baugh's new family immigrated to Australia in 1961, and had lived there until Baugh's death in 1974. | |||
11 | Martin Freeman | 19 August 2009 | 6.48 |
Freeman researches his paternal grandfather, whom he learns died while serving as a medic during the Battle of Dunkirk in World War II. He discovers that his great-grandfather was blind, married three times, and meets a cousin he never knew he had. He also discovers how syphilis (a common disease at the time) ravaged his family in the late 1800s and early 1900s. |
Series 7 (2010)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Bruce Forsyth[7] | 19 July 2010 | 7.22 |
2 | Rupert Everett | 26 July 2010 | 5.97 |
3 | Dervla Kirwan | 2 August 2010 | 5.58 |
Growing up, Kirwan knew she was related to Irish national hero Michael Collins but did not know how. She discovers he was her great-great uncle: his sister, Margaret Collins O'Driscoll, was the mother of Kirwan's maternal grandfather. Kirwans seeks to find how her grandfather, Finian O'Driscoll, was involved in the IRA. She travels to Clonakilty, County Cork, birthplace of Michael Collins. On her father's side, she finds out her great grandfather, Henry Kahn, was a Polish Jew from the Russian Empire who broke with his community to marry an Irish Catholic girl in the late 19th century. Kirwan was surprised to discover they were married in the Protestant Church of Ireland, after the Catholic church refused to marry them. | |||
4 | Monty Don | 9 August 2010 | 5.95 |
5 | Rupert Penry-Jones | 16 August 2010 | 5.68 |
Penry-Jones travels to India and confirms the family rumour that they have Indian ancestry. His great-great-great grandfather Thomas Johnstone was a sergeant major in the Royal Madras Fusiliers, and was part of the British attempts to quell the Indian Rebellion of 1857. He discovers Johnstone's wife, Louisa Collum, was of Anglo-Indian heritage. | |||
6 | Alexander Armstrong | 23 August 2010 | 6.46 |
Armstrong traces his mother's side of the family, who are descended from Irish landed gentry. The McCauslands were originally seated in Drenagh, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland and trace their ancestry through the Rouse-Boughton family, to Edward Somerset, 2nd Marquess of Worcester, a descendant of William the Conqueror via Edward III and the Beauforts, Dukes of Somerset. | |||
7 | Jason Donovan | 30 August 2010 | 5.55 |
8 | Hugh Quarshie | 6 September 2010 | 5.42 |
9 | Alan Cumming | 13 September 2010 | 5.15 |
Cumming traces the life of his maternal grandfather, whom the family was told died while cleaning his pistol while serving as a British police officer in Malaya. He learns about his grandfather's terrifying experiences as a war hero during the Battle of Dunkirk in World War II, his battle wounds received while helping stave off the Empire of Japan's invasion of India during the Burma Campaign, and his psychological problems which led to his death while playing Russian roulette in Malaya. |
Series 8 (2011)
# | Celebrity[8][9] | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | June Brown | 10 August 2011 | 6.62 |
2 | J.K. Rowling | 17 August 2011 | 7.00 |
Rowling researches her mother's paternal great-grandfather, Louis Volant, a French head waiter who previously worked at Savoy Hotel in the 1920s. Volant had won the Croix de Guerre for his bravery during the First World War. She also learns about Volant's mother, Salomée Schuch, an unmarried maid working in Paris at the time of his birth. At age 17, she had fled her hometown of Brumath in Alsace – which became part of the German Empire during the Franco-Prussian War – to become a naturalised French citizen when she eventually married Louis' father. | |||
3 | Sebastian Coe | 24 August 2011 | 5.45 |
4 | Larry Lamb[10] | 31 August 2011 | 5.45 |
5 | Emilia Fox | 7 September 2011 | 6.06 |
6 | Alan Carr | 14 September 2011 | 5.49 |
7 | Robin Gibb | 21 September 2011 | 4.37 |
8 | Richard Madeley[11] | 28 September 2011 | 5.05 |
9 | Len Goodman | 5 October 2011 | 5.03 |
10 | Tracey Emin | 12 October 2011 | Unknown (under 4.21) |
Series 9 (2012)
# | Celebrity[12] | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Samantha Womack | 15 August 2012 | 5.30 |
2 | Gregg Wallace | 22 August 2012 | 5.46 |
3 | Patrick Stewart | 29 August 2012 | 4.58 |
4 | Annie Lennox | 5 September 2012 | 4.86 |
5 | Hugh Dennis | 12 September 2012 | 4.87 |
6 | Alex Kingston | 19 September 2012 | 4.97 |
7 | William Roache | 26 September 2012 | 4.30 |
8 | Celia Imrie | 10 October 2012 | 4.89 |
9 | John Barnes | 17 October 2012 | Unknown (under 4.10) |
10 | John Bishop | 6 December 2012 | 5.53 |
Series 10 (2013)
# | Celebrity[13] | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Una Stubbs | 24 July 2013 | 5.24 |
2 | Nigel Havers | 31 July 2013 | 5.39 |
3 | Minnie Driver | 7 August 2013 | 4.95 |
4 | Lesley Sharp | 14 August 2013 | 4.52 |
5 | Gary Lineker | 21 August 2013 | 5.37 |
6 | Nick Hewer | 28 August 2013 | 4.52 |
7 | Nitin Ganatra | 4 September 2013 | 4.31 |
8 | Sarah Millican | 11 September 2013 | 4.57 |
9 | Marianne Faithfull | 18 September 2013 | 3.78 |
10 | John Simpson | 25 September 2013 | 3.99 |
Series 11 (2014)
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
— | Who Do They Think They Are?: 10 Years, 100 Shows[14] | 6 August 2014 | Unknown (under 3.34) |
1 | Julie Walters[15] | 7 August 2014 | 5.23 |
Walters traces her Irish great-grandfather, Anthony Clarke. | |||
2 | Brian Blessed | 14 August 2014 | 5.31 |
Blessed traces his great-great-great-grandfather, Barnabus Blessed, a bookbinder, and discovers that after moving from London to Portsmouth, his four children were left orphans. Blessed's great-great-grandfather, Jabez Blessed, became a "real life Oliver Twist".[16] | |||
3 | Tamzin Outhwaite | 21 August 2014 | 4.94 |
4 | Brendan O'Carroll | 28 August 2014 | 6.06 |
5 | Sheridan Smith | 4 September 2014 | 4.74 |
6 | Mary Berry | 11 September 2014 | 4.75 |
7 | Martin Shaw | 18 September 2014 | 5.39 |
8 | Reggie Yates | 25 September 2014 | 4.18 |
9 | Billy Connolly | 2 October 2014 | 5.74 |
10 | Twiggy | 9 October 2014 | 5.33 |
Series 12 (2015)
On 23 June 2015, the BBC confirmed the lineup for Series 12, which began on 13 August 2015.[17][18]
# | Celebrity | Original air date[19] | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Paul Hollywood | 13 August 2015 | 5.08 |
2 | Jane Seymour | 20 August 2015 | 5.14 |
Seymour traces the lives of two of her Polish great aunts during World War II. | |||
3 | Derek Jacobi | 27 August 2015 | 4.68 |
Jacobi, a descendant of Huguenots who fled persecution by Catholics, travels to France, where he discovers the horrors his Protestant ancestors faced during persecution. His sixth great-grandfather Joseph de la Plaigne, a prominent financier of Louis XIV, lived as a covert Protestant following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. He was uncovered and imprisoned by the king in the Château de Loches in 1701. He apparently bribed his way out of prison the next year and fled to London. In 1708, two years before his death, the 70-year-old de la Plaigne married fellow Huguenot Salomé de la Bastide, sister of Colonel Armand de la Bastide, and 45 years his junior. In 1709 they had a son, Guillaume, who was baptised with William Cavendish, 2nd Duke of Devonshire as his godfather. Guillaume anglicised his name to William Laplain and was chaplain to the Dukes of Devonshire. | |||
4 | Jerry Hall | 3 September 2015 | 4.38 |
5 | Gareth Malone | 10 September 2015 | 4.56 |
6 | Anne Reid | 17 September 2015 | 4.70 |
7 | Frank Gardner | 24 September 2015 | 4.41 |
8 | Anita Rani | 1 October 2015 | 4.38 |
9 | Mark Gatiss | 8 October 2015 | Unknown (under 3.80) |
10 | Frances de la Tour | 22 October 2015 | 3.83 |
Actress Frances de la Tour discovers aristocratic lineage. Her great-great-great-great grandmother Maria Elizabeth Adderley, stepdaughter of Robert Hobart, 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire, married captain Alan Hyde Gardner in 1796. They divorced in 1805 after he discovered her affair with Henry Jadis, nephew of the Earl of Strathmore. Lady Gardner had an illegitimate child with Jadis, Henry Fenton Gardner (born in 1802), who was declared illegitimate by the House of Lords in 1825 following the Gardner Peerage Case, in which Henry unsuccessfully attempted to prove he was the rightful heir to the Gardner peerage. De la Tour visits Doddington Hall and Seaton Delaval Hall to find out more about Jadis' mother, the Hon. Sophia Ann (née Delaval), daughter of John Delaval, 1st Baron Delaval. De la Tour discovers Sophia's sad story of becoming pregnant before marriage with Henry, and rushing to marry a man beneath her status, John Jadis. After suffering abuse from a drunken Jadis, Sophia divorced him but became ostracised socially. She developed an addiction to laudanum and died at 38. |
Series 13 (2016)
On 13 July, the line-up for the 13th series was confirmed. The series started on 24 November 2016. The ten personalities announced are: Danny Dyer, Cheryl, Amanda Holden, Sir Ian McKellen, Sophie Raworth, Ricky Tomlinson, Warwick Davis, Greg Davies, Liz Bonnin and Sunetra Sarker.[20]
# | Celebrity | Original air date | Viewers (millions)[5] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Danny Dyer | 24 November 2016 | TBA |
2 | Amanda Holden | 1 December 2016 | TBA |
3 | Liz Bonnin | 8 December 2016 | TBA |
4 | Cheryl | 15 December 2016 | TBA |
Awards and nominations
The show was nominated for the 2010 BAFTA Television Award for Best Factual Series.[21]
Media releases
Series 1 – 11 of Who Do You Think You Are? are available on DVD in the UK (Region 2).
In October 2007, BBC Magazines began issuing Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine, a monthly publication that includes material from the TV series.
The series 1–4 box set of Who Do You Think You Are? is available, distributed by Acorn Media UK.[22]
Complete Series | Release dates | DVD Extras and Bonus Features |
Number Of Discs | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
The Complete First Series |
TBA | 5 March 2007 | 17 September 2008 | Unseen Footage, First Steps to Researching Your Family | 3 |
The Complete Second Series |
TBA | 4 September 2007 | 12 November 2008 | Unseen Footage | 2 |
The Complete Third Series |
TBA | 12 January 2009 | 18 March 2009 | None | 3 |
The Complete Fourth Series |
TBA | 3 August 2009 | 20 May 2009 | Special episode in conjunction with the BBC's "Family Wanted" campaign featuring Nicky Campbell, who was adopted a few days after he was born. | 3 |
The Complete Fifth Series |
TBA | 1 February 2010 | TBA | Three behind-the-scenes features | 3 |
The Complete Sixth Series |
TBA | 6 September 2010 | TBA | None | 4 |
The Complete Seventh Series |
TBA | 7 March 2011 | TBA | None | 3 |
The Complete Eighth Series |
TBA | 20 August 2012[23] | TBA | None | 3 |
The Complete Ninth Series |
TBA | 5 August 2013[24] | TBA | None | 3 |
The Complete Tenth Series |
TBA | 22 September 2014[25] | TBA | None | 3 |
The Complete Eleventh Series |
TBA | 10 November 2014[26] | TBA | Who Do They Think They Are?: 10 Years, 100 Shows | 3 |
Other countries
The format of the series has proved popular around the world and the BBC has licensed it to many foreign television companies, who have produced their own individual versions:
TVP1 has aired a Polish version, called Sekrety rodzinne, which was broadcast from November 2006 to March 2007.
In September 2007, a first series of Canadian version, consisting of 13 episodes, aired on CBC Television.
An Australian version aired on SBS in January 2008, after six episodes of the BBC version had been shown; the BBC programmes were those featuring Stephen Fry, Bill Oddie, Julia Sawalha, Jeremy Clarkson, Gurinder Chadha, and Nigella Lawson.
In 2008, ARD's Das Erste aired the German version, called Das Geheimnis meiner Familie ("The secret of my family"). They aired four episodes featuring Marie-Luise Marjan, Armin Rohde, Christine Neubauer and Peter Maffay.
Ireland's national broadcaster RTÉ has aired two series of Irish version of Who Do You Think You Are? in autumn 2008 and autumn 2009. The Irish version has included internationally recognised names such as Ardal O'Hanlon, Dana, Rosanna Davison, and Dermot Gavin.[27][28] The British version of the show already airs on TG4 in Ireland.
Sveriges Television, the Swedish public service broadcaster, aired a Swedish version called Vem tror du att du är? in 2009. Later that year, in May and June, they also aired the BBC episodes featuring Stephen Fry, Jeremy Irons, Nigella Lawson, John Hurt, and Jane Horrocks.
Also on 31 May 2009, South African station SABC2 premiered its version, split into two parts, featuring local personalities.[29]
An American adaptation of the show premiered on 5 March 2010 on NBC. In Britain, this began airing on BBC One on Sunday 13 June 2010.
In 2010, the Dutch version called Verborgen Verleden ("Hidden Past") of the show started. Thus far, four series of eight episodes each have been produced in 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013. From 2005 to 2008, four series of the show Verre Verwanten ("Distant Relatives") were shown on Dutch television.
In September 2010, the Danish TV station Danmarks Radio aired the first episode of the Danish version, called Ved du hvem du er?.
On 1 September 2010, France 2 aired two episodes of the French version, Retour aux Sources, featuring Vincent Pérez and Clémentine Célarié [30]
In January 2011, the Norwegian TV station NRK started to air the Norwegian version, called Hvem tror du at du er?
Starting on 9 January 2012, Finland's national public-broadcasting company, YLE, aired 15 episodes of the Finnish version, called Kuka oikein olet?, in which local public figures searched for their origins.[31]
A furthering of the concept was developed for American public broadcast TV, called Finding Your Roots, with Henry Louis Gates. This series adds DNA profiling to the format; including Y-chromosome DNA, mitochondrial DNA and autosomal DNA analyses to infer both ancient and recent genetic relationships. The series started airing on 25 March 2012.
In January 2013, Czech broadcaster ČT started broadcasting their version of this show, called Tajemství rodu ("The secret of the lineage").[32]
Starting 15 January 2013, RTP1 broadcast a Portuguese version called Quem É que Tu Pensas Que És? ("Who Do You Think You Are?") at the 10:30 pm timeslot. The first season featured such names as the comedian Herman José, the actresses Maria do Céu Guerra and Maria João Abreu, the musician Zé Pedro from the Xutos & Pontapés rock band and the fadista Camané.
International versions
Country | Local Name | Network | Air Dates |
---|---|---|---|
Australia | Who Do You Think You Are? | SBS One | January 2008 – present |
Canada Quebec |
Who Do You Think You Are? | CBC Television | 11 October 2007 – 31 January 2008 |
Qui êtes-vous? | ICI Radio-Canada Télé | 8 November 2013 | |
Czech Republic | Tajemství rodu | ČT1 | 9 January 2013 |
Denmark | Ved du hvem du er? | DR1 | 15 September 2010 – 17 March 2012 |
Finland | Kuka oikein olet? | Yle TV1 | 9 January 2012 |
France | Retour aux Sources | France 2 | 1 September 2010 |
Germany | Das Geheimnis meiner Familie | Das Erste | 31 March 2008 – |
Ireland | Who Do You Think You Are | RTÉ One | 15 September 2008 – 19 October 2009 |
Israel | Mi Ata Hoshev She'ata | Channel 1 | 4 February 2010 |
Netherlands | Verborgen verleden | Nederland 2 | 29 September 2010 – present |
Norway | Hvem tror du at du er | NRK1 | January 2011 |
Poland | Sekrety rodzinne | TVP1 | November 2006 – March 2007 |
Portugal | Quem É que Tu Pensas Que És? | RTP1 | 15 January 2013 |
Russia | Моя родословная | Channel One Russia | 1 July 2009 – 12 February 2011 |
South Africa | Who Do You Think You Are? | SABC2 | 31 May 2009 |
Sweden | Vem tror du att du är? | SVT1 | Spring 2009 |
United States | Who Do You Think You Are? | NBC (2010–12) TLC (2013–present) |
5 March 2010 – present |
Similar programmes
BBC Wales has a similar series called Coming Home, which is made by Yellow Duck Productions and features celebrities with a Welsh background.[33][34] In 2007, Wall to Wall developed You Don't Know You're Born for ITV1. The series saw various celebrities taking on their ancestors' jobs. UKTV broadcast My Famous Family in 2007.
A short parody sketch of the show featured in the first series of The Armstrong and Miller Show in which Alexander Armstrong plays a fictionalised version of himself, discovering that his paternal grandfather and maternal grandmother were a child molester and a brothel-owner, respectively.
Notes
- ↑ "BBC One Who do you think you are?". Retrieved 14 August 2015.
- ↑ "6.4 million uncover Davina's family history". Digital Spy. 16 July 2009. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? with Nicky Campbell". Who Do You Think You Are. 11 July 2007. BBC. BBC Two.
- ↑ Meet Sir Alan Sugar, the Del Boy business tsar, who faces storm over Apprentice 'conflict' Daily Mail, 10 June 2009
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 "Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ↑ Nigella Lawson. BBC Who Do You Think You Are?, 26 September 2006; retrieved 5 October 2008.
- ↑ "Bruce Forsyth Traces Family History". BBC News. 17 June 2010.
- ↑ "Featured Articles – BBC launching new series of Who Do You Think You Are?". TheGenealogist.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-10-20.
- ↑ Submitted by mattelton (12 April 2011). "This year's Who Do You Think You Are? celebrities revealed". Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine. Retrieved 2012-10-20.
- ↑ "Press Office – Network TV Programme Information BBC Week 35 Who Do You Think You Are? feature – interview with Larry Lamb". BBC. Retrieved 2012-10-20.
- ↑ richardm56 (1 August 2011). "Yup. Sep 28, 9pm BBC1". Twitter. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ↑ Elton, Matt (9 February 2012). "Who Do You Think You Are? 2012: new series celebrities revealed". Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine. Retrieved 2012-10-20.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? 2013: new celebrities revealed". Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine. 13 June 2013. Retrieved 13 June 2013.
- ↑ "Who Do They Think They Are?: 10 Years, 100 Shows". BBC. 6 August 2014. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? Julie Walters". BBC. 7 August 2014. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ↑ Furness, Hannah (9 August 2014). "Tearful Brian Blessed overcome as he discovers 'real-life Oliver Twist' in the family". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
- ↑ Greenwood, Carl (22 June 2015). "Who Do You Think You Are returns with Paul Hollywood, Derek Jacobi and Jerry Hall". The Mirror. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are?". BBC. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
- ↑ "BBC reveals WDYTYA? 2015 running order". Who Do You Think You Are Magazine. 5 August 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
- ↑ Methven, Nicola (13 July 2016). "Danny Dyer discovers he is related to royalty during making of BBC documentary". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
- ↑ "Television Awards Winners in 2010". BAFTA. 10 May 2010. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
- ↑ "AcornMediaUk.com is coming soon". Retrieved 7 December 2015.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? Series Eight [DVD]: Alan Carr, June Brown, J. K. Rowling, Larry Lamb, Robin Gibb, Emilia Fox: Film & TV". Amazon.co.uk. 20 August 2012. Retrieved 2012-10-20.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? Series Nine [DVD]". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? Series 10 [DVD]". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? Series 11 [DVD]". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are%3F (Irish TV series)". RTÉ. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
- ↑ About The Show {Series 2} Who Do You Think You Are? RTÉ
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? (SA)". TVSA. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
- ↑ "Retour aux sources, TV Show", Facebook.
- ↑ "Sarja: Kuka oikein olet? Ohjelmat Yle.fi". YLE. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
- ↑ "Tajemství rodu" [Secrets of the family] (in Czech). Ceskatelevize.cz. 2013. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ↑ "Coming Home, Coming Soon". South East Wales. BBC Wales. 11 July 2007.
- ↑ "Coming Home Coming Soon". Mid Wales. BBC Wales. 28 January 2008.
References
- "Who Do You Think You Are? Series one: Celebrity Gallery". BBC History.
- "Who Do You Think You Are? Series two: Celebrity Gallery". BBC History.
- "Who Do You Think You Are? Series three: Celebrity Gallery". BBC History.
- "Who Do You Think You Are? Series four: Celebrity Gallery". BBC History.
- "Who Do You Think You Are? Series five: Celebrity Gallery". BBC History.
- "Who Do You Think You Are? NBC Info Page With Celebrity Links". Footnote.com.
External links
- Who Do You Think You Are? at BBC Programmes
- Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine BBC
- Who Do You Think You Are? Story
- Family History at BBC Online
- Who Do You Think You Are? at the Internet Movie Database