Room 101 (radio series)
Genre | Comedy |
---|---|
Running time | 30 mins |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | BBC Radio 5 |
TV adaptations | Room 101 (TV series) |
Starring | Nick Hancock |
Air dates | 9 January 1992 to 25 March 1994 |
No. of series | 4 |
No. of episodes | 27 |
- This page is about the radio series Room 101; for information about the TV series of the same name, see Room 101 (TV series). For the room from Nineteen Eighty-Four, see Room 101.
Room 101 is a radio comedy series that ran from 1992 to 1994 on BBC Radio 5, before transferring to BBC television. Hosted by Nick Hancock, it was an alternative to the more established and formal Desert Island Discs. Celebrities were invited to discuss their "least favourite people, places and pop songs" in order to have them consigned to Room 101.
Episode guide
Series One 1992 (six programmes)
- Paul Merton (9 January 1992)
- Jenny Eclair (16 January 1992)
- Danny Baker (23 January 1992)
- Arthur Smith (30 January 1992)
- Steve Punt (6 February 1992)
- Annie Nightingale (13 February 1992)
Series Two 1992 (eight programmes)
- Ian Hislop (14 August 1992)
- Jo Brand (21 August 1992)
- Tony Slattery (28 August 1992)
- John Walters (4 September 1992)
- Helen Lederer (11 September 1992)
- David Baddiel (18 September 1992)
- Stephen Frost (25 September 1992)
- Donna McPhail (2 October 1992)
Christmas Special 1992
- Nick Hancock (22 December 1992) - Guest host Danny Baker
Series Three 1993 (eight programmes)
- Frank Skinner (27 August 1993)
- Trevor and Simon (3 September 1993)
- Caroline Quentin (10 September 1993)
- Tony Hawks (17 September 1993)
- Rory McGrath (8 October 1993)
- Kevin Day (15 October 1993)
- Maria McErlane (22 October 1993)
- Mark Lamarr (29 October 1993)
Series Four 1994 (four programmes)
- Nick Revell (4 March 1994)
- Simon Delaney (11 March 1994)
- Chris England (18 March 1994)
- Andy Hamilton (25 March 1994)
Title
The title refers to the room in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four which, for each person, represents the worst fear they can imagine. Appropriately, this is supposedly named after a conference room at BBC Broadcasting House where Orwell used to sit through tedious meetings.
See also
External links
- Radio Ha Ha entry for Room 101
- Room 101 on the BBC website
- Room 101 at epguides.com
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