Local Heroes (British TV series)
Local Heroes | |
---|---|
Directed by | Paul Bader |
Presented by | Adam Hart-Davis |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 4 |
Production | |
Production company | Screenhouse Productions |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 1992 2000 | –
Local Heroes is a science and history television programme in the United Kingdom, presented by Adam Hart-Davis.
Made by Screenhouse Productions and directed by Paul Bader, it was first aired on the ITV regional network Yorkshire Television in 1992. In the show, Adam Hart-Davis, dressed in the pink and yellow cycling clothes that would become the show's trademark, rode around the YTV region (including Yorkshire, Norfolk and Lincolnshire) on a matching pink and yellow bicycle, stopping in a particular area to tell the stories of scientists that lived or were born there. These stories were embellished by experiments, performed on the street by Hart-Davis, generally using bits of wood and junk from a trailer on his bike.
This hobo-meets-Johnny Ball style approach to science-education proved appealing, and after two series, the show was sold to the national BBC2 network in 1994. The move saw two changes: the scope of the show was expanded nationwide, with a different region visited each episode; and the theme tune was changed from No More Heroes by The Stranglers to a twee and plinky number, more in keeping with the programme genre. Eventually this was replaced by a more upbeat theme, by Wallace and Gromit composer Julian Nott, played by a Czech orchestra.
Since then, the series has covered over 200 'heroes', and has seen several special episodes. The first special saw Hart-Davis visit Egypt to investigate ancient heroes, while another took him to Italy for a Renaissance special. Another notable show was the finale of the last series (to date), which was performed in front of a live audience at the Royal Institution, much in the style of the Institution's Christmas Lectures.
The show continued until 2000. Since then, Hart-Davis has moved on to other shows, and the bbc.co.uk Local Heroes pages have now been deleted, suggesting that no further series are planned.
Series 1
[edit]- South West:
- Sarah Guppy: patented the exercise bed, the breakfast urn and the suspension bridge
- William Watts: invented lead shot
- Humphry Davy: discovered laughing gas, started electrochemistry and made patients breathe gases from cows
- Edward Jenner: introduced vaccination against smallpox
- Mikael Pedersen: designed a beautiful and curious bicycle
- George Pocock (inventor): inventor of spanking machine and pioneer of kite locomotion
- South:
- John Milne: founder of modern seismology
- Edward Lyon Berthon, who invented the folding lifeboat
- Florence Nightingale
- Colin Pullinger
- John Stringfellow:
- Scotland:
- Charles Piazzi Smyth
- Joseph Black
- John Napier
- David Brewster
- David Douglas
- Gilbert D. Malloch (1881–1955)
- Nevil Maskelyne
- Charles Hutton
- Midlands:
- John Barber (engineer): patented the gas turbine
- Matthew Boulton: host of the Lunar Society, a gathering of scientists
- William Withering: made heart cure from foxgloves (digitalis)
- William Murdoch: invented gas lighting
- James Watt: invented the copying machine and greatly improved steam engines
- Dennis Gabor: invented the hologram on a tennis court – before it was possible to make one
- Alexander Parkes: produced plastics, two generations ahead of their time
- Frederick W. Lanchester: built the first all-British four-wheel petrol-driven car
- Northern Ireland:
- John Boyd Dunlop: invented the pneumatic tyre
- William Coppin: invented the diving suit and pioneered salvage operations
- George Garrett (inventor): invented a submarine, powered by steam and called Resurgam
- John Getty McGee: invented the Ulster overcoat (as worn by Sherlock Holmes)
- John Thomas Romney Robinson: invented the cup anemometer and measured the position of Armagh with rockets
- Harry Ferguson: pioneered the modern tractor system
- North West:
- John Mackereth: invented the pneumatic mud corer (Mackereth corer) for taking samples from lake beds
- John Gough (natural philosopher): blind naturalist who could identify any plant by taste and touch
- Thomas Edmondson: inventor of the railway ticket
- John Dalton: meteorologist and pioneer of atomic theory
- James Prescott Joule: devised modern ideas about heat
- Joseph Whitworth: revolutionised engineering by defining standard screw threads
Series 2
[edit]1 Devon: Isambard Kingdom Brunel: Henry Moule: Thomas Savery: Mary Anning:
2 Scotland: Alexander Bain (inventor): Electro-chemical telegraph Charles Macintosh: Mac James Clerk Maxwell: Robert Stirling: Inventor James Gregory (mathematician): Mathematician
3 East: William Harvey: Reformed incorrect thinking about the circulation of blood. Robert Fitzroy: Pioneered storm warning system and invented the weather forecast. Benjamin Wiseman: Patented a Windmill in 1783. William Hase: Modified prison treadmills to take power outside the prison. William Gilberd: Discovered the earth is a magnet. John Jeyes: Invented a unique three-function toilet cleaner Jeyes Fluid. William Hyde Wollaston: Invented a clever mirror-and-prism device (Camera lucida) that lets you see your subject superimposed on your sketch pad.
4 North East: John Walker (inventor): Invented the friction match. Charles Algernon Parsons: Invented the steam turbine. Joseph Wilson Swan: Invented the incandescent light bulb. Lewis Fry Richardson: Inventor of sonar and the understanding of the mathematics of the weather. Thomas Wright (astronomer): First to understand the Milky Way. Gladstone Adams: Invented the windscreen wiper.
5 Wales: Thomas Telford: Developed a system for road building & built bridges. Alfred Russel Wallace: Devised theory of natural selection jointly with Darwin. William Price (physician): Pioneer of cremation. Harry Grindell Matthews: Invented a portable radio, and supposed Death Ray inventor. Richard Trevithick: Ran world's first steam locomotive at Merthyr. Robert Recorde: Invented equals sign. Hugh Owen Thomas (and the bonesetters of Anglesey): Four generations of bonesetters and founder of orthopaedic surgery.
6 South East: Samuel Morland: Invented giant megaphones and was master mechanic to Charles II Hertha Ayrton: Invented way of clearing trenches of Mustard Gas. Eleanor Coade: Her artificial stone was used for many landmarks. Henry Maudslay: Founder of precision engineering and first production line. Thomas Young (scientist): Discovered how the eye works and translated the Rosetta Stone. Liborio Pedrazzoli: Inventor of swimming umbrellas. Ralph Wedgwood (inventor): Invented carbon paper. William Willoughby Cole Verner: Invented cavalry sketching board to enable cavalrymen to make accurate maps whilst on horseback.
Series 3
[edit]1 Devon and Cornwall: Thomas Newcomen et al.
2 London: Cornelius Drebbel et al.
3 South: Robert Hooke et al.
4 Special – Egypt
5 Special – Italy
6 Special – Science Week
Series 4
[edit]1 South: Henry Cavendish et al.
2 East of Scotland: James Dewar et al.
3 Cotswolds: William Henry Fox Talbot et al.
4 St Pauls: Heroines
External links
[edit]- Local Heroes at IMDb
- 1992 British television series debuts
- 2000 British television series endings
- 1990s British documentary television series
- 2000s British documentary television series
- BBC television documentaries about history
- ITV documentaries
- Television series by ITV Studios
- Television series by Yorkshire Television
- British English-language television shows