Portrait Artist of the Year: Georgina Campbell, Mark Gatiss & Tanni Grey-Thompson


5:00 pm - 6:00 pm, Wednesday, June 10 on Sky Arts (350)

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About this Broadcast

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Georgina Campbell, Mark Gatiss & Tanni Grey-Thompson
Season 5, Episode 5

Stephen Mangan and Joan Bakewell host the artistic challenge. Nine new contestants paint celebrity sitters Georgina Campbell, Mark Gatiss and Tanni Grey-Thompson, before the judges decide who to send through to the next round of the competition


HD subtitles 16x9
Arts/Culture (without Music) Fine Arts Game Show/Quiz/Contest Show/Game Show

Cast & Crew

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Joan Bakewell (Presenter)
Stephen Mangan (Presenter)
Georgina Campbell (Contributor)
Mark Gatiss (Contributor)
Tanni Grey-Thompson (Contributor)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Joan Bakewell (Presenter)
Born: April 16, 1933 in Stockport
Best Known For: Being the 'Thinking Man's Crumpet'.
Early-life: Born Joan Dawson Rowlands on April 16, 1933, in Stockport, the eldest child of ambitious working class parents. She was educated at Stockport High School for Girls before heading off to Newnham College, Cambridge, where she read history. Bakewell began her working life as a studio manager for BBC radio, later becoming an advertising copywriter before leaving to marry and have a family - a matter which upset her mother.
Career: Bakewell eventually returned to work in the early 1960s, and quickly made a name for herself thanks to numerous arts, travel and current affairs programmes. TV's Late Night Line Up made her a national pin-up. Since then she's presented the religious affairs programme Heart of the Matter, written radio plays, published numerous books and become one of the BBC's most respected broadcasters. She currently presents Something Understood for BBC Radio 4 and Belief for BBC Radio 3 and continues to write articles for various newspapers. Her autobiography, The Centre of the Bed, was published in 2004, which hit the headlines thanks to its account of her affair with playwright Harold Pinter, which inspired his 1978 play Betrayal. Her first novel, All the Nice Girls, came out in 2009.
Quote: 'I'm not a star. I never have been. I have a pretty average media life. It's not a career. I just work. I'm a worker.'
Trivia: She was made a Dame in 2008, and two years later received a life peerage.
Stephen Mangan (Presenter)
Born: July 22, 1972 in London
Best Known For: Green Wing and Episodes.
Early-life: Born on July 22, 1972, in London, and was raised in Hertfordshire. His parents were Irish, and his father owned a building company. He became interested in acting after appearing in numerous school plays, but never thought he would tread the boards professionally. Instead, he studied law at Cambridge University, but decided against being a solicitor after taking a year out to care of his terminally ill mother. After a spell at Rada, he began landing theatre roles.
Career: Mangan became a regular on the West End stage, and apart from some foreign adverts, steered clear of TV work for years. He made his film debut in Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and Laurence in 1998, and had a small role in Billy Elliot. Early TV appearances came in Big Bad World, Sword of Honour, In Defence and Human Remains before his big break as the lead in Adrian Mole: The Cappuccino Years. He's worked consistently in movies and on TV ever since, with roles in Jane Hall, Marple, Never Better, I'm Alan Partridge, Hyperdrive, and the acclaimed Green Wing. His recent work includes Dirk Gently and Episodes on TV, as well as several well-received stage performances.
Quote: 'I love playing unattractive parts. I want to be really horrid. I want people to really hate me. Maybe one day in analysis, I'll discover what that's all about.'
Trivia: Away from showbiz, Mangan is a Tottenham Hotspur fan. He attends games with Tamsin Greig's husband, actor Richard Leaf.
Georgina Campbell (Contributor)
Mark Gatiss (Contributor)
Born: October 17, 1966 in Sedgefield, County Durham
Best Known For: The League of Gentlemen.
Early-life: Born October 17, 1966, in Sedgefield, County Durham. He grew up opposite a Victorian psychiatric hospital, where both his parents worked. While at college, he had a job there as a gardener. Gatiss claims he always wanted to escape from what he regarded as a grim, northern childhood, although now accepts that Heighington, where he lived, is actually a pleasant village. After school, he took a year out to travel around Europe, then began a drama course at Bretton Hall near Leeds.
Career: Gatiss eventually settled in London, where he hoped to earn a living as an actor but made ends meet writing Doctor Who books. He and friends Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith and Jeremy Dyson formed The League of Gentlemen in 1995, which had successful stints on stage, radio, TV and film. Since then he's appeared in Bright Young Things, Marple, The Quatermass Experiment, Nighty Night and Jekyll. Gatiss was also script editor on the first Little Britain series, and has penned episodes of Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) and Doctor Who (in which he's also appeared). He portrayed Malcolm MacLaren in the 2010 drama Worried About the Boy and co-created Sherlock with Steven Moffat.
Quote: 'I've done lots of acting and been very pleased with the response to what I've done. I'd like to do a lot more.'
Trivia: Gatiss has also written several novels and appeared regularly on the stage.
Tanni Grey-Thompson (Contributor)

Before / After

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