Celebrity Bridge of Lies


4:30 pm - 5:15 pm, Friday, June 12 on BBC One London (1)

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About this Broadcast

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Season 1, Episode 7

Ross Kemp hosts the game show, which sees Gareth Malone, Stephen Bailey, Mwaka Mudenda, and Ore Oduba taking it in turns to cross the floor by only stepping on the correct answers - and doing their best to avoid the wrong ones. For the final crossing, those who have been successful join forces for a chance to take home the money for their chosen charities


HD subtitles repeat 16x9
Game Show/Quiz/Contest Show/Game Show

Cast & Crew

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Ore Oduba (Contestant)
Mwaka Mudenda (Contestant)
Stephen Bailey (Contestant)
Gareth Malone (Contestant)
Nick Gunaydin (Series producer)
Gary Chippington (Executive producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Ross Kemp (Host)
Born: July 21, 1964 in Barking, Essex
Best Known For: Dodging the bullets on the field of battle and for playing EastEnders' hard man Grant Mitchell.
Early-life: Ross James Kemp was born on July 21, 1964, in Barking, Essex. His mother was a hairdresser, his father a policeman. His brother Darren is a documentary producer. Kemp excelled at sports at school, but knew from an early age he wanted to be an actor after appearing as a shepherd in a nativity play. He later enrolled at the Webber Douglas Academy in London, making ends meet by working as a labourer and waiter.
Career: Kemp has rarely been out of work since graduating in 1985. His first credited TV appearance was in Emmerdale in 1986. He also appeared in a string of Kellogg's adverts and featured in such series as Birds of a Feather and London's Burning, before landing the role of Grant in EastEnders - the part that made him a household name. He left in 1999 after nine years. He then appeared in A Christmas Carol, Ultimate Force, In Defence, Hero of the Hour, A Line in the Sand, and a TV remake of Spartacus. In 2005, he featured in an episode of Extras and made a brief, but much-publicised return to EastEnders. He has also hosted a number of hard-hitting documentaries for Sky1, including the Bafta-winning Ross Kemp on Gangs.
Quote: 'I never fail to get a buzz from setting off to work early in the morning and settling into that make-up chair. Mind you, I've done an awful lot of rubbish.'
Trivia: He has written several books, including the novel Moving Target.
Ore Oduba (Contestant)
Born: November 17, 1985 in London
Best Known For: Winning the 14th series of Strictly Come Dancing.
Early-life: Born on November 17, 1985 in London. Ore attended Dumpton School and then Canford School in Dorset. He graduated from Loughborough University in 2008 with a degree in Sports Science and Social Science.
Career: Oduba joined children's news programme Newsround in 2008, initially as a reporter and breakfast bulletin presenter but was promoted to deputy presenter in 2009 and began presenting the main Newsround bulletin in 2010. He was also the main presenter for spin-off show Sportsround from 2008 until 2010, when it was replaced with Match of the Day Kickabout and Oduba began presenting that instead. From 2012 to 2014, he also had an acting role in children's series Hacker Time. Oduba left Newsround in 2014. Since then, he has presented sport bulletins for BBC Breakfast and BBC Radio 5 Live and been a guest presenter on numerous episodes of The One Show. His other presenting credits include The National Lottery Draws, Claimed and Shamed as well as programmes for such sporting events as the Commonwealth Games and the Olympics. In 2016, Oduba took part in Strictly Come Dancing with professional dancer Joanne Clifton and won the contest.
Quote: 'The thought of getting married and being on Strictly were dreams from a very young age.'
Trivia: He supports Manchester United.
Mwaka Mudenda (Contestant)
Stephen Bailey (Contestant)
Gareth Malone (Contestant)
Born: November 09, 1975 in London
Best Known For: The Choir.
Early-life: Gareth Edmund Malone was born in London on November 9, 1975. He was obsessed with singing from a young age. When he was 10, his family moved to Bournemouth and that was where his love of choirs began. He studied drama at the University of East Anglia and completed a postgraduate vocal studies course at the Royal Academy of Music.
Career: Malone worked for the London Symphony Orchestra from 2001 until 2009. He ran their youth choir and community choir. His big break came in 2006 when he presented the first series of The Choir on BBC Two. He was asked to create a choir from scratch at a comprehensive school in Middlesex. He auditioned 160 pupils for 30 places. After only nine months' training, he took them to China to compete in the 2006 World Choir Games. The series was a big success and since then he has presented various takes on the same format, including The Choir: Boys Don't Sing, The Choir: Unsung Town, The Choir: Military Wives, and Sing While You Work. He has also made a version of The Choir for the American market and appeared on Who Do You Think You Are?
Quote: 'A passion for singing is the vital ingredient in any performance. As an audience member you want to know that people love getting together to sing.'
Trivia: When he's not singing, he loves walking.
Janine O'Connor (Director)
Nick Gunaydin (Series producer)
Gary Chippington (Executive producer)

Before / After

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Pointless
5:15 pm