Would I Lie to You?


7:00 pm - 7:40 pm, Monday, December 29 on U&Dave (19)

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About this Broadcast

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Season 4, Episode 4

Outnumbered star Hugh Dennis, presenter Ben Fogle, newsreader Kate Silverton and Strictly Come Dancing judge Craig Revel Horwood are this week's guests on the comedy panel show. Team captains David Mitchell and Lee Mack guide the contestants as they try to hoodwink their opponents with absurd facts and plausible lies about themselves. Presented by Rob Brydon


HD subtitles 16x9
Comedy Game Show/Quiz/Contest Movie/Drama Show/Game Show

Cast & Crew

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Lee Mack (Team captain)
David Mitchell (Team captain)
Hugh Dennis (Panellist)
Ben Fogle (Panellist)
Kate Silverton (Panellist)
Peter Holmes (Executive producer)
Ruth Phillips (Executive producer)
Stu Mather (Series producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Rob Brydon (Host)
Born: May 03, 1965 in Swansea
Best Known For: His chat show and Gavin & Stacey.
Early-life: Born Robert Brydon Jones in Swansea, South Wales, on May 3, 1965. His early years were spent in Baglan near Port Talbot before he and his family moved to Porthcawl. He attended two secondary schools, one alongside Catherine Zeta-Jones, the other with Ruth Jones. Under the guidance of his drama teacher at the local comprehensive school, his interest in acting grew, leading to him attending The Welsh College of Music and Drama in Cardiff. During the second year of his course, he quit to work for BBC Wales and enjoyed six years of presenting work on local TV and radio stations.
Career: While still presenting, Brydon ventured into comedy, and made ends meet by providing voices for adverts and animations. A small role in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels inspired him to make a short film of his comic characters; series of Marion & Geoff, A Small Summer Party and The Keith Barret Show followed. Other credits include Director's Commentary, Human Remains, Supernova, A Cock and Bull Story, Little Britain, Annually Retentive and Gavin & Stacey. He's also hosted his own BBC chat show and has chaired the comedy panel show Would I Lie to You? since 2009. In 2010, he starred alongside Steve Coogan in the partially improvised BBC Two sitcom The Trip and has since appeared in its follow-up.
Quote: "I was always very good with girls, I could talk to them no problem at all. But I could never close the deal. You need Dutch courage to do that, to kiss them."
Trivia: He released an autobiography, Small Man in a Book, in 2011.
Lee Mack (Team captain)
Born: August 04, 1968 in Southport
Best Known For: His role as namesake Lee in BBC comedy Not Going Out.
Early-life: Born Lee Gordon McKillop in Southport, Manchester. He lived with his parents above a pub before their divorce and he relocated to Blackburn. He left school at sixteen and worked as a stable boy and a bingo caller before his talent for performing was realised. He joined Pontin's as a Bluecoat but was sacked for shouting profanities at the audience and going on stage drunk. He entered an open-mike competition in 1994 and his talent was so obvious that he was to become a full-time comic within 18 months.
Career: His success as a stand-up was crowned when he won an award at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. He came to the attention of TV bosses after a stint on the radio. Lee was cast in The Sketch show alongside long-term collaborator Tim Vine. After a short-lived stint presenting They Think It's All Over, Mack and Vine began work on Not Going Out. The series revolves around two friends with opposite backgrounds and personalities, much like the two comics themselves. Mack has recently become a regular on comedy panel shows such as Would I Lie to You? and Have I Got News for You. He also has sell-out tours and best-selling DVDs to his name.
Quote: "I'm not as bothered about being as cool as I was 10 years ago. I quite like the idea of being phenomenally uncool."
Trivia: In June 2012, Mack was one of the comperes at the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Concert outside Buckingham Palace.
David Mitchell (Team captain)
Born: July 14, 1974 in Salisbury
Best Known For: Being one half of hysterical duo Mitchell and Webb.
Early-life: Born David James Stuart Mitchell in Salisbury on July 14, 1974. He has a younger brother called Daniel. His parents were hotel managers who later moved to Oxford, where they became lecturers in hotel management. He claims he always wanted to be an actor or comedian, but told people he planned to become a barrister to please his parents. In 1993 David went to Peterhouse College, Cambridge, to study history. He performed with the famous Cambridge Footlights, eventually becoming the society president. It was in his first year at university that he met Robert Webb at an audition for a student pantomime production of Cinderella.
Career: After graduating, Mitchell worked an usher at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith. He and Webb took a number of shows to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival before being asked to write for Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller and for surreal comedy series Big Train. In 2001, they made their first sketch show, The Mitchell and Webb Situation, which ran for six episodes on the now-defunct cable channel Play UK. Their next project came in 2003, with the award-winning Channel 4 sitcom Peep Show. They've also worked together on That Mitchell and Webb Sound, That Mitchell and Webb Look and the film Magicians. Solo, Mitchell has appeared on 10 O'Clock Live and numerous panel shows, including Would I Lie to You?, where he's a regular team captain. His autobiography, Back Story: A Memoir, was published in 2012.
Quote: "I think, fundamentally, the people I want to make laugh are British. I can't ever imagine living abroad."
Trivia: He writes columns for The Observer and The Guardian.
Hugh Dennis (Panellist)
Born: February 13, 1962 in Kettering
Best Known For: His regular slot on Mock the Week and The Now Show on Radio 4.
Early-life: Peter Hugh Dennis was born in Kettering on February 13, 1962. His father was Bishop of Saint Edmundsbury and Ipswich. Hugh read geography at Cambridge, where he joined the famous Footlights and met future comedy partner Steve Punt. After graduating, he worked at Unilever for six years. Hugh and Steve worked the comedy circuit, including London's Comedy Store. There, they were spotted by Jasper Carrott, who offered the pair a slot on his show Carrott Confidential.
Career: Punt and Dennis moved on to work on The Mary Whitehouse Experience, alongside Rob Newman and David Baddiel, before branching out into their own radio series, It's Been A Bad Week and the hugely popular The Now Show. Over the years, Dennis has appeared in a string of comedy shows, including The Imaginatively Titled Punt and Dennis Show, Mock the Week and Have I Got News For You. As well as keeping busy with plenty of voice-over work, Dennis is also an accomplished actor. His CV boasts roles in My Hero and the popular sitcom Outnumbered. He has been involved with The Now Show on Radio 4 since 1998.
Quote: "Everyone's careers go at different paces; you need to forget what other people are doing and concentrate on your own progress."
Trivia: Away from performing, in 2007, Dennis took part in a mountain stage of the Tour de France.
Ben Fogle (Panellist)
Born: November 03, 1973
Best Known For: His adventures with James Cracknell.
Early-life: Born Benjamin Myer Fogle on November 3, 1973, the son of actress Julia Foster and vet Bruce Fogle. After completing his A-levels at Bryanston School in Dorset, Ben spent a gap year in Ecuador where he helped out at an orphanage and taught English, before having 12 months in Honduras and Nicaragua. He eventually went to university in Portsmouth, where he took a degree in Latin American studies. While there, he enrolled in the Royal Navy reserve, serving in Norway, Spain, Gibraltar and France.
Career: After finishing his education, Fogle worked as picture editor on Tatler magazine before volunteering to take part in BBC series Castaway. This would see him and 35 others become self-sufficient on the remote island of Taransay. After that, he returned to journalism, becoming a roving travel reporter for various publications. This led to a presenting spot on Countryfile alongside John Craven and Michaela Strachan, and many other shows such as Animal Park, Death by Pets, Cash in the Attic, Big Screen Britain and One Man and His Dog. He has taken part in many endurance challenges, including rowing across the Atlantic Ocean with Olympic medal-winner James Cracknell and a quest to conquer the South Pole.
Quote: "I've always wondered if it would be possible to swim a mighty ocean. It also closes the circle, completing that lifelong connection with the Atlantic. If I can do it. A lot of it is mind over matter."
Trivia: In May 2014, Fogle foiled a mugger by giving him a black eye.
Kate Silverton (Panellist)
Born: August 04, 1970 in Waltham Abbey, Essex
Best Known For: Keeping the nation up-to-date with current events on BBC News programmes.
Early-life: Kate hails from Waltham Abbey, Essex, and was born on August 4, 1970. She is the daughter of hypnotherapist Terry and businesswoman Patricia. Kate worked for a London-based bank before becoming a journalist, training with the BBC on Look North in the North East.
Career: Silverton became a reporter for Tyne Tees Television, later taking positions as a presenter on World Travel for The Travel Channel, The Third Degree for BBC Three and 3D for Sky News. In 2003 she presented The Heaven and Earth Show, leaving a year later for her best-known role as a BBC News presenter, helming shows including BBC News 24, BBC Breakfast and the One O'Clock News. Silverton has also reported for Panorama.
Quote: "I love my job. I like getting to dip a toe in different worlds. I like meeting so many different people and to feel that you're learning as much as you're providing information. I'm challenged every single day. I just love it."
Trivia: She suffered embarrassment when she was younger because of her size nine feet.
Craig Revel Horwood (Panellist)
Born: January 04, 1965 in Ballarat, Victoria, Australia
Best Known For: Being a judge on Strictly Come Dancing.
Early-life: Born in Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, on January 4, 1965. He has four siblings. Their father was in the Australian navy, so the family moved around a lot. At the age of 17, he made ends meet by performing as a drag queen. He went on to become a dancer in Melbourne and appeared in a number of productions, including West Side Story, the Danny La Rue Show, La Cage Aux Folles and Ladies Night. He also featured in numerous TV commercials in Australia, notably for KFC, before moving to the UK to further his dance career in 1989.
Career: Horwood's West End credits include roles in Cats, Miss Saigon and Crazy for You. As a choreographer, he has worked on West Side Story, Martin Guerre and Spend Spend Spend, and as a director on Sunset Boulevard, Chess, the live tour of Strictly Come Dancing, and the opening ceremony of the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester. He became a household name in 2004 after becoming a member of the judging panel on Strictly Come Dancing. He has a reputation for awarding the lowest marks of all the judges. Since 2009, he has been a regular on the pantomime circuit and in 2011 became a British citizen.
Quote: "When I'm watching something I'm professional about it. I'm not there to have a good time. I'm there to judge a competition."
Trivia: In 2009, he became a patron of the National Osteoporosis Society. He's had two lots of plastic surgery - one op on his nose, the second to get rid of 'manboobs'.
Peter Holmes (Executive producer)
Ruth Phillips (Executive producer)
Stu Mather (Series producer)

Before / After

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QI
6:20 pm