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Popstars (UK TV series)

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Narrated by
  
Daniel Hill

Original language(s)
  
English

No. of episodes
  
13

Final episode date
  
18 March 2001

5.8/10
TV

Genre
  
Talent show

Country of origin
  
United Kingdom

No. of series
  
1

First episode date
  
10 January 2001

Popstars (UK TV series) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen771Pop

Presented by
  
Davina McCall (Live final episode)

Judges
  
Nigel Lythgoe, Nicki Chapman, Paul Adam

Cast
  
Davina McCall, Daniel Hill

Similar
  
The Big Reunion, Popstar to Operastar, Piers Morgan's Life Stories, Fame Academy, The Girls Aloud Party

Popstars part1 itv 2001


Popstars is a UK talent show series that was broadcast on ITV in early 2001. It was the first UK series of the international Popstars franchise, and was billed as a documentary on the formation of a modern pop group. The series began with audition rounds of aspiring singers (good and bad) performing songs before a panel of judges. The best performers were selected to come to London for further rounds of auditions. Over the weeks, the judges eliminated various singers from the auditions until just a few singers were left in contention. In the final weeks, five contestants were chosen by the judges to form the new pop group Hear’Say. The programme then showed the group recording and promoting their first single, documenting their first ventures into the music industry.

Contents

The first series of Popstars proved popular with audiences, and a second series (named Popstars: The Rivals) followed in 2002, but used a vastly different format, heavily influenced by the success of Pop Idol. Another follow-up, Soap Stars, used the original Popstars format to find actors for a new family in ITV's hit soap Emmerdale, but neither the show, nor the winners' roles in Emmerdale, were deemed a success.

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Format

Unlike the modern Idol or X Factor television series, which are presented as singing contests with public votes, the original UK series of Popstars was presented as a documentary, looking at the formation of a modern pop group from the auditions through to the first released single. There was no public vote, rather the panel of judges decided on which aspiring singers formed the group.

After the formation of the group (called Hear'Say), the programme documented the group recording and promoting their first single ("Pure and Simple"), with the series ending on the night the single charted in the UK Singles Chart (The single went straight to number 1).

Daniel Hill was the narrator of the series and Davina McCall was the host of the final episode, which was broadcast live on the night that Hear'Say's first single entered the chart in a simulcast with Mark Goodier on the Top 40 show on BBC Radio 1.

Judges

  • Nigel Lythgoe, (dubbed "Nasty Nigel" by the British press) was the most outspoken judge on the panel. With a judging style to be emulated later by Simon Cowell, Lythgoe later went on to be head judge on So You Think You Can Dance
  • Nicki Chapman, music promoter, who later featured in the judging panel of Pop Idol alongside Simon Cowell
  • Paul Adam, director of A&R at Polydor Records
  • Notable acts and performers

    The winners of the series — Danny Foster, Myleene Klass, Kym Marsh, Suzanne Shaw and Noel Sullivan — formed the group Hear'Say. Hear’Say went on to sell three million records worldwide, and scored two UK number-one singles before disbanding eighteen months after their formation. Today, Klass is a television presenter, while Marsh and Shaw are actors in television soap operas. Sullivan is a West End theatre performer, while Foster has made occasional appearances in reality television shows, including the The Voice UK in 2013.

    The other five finalists in the first Popstars series (who were not selected to join the group) formed their own pop group called Liberty X (consisting of Michelle Heaton, Tony Lundon, Kevin Simm, Jessica Taylor and Kelli Young). Liberty X went on to be commercially more successful than Hear'Say, achieving ten consecutive UK top 20 singles before their split in 2007.

    Darius Danesh was another noted auditionee in the first series of Popstars. Danesh was seen as an early favourite on the show, but was eliminated halfway through the series after performing an 'alternative' version of Britney Spears's "...Baby One More Time" to the judges. Danesh went on to compete in the first series of Pop Idol, finishing third. He then had a successful solo career as a recording artist before becoming a West End theatre performer.

    Contestant Warren Stacey was signed to Def Jam Recordings in 2001 and reached number 26 on the UK Singles Chart with his debut hit "My Girl My Girl".

    Aftermath

    The first series of Popstars proved popular with audiences, and was a ratings hit for ITV. However, Simon Fuller used the Popstars format as inspiration for his new TV show Pop Idol, which was broadcast on ITV soon after Popstars. Pop Idol, which included audience voting and live performances, proved even more popular than Popstars with the viewing public, and these elements were worked into the second series of Popstars (named Popstars: The Rivals) which included audience polls and live singing. In 2004, another show based on Popstars, which went on to become even more popular than Popstars or Pop Idol, was created by Simon Cowell—The X Factor.

    References

    Popstars (UK TV series) Wikipedia