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26
Jul 2020
The BBC's Antiques Road Show is set to come to Newby Hall this summer - sadly the show is closed to the public due to coronavirus.
In this Q and A presenter Fiona Bruce answers some questions about the fun of uncovering hidden treasures and other memorable moments
What has been your personal highlight from working on Antiques Roadshow?
I feel incredibly lucky to have spent the last 13 years working on the Antiques Roadshow. I love doing it and I’ve had so many highlights from over the years. My personal favourite would probably have to be when a man of the cloth turned up with a painting, which he thought might be a Van Dyck. I looked at it - and I was making a programme about Van Dyck at the time - and I thought it had the look of the genuine article. And so we had it examined and my hunch turned out to be right. It has been proven to be the case and it is now being exhibited as a Van Dyck. I can’t imagine that will ever happen to me again in my lifetime and it’s definitely a highlight for me.
Why do you think the show continues to be so popular?
I think it’s amazing that the Antiques Roadshow is essentially the same as it has been for more than four decades and it’s still hugely popular. What makes it eternally popular is probably what I love about it - that we all hope that we could have something gathering dust on the mantelpiece or in the attic that either turns out to be very valuable, or has an amazing story. It happens week-in, week-out and you’d think that the well would begin to run dry and it hasn’t. We still find amazing things every week. You can never predict what will turn up once a visitor brought along a vanity set that had been on Donald Trump’s yacht. It was as tasteful and restrained as you might expect - that’s to say it was fabulously bling.
What is your earliest memory of the Antiques Roadshow?
I still remember watching Antiques Roadshow as a child with my parents, on a Sunday night, sitting in our 1970s living room. I gradually came back to it as an adult and then I was asked to present it which I had no idea was coming! I was absolutely thrilled. It’s not often that you get asked to work on a programme you’ve watched for so long and genuinely watch at home.
Is there anywhere that you still yearn to take Antiques Roadshow to?
New Zealand! We would find extraordinary things there; I’m sure from antiques belonging to British settlers to Maori culture.
What are your hopes for the future of Antiques Roadshow?
That it continues to be as popular as it is now, continues to find extraordinary items and continues to have a place in people’s hearts.
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