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3-2-1

  • TV Series
  • 1978–1988
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
111
YOUR RATING
Mireille Allonville, Ted Rogers, and Dusty Bin in 3-2-1 (1978)
Game Show

Three couples compete in a missing word game, with the winning couple going on to solve riddles left by guest performers to win prizes and avoid Dusty Bin's booby prize.Three couples compete in a missing word game, with the winning couple going on to solve riddles left by guest performers to win prizes and avoid Dusty Bin's booby prize.Three couples compete in a missing word game, with the winning couple going on to solve riddles left by guest performers to win prizes and avoid Dusty Bin's booby prize.

  • Stars
    • Ted Rogers
    • Dusty Bin
    • Chris Emmett
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    111
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Ted Rogers
      • Dusty Bin
      • Chris Emmett
    • 9User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes152

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    Photos5

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    Top cast99+

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    Ted Rogers
    • Self - Host
    • 1978–1988
    Dusty Bin
    • Self
    • 1978–1987
    Chris Emmett
    • Self…
    • 1978–1986
    Mike Newman
    • Self…
    • 1978–1984
    Caroline Munro
    Caroline Munro
    • Self - hostess…
    • 1983–1986
    The Brian Rogers Connection
    • Themselves…
    • 1983–1987
    Lynda Lee Lewis
    • Self - Hostess…
    • 1984–1988
    Felix Bowness
    • Self…
    • 1979–1987
    Karen Palmer
    • Self - Happy Hostess…
    • 1978–1981
    Libby Roberts
    • Self - Happy Hostess…
    • 1980–1986
    Fiona Curzon
    Fiona Curzon
    • Self - Happy Hostess…
    • 1980–1982
    Jenny Leyland
    • Self - 3-2-1 Girl…
    • 1978–1980
    John Benson
    • Self - Announcer
    • 1986–1988
    Mireille Allonville
    • The Gentle Secs…
    Patsy Ann Scott
    • The Gentle Secs…
    Annie St John
    • Self - 3-2-1 Girl…
    • 1978–1980
    Anthony Schaeffer
    • Self - Announcer
    • 1985
    Alison Temple-Savage
    • Self - Happy Hostess
    • 1980–1981
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    5.6111
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    Featured reviews

    chris_gaskin123

    When Saturday evening TV was worth watching

    I used to watch 3-2-1 on Saturday evenings during the 1980's and it was usually the prime time show on ITV. It was much better that the rubbish that is now shown on Saturday evenings.

    Three couples competed against each other and the first to go was at the first round, a quiz. The other two went on for the acts and a member of the act bought back an envelope with a rhyme, along with an object as a clue to what the prize could be. The contestants then had to pick one of these, hoping it would be Dusty Bin as all they would win if that was the last one at the end was a brand new dustbin. The prizes were usually cars or holidays. Every couple also taken home with them a ceramic Dusty Bin.

    This show was hosted by the late Ted Rogers and one of his female assistants for a few years was actress Caroline Munro (The Spy Who Loved Me).

    I use to enjoy this on a Saturday evening and was a shame it finished.
    de_niro_2001

    Typical late 70s/early 80s TV rubbish

    I naturally wasn't a regular watcher of this show but from what I saw of it, it seemed it had a resident group of failed comedians performing a sketch, one of the comedians would go over to the contestants and recite a cryptic poem which made no sense which invariably they failed to understand and they'd then be told by host Ted Rogers that they'd rejected a brand new Austin Metro or a holiday in Jamaica. Like a lot of 1970s and early 1980s TV this show seemed like a load of rubbish and I never understood it.
    Jools-10

    Awful 80's Show!!!

    This was a show that you could win prizes but only if you could work out the riddles. If you picked the right one you won the prize but if you picked the wrong one you won a dustbin or as on the show Dusty Bin. The person who was the host was a man who's claim to fame was doing three, two, one with his fingers very fast and a catch phrase of 'Don't go away now.'
    5By-TorX-1

    A Gameshow with Riddles Set by the Sphinx!

    As a mere lad in the 1970s, I recall 3-2-1 seeming to last all night, but on seeing it recently on a game show channel it was only an hour long! Helmed by Ted Rogers (with his legendary quick fingered countdown) and assisted by the slightly mechanised Dusty Bin, the show was a curious hybrid of quiz, sketch and variety show, with initial rounds of questions to reduce three couples to one, who then moved on to the final clues round and had to watch (or endure!) various sketches after which a performer from said sketches would deliver and read out a baffling clue that represented a prize (from holidays and fridges to a speed boat!), but the couple had to beware as one prize was the dreaded bin! The choosing of the clues was invariably just pure guesswork as they were truly abstract and pretty much unsolvable through the use of any kind of logic, and as the series progressed the Chris Emmett-fronted comedy sketches (always according to a theme) gave way to guest star turns (including Bernard Bresslaw and Frankie Howerd) and then more club-like variety acts (although one did include an early appearance of Mark Heap). Of the latter stage, one episode's theme was 'Saturday Night,' which is, I think you will agree, a bit vague. However, of this period I do remember an 1980s alternative comedy troupe whose (I thought hilarious) surreal act concluded with the camera cutting back to a clearly totally bemused Ted Rogers. So, in some respects it was a bizarre spectacle (although some episodes did feature the glorious Caroline Munro), but it was certainly an original approach to the TV quiz show.
    ArmandTanzarian

    classic 80's bad TV which was inexplicably massively popular

    This is one of those 80's programmes which crop up on cheap cable channels and when you watch it you can't believe that this was Saturday evening prime time entertainment and 15-20 million people would watch it.its a bizarre cross between a quiz/gameshow and variety show.Basically,the idea was to interpret totally in penetrable cryptic poems which represented a prize, and the contestants would have to reject prizes and hope they got something tidy and not the booby prize of a dustbin, represented by the 'hilarious' character Dusty Bin. It was called 3-2-1 cos three couples would be whittled down to 2 via a quiz for the main part of the programme and then to 1 couple for the climactic choosing of the prize. The host , Ted Rodgers did this sort of visual 'catchphrase' where he would hold up 3 fingers, then 2, then 1 finger at a speed which dazzled the easily impressed people of the 80's. The weirdest bit was that instead of just bringing out all the clues to the prizes at once, there would be variety segments where various seaside comics, singers, dancers and magicians such as Keith Harris and Orville and The Krankies would do a few minutes of an act, or if the money was a bit tight that week then the in-house dancers 'the Brian Rodgers Connection' would do a turn. The act would then come over to Ted and the contestants and Ted would ask either where they were doing 'Summer Season/Pantomime" depending on the time of the year and they would read out the cryptic poems which made no sense and an item which was also supposed to be a clue but had no connection to the prize we later find out it represents. The couples would get to 'reject' the prizes one by one, supposedly by deciphering the clues, but actually by blind guess work. Once they picked an item to reject, Ted would open the envelope the poem was written on and read out an incredibly contrived and tenuous explanation for the clue, and the contestants were none the wiser as he went along until he shouted "Its the car/holiday/dusty bin!". Thered be another little quiz to knock out another couple and the final couple would get the choice out of the last few clues and win either a holiday,car, kitchen suite or a dustbin. Fantastic.

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    Related interests

    Bill Barretta and Pat Sajak in Wheel of Fortune (1983)
    Game Show

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Referenced in Melbourne House's 1984 text adventure game "Hampstead", where the player started in their home with an episode of the series showing on TV.
    • Connections
      Featured in It'll Be Alright on the Night 3 (1981)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 29, 1978 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • One three, Two
    • Production company
      • Yorkshire Television (YTV)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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