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Celebrity Mastermind - Season 24 Episode 7
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00:00Hello and welcome to Celebrity Mastermind with me, Clive Myrie.
00:24In the spotlight tonight are Olympic medalist Ewan Thomas.
00:28His specialist subject is the Oscar-winning film Forrest Gump.
00:32Sophie Aldred, known for playing Ace in Doctor Who.
00:35Her subject is the actor Sylvester McCoy.
00:38Journalist and documentary maker Mobin Azhar.
00:41He'll be answering questions on Prince's Sign of the Times album.
00:44And broadcaster Ashley James, whose subject is the activist and suffragette Lady Constance
00:49Lytton.
00:55Life is one giant sweet shop for our celebrity contenders.
00:59They can get whatever they want, whenever they want.
01:02That's the perk of being a celeb.
01:04But no matter how much they may want to be crowned a Celebrity Mastermind winner and take
01:08home this splendiferous trophy, they've got to earn it by getting through one and a half
01:13minutes on a specialist subject and two minutes on general knowledge.
01:17In my sweet shop it could just be gobstoppers on offer, as they're rendered speechless by
01:21all the pressure.
01:22Let's hope not.
01:23And anyway, whatever happens, they're also helping their chosen charities.
01:27So can I ask our first celebrity contender to please make their way to the black chair.
01:33Your name?
01:41Ewan Thomas.
01:42Your occupation?
01:43Former athlete.
01:44Your chosen charity?
01:46Group B strep support.
01:47And your specialist subject?
01:49Forrest Gump.
01:50The Oscar-winning 1994 film starring Tom Hanks as the title character in one and a half minutes.
01:56Here we go.
01:57Forrest Gump's fictional hometown of Greenbow is in which southern US state?
02:02Alabama.
02:03Yes.
02:04Which actress plays Forrest's childhood sweetheart Jenny Curran as an adult and was nominated for
02:08a Golden Globe for her performance?
02:10Hannah Wright.
02:11No, Robin Wright.
02:12Robin Wright.
02:13The many bench scenes in which Forrest sits and tells his life story to various strangers
02:16were filmed in Chippewa Square, in what city in Georgia?
02:20Savannah, Georgia.
02:23Yes.
02:24After Jenny lets Forrest sit next to her on the school bus on his first day at school,
02:28he says,
02:29From that day on we was always together. Jenny and me was like what two vegetables?
02:34Peas and carrots.
02:35Yes.
02:36The author, Winston Groom, who wrote the novel Forrest Gump, on which the film is based,
02:39is quoted as having said that he envisioned which other actor in the title role,
02:43because of the character's large size in the book.
02:45Goodman.
02:46Yes, John Goodman.
02:48When the young Forrest meets Elvis Presley, Forrest dances to what song?
02:52A performance that Elvis later re-enacts on television?
02:55Hound Dog.
02:56Yes. While serving in Vietnam, Forrest promises to enter into a business partnership as a shrimp
03:00fisherman with his friend and comrade Bubba, whose full given name is Benjamin Buford
03:05What?
03:06Blue.
03:07Yes. When Forrest goes for a little run from his house in Alabama, he somehow keeps going
03:12until he reaches the ocean, in what city in Los Angeles County, only to carry on running
03:16for more than three years?
03:17Santa Monica.
03:18Yes. When Forrest goes to visit Jenny at her college, she tells him she wants to be a singer,
03:23like which famous artist who features on a poster that she has on her bedroom wall?
03:27Bob Dylan.
03:28No.
03:29Joan Baez.
03:30Ah.
03:31At the end of that round, Ewan, you had no passes. You got seven points.
03:44And our next contender, please.
03:54Your name.
03:55Sophie Aldred.
03:56Your occupation.
03:57Actor.
03:58Your chosen charity.
03:59National Autistic Society.
04:01And your specialist subject.
04:02Sylvester McCoy.
04:03Yes.
04:04The prolific Scottish actor and former star of the television series, Doctor Who, in one
04:08and a half minutes.
04:09Here we go.
04:10Sylvester McCoy has famously played what kitchen utensils as a musical instrument, both
04:15on Doctor Who and on stage with the London Concert Orchestra?
04:18The Spoons.
04:19Yes.
04:20McCoy was working in the box office at what North London venue when he was mistaken for
04:24an actor and invited to join the experimental theatre group, the Ken Campbell Roadshow?
04:28The Roundhouse.
04:29Yes.
04:30McCoy's exploits in the Ken Campbell Roadshow included having bricks broken over his chest
04:34and trying to break the world record for having what creatures down his trousers?
04:38Ferrets.
04:39Yes.
04:40The television sitcom set in the early 1950s which starred McCoy as a Scottish teddy boy called Terps is entitled Big Jim and the what?
04:47Figaro Club.
04:48Yes.
04:49For the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2007, followed by a world tour, McCoy played the fool to Ian McKellen's King Lear.
04:56Which director's production of the play?
04:59Um...
05:04Richard Eyre.
05:05No, Trevor Nunn.
05:06In what children's television programme did McCoy perform as a mime playing a character called Pepe or E-Pep, who lives in a backwards world behind a mirror?
05:16Jigsaw.
05:17No, Vision On.
05:18When McCoy was chosen to play the seventh incarnation of the Doctor in 1987, he was starring in the title role of what play by Adrian Mitchell at the National Theatre in London?
05:27The Pied Piper.
05:28Yes.
05:29McCoy narrowly missed out to Ian Holm on the role of Bilbo Baggins in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings films, though he went on to play which character in The Hobbit trilogy?
05:38Radagast the Brown.
05:39Yes. In the Dan Freeman play, A Joke.
05:41I've started to self-finish.
05:42In the Dan Freeman play, A Joke, staged in Edinburgh in 2017 and 18, McCoy played the Irishman alongside which American actor as the Scotsman?
05:51Robert Picardo.
05:52It was Robert Picardo.
05:54Sophie, at the end of that round, you had no passes. You've got seven points.
06:07And our next contender, please.
06:16Your name?
06:17Mubin Azhar.
06:18Your occupation?
06:19I'm a journalist.
06:20Your chosen charity?
06:21Medical aid for Palestinians.
06:23And your specialist subject?
06:25Prince's Sign of the Times.
06:26The highly acclaimed double album released in 1987 and its companion concert film in one and a half minutes. Here we go. What two-word phrase does Prince sing at the beginning of the title track of the album, Sign of the Times?
06:38Oh, yeah.
06:39Oh, yeah.
06:40Yeah. The single, You Got the Look, was not originally intended as a duet, but Prince invited which Scottish pop star to sing backing vocals on the track and then ended up expanding her role?
06:49Sheena Easton.
06:50Yes.
06:51What's the name of Prince's alter ego, who's credited as the vocalist on several songs on the album, including Housequake, If I Was Your Girlfriend and Strange Relationship?
06:58Camille.
06:59Yes.
07:00Much of the music for the Sign of the Times concert film, which Prince himself chiefly directed, was recorded during performances at which venue in Rotterdam?
07:08Ahoy.
07:09Yes.
07:10The lyrics of the ballad of Dorothy Parker include a reference to a song by which Canadian singer-songwriter?
07:15Joni Mitchell.
07:16Who was one of Prince's early influences?
07:17Joni Mitchell.
07:18Yes.
07:19During the performance of Play in the Sunshine in the concert film, Prince introduces which member of the backing band on drums, jokingly commenting,
07:26Not bad for a girl.
07:27Sheila E.
07:28Yes.
07:29Which month of the year is mentioned in the lyrics of both the songs, Sign of the Times and I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man?
07:34June.
07:35Yes.
07:36The version of It's Gonna Be A Beautiful Night included on the album was recorded live in which European city?
07:41Paris.
07:42With Prince crediting 6,000 of its wonderful inhabitants on backing vocals.
07:45Paris.
07:46Yes.
07:47What's the stage nickname given to him by Prince of Matthew Bliston, the jazz musician who plays trumpet on a number of tracks on the album, including Slow Love and Adore?
07:55Atlanta Bliss.
07:56Yes.
07:57In the concert film, over a total period of 11 minutes, Prince and his backing band perform a version of Forever In My Life, which then segues into
08:04what other song from the album?
08:06It.
08:07It is.
08:08It.
08:09And Mobine, at the end of that round you had no passes.
08:11You got them all right.
08:12Ten points.
08:13Thank you so much.
08:14And our final contender please.
08:15Your name.
08:16Ashley James.
08:17Your occupation.
08:18Broadcaster.
08:20Right.
08:23And our final contender, please.
08:33Your name.
08:34Ashley James.
08:35Your occupation.
08:36Broadcaster.
08:37Your chosen charity.
08:38Girl guiding and women's aid.
08:40And your specialist subject.
08:42Lady Constance Lytton.
08:43The British noblewoman, activist and writer known for her
08:46influential role in the suffragette movement.
08:49In one and a half minutes.
08:51Here we go.
08:51Constance Lytton was born in 1869 in Vienna,
08:54but spent some of her childhood in which colony of the
08:57British Empire where her father was later Viceroy?
08:59India.
09:00Yes. What alias did Lytton use to ensure that she'd
09:03received the same treatment as less privileged,
09:05working class suffragettes after her arrest in
09:07Liverpool in January 1910?
09:09Jane Warton.
09:10Yes. What was the title of the book written by Lytton and
09:13first published in March 1914 that describes her
09:16experiences after being jailed for her part in
09:18suffragette protests?
09:19Prisons and prisoners.
09:20Yes. In protest at her arrest and detention in
09:23Holloway Prison after a demonstration in February 1909,
09:26Lytton cut which letter of the alphabet into her chest?
09:29V.
09:30Yes. Which of her fellow suffragettes,
09:31traumatised by her experiences of being force-fed in
09:341913, did Lytton later support by paying her private
09:38asylum fees?
09:41Mary Dunlop?
09:42No. Rachel Peace. At the Pageant of Great Women, staged
09:45in Bristol in support of the suffragette movement in November
09:481910, Lytton portrayed which renowned nurse and social
09:52reformer?
09:56Florence Nightingale.
09:57Yes. At what house in Hertfordshire, desired by Edwin Lutyens
10:00and built in 1901, did Lytton live for much of her later life?
10:04Homeward House.
10:05Yes. Lytton helped working class girls to participate in what
10:08traditional activity with the help of members of the Esperance
10:11Club?
10:12Morris Dancing.
10:13Yes. In 1896, Lytton helped her aunt, Mrs C.W. Earl, write a
10:17best-selling book with the title Popori from a what?
10:21Surrey Garden.
10:23It was Surrey Garden.
10:25Ashley, at the end of that round, you had no passes.
10:27You've got eight points.
10:29And at the end of the specialist subjects round, let's have a
10:40look at the scores. In joint third place with seven points
10:43each, Ewan and Sophie. In second place with eight points, it's
10:46Ashley. And in first place with ten points, it's Mobeen.
10:50So now it's general knowledge. And if there's a tie at the end,
10:53then the number of passes is taken into account. And the person with
10:56the fewer passes is the winner. And if they're tied on
10:59passes as well, it's a tie-break. So let's ask Ewan to join us
11:02again, please.
11:10Ewan, former 400-metre sprinter. It all started, of course, at
11:14getting that silver medal with the four-by-400-metre relay in the
11:171996 Olympics in Atlanta. I mean, that was a golden moment for the
11:23sport. That whole period, wasn't it, really? Roger Black, you,
11:26Michael Johnson, of course.
11:27Yeah, his famous gold shoes. I saw the back of those in the
11:30final with the 400. Just to make that Atlanta team, for example, I
11:33think the first five athletes in the British 400-metre trials all run
11:37under 45 seconds, which was better than the US team. So, you know, I was
11:40really lucky to be around. And I will add, by the way, sitting in this
11:43chair is more nerve-wracking than running in front of 110,000 people in
11:47the Olympic final. Do you still run now? Do you do any park runs or anything?
11:51I kind of did. And then I thought, I'm going to stop now, because people try and
11:55take me on traffic lights. Wherever I am, people try and waste me. Oh, yeah, it's just
11:58like, yeah. And the worst thing is, when I do things like the London Marathon, which I'm
12:02never going to be good at long distance, the amount of people who tap me on the back as
12:06they go past, I say, come on, mate, you're an Olympic medalist, you should be at the front.
12:08I used to run for 44 seconds, not a marathon, but yeah. Not two hours plus. Yeah, my job was easy.
12:14I started there, I ran around, I finished there, I got my drink and went home. So, yeah, I feel
12:19very fortunate that I made a living out of something I truly love doing. I would have run
12:23for nothing. It was an honour to represent this country and, you know, I tried to do it with pride.
12:28OK, well, you start with seven points. You've got two minutes on general knowledge. Here we go.
12:32What dairy product is processed in different ways to make various types described as single,
12:37double, soured and whipping? Milk. No, cream. What religious text is
12:41colloquially referred to as the good book? The Bible? Yes. Ned Flanders, Milhouse Van Houten
12:49and Nelson Muntz are recurring characters in which long-running animated television series?
12:54The Simpsons. Yes. The Bits were a group of ancient tribes who primarily inhabited the territory
13:00of which of the home nations of the UK? Scotland. Yes. Which American singer had his first
13:05solo UK number one single in 1984 with, I just called to say I love you?
13:11Ah. Oh, come on. Rich T, Biscuit adverts. Um, I just can't. I can't believe I'm going blank on this.
13:20Just one second. Absolutely. I've gone blank. Legend.
13:24I'll take that as a pass. Which day of the week is named after Tia, the Norse God of War?
13:29Tuesday. Yes. The 2024 action film directed by Ridley Scott starring Paul Mescal,
13:35Connie Nielsen and Denzel Washington is a sequel to what 2000 film?
13:42The Equaliser. No, Gladiator. The city of Toronto is the capital of which province of Canada?
13:46Ottawa. No, Ontario. Which Spanish tennis champion announced his retirement from the professional game
13:52in 2024 and played his last match in a Davis Cup tie against the Dutch player Botic van der Zanskamp.
13:59Rafa Nadal. Yes. The title of the best-selling 2003 novel by Lionel Shriver is We Need to Talk About Whom?
14:07Kevin. Yes. The Italian city of Carrara in Tuscany is famous as a source of what form of white limestone,
14:14favoured for centuries as a medium for sculpture? Marble. Yes. The popular board game launched in the
14:19early 1980s that requires players to make strategic decisions in a second world war setting has the
14:24illustrative name Axis and what? Allies. Yes. What percussion instrument is a small hand-held
14:31drum with jingling metal discs set into its wooden frame? Can you repeat the question? Am I allowed that?
14:39No. I'm afraid not. Symbol. No, the tambourine. Ah, silly me. Ewan, you had just a one past the American
14:48singer who had his first solo UK number one single in 1984 with I just called to say I love you. Stevie
14:53Wanda. Ah, it wasn't. Ah, yeah. Of course it's Stevie Wanda. And at the end of that round, Ewan,
14:57you've got 15 points. Thank you. Next up, it's Sophie. Sophie, a Doctor Who legend of course,
15:19viewers will know you as Ace, companion to the seventh Doctor, Sylvester McCoy. And in many ways,
15:25a groundbreaking character for that role. Yes, I'm very proud to have played her. She was a very
15:30realistic character and very tough as well and emotional. And you had a distinctive style as
15:36well. I mean, you wore a pretty classic bomber jacket while you were acting as Ace and that's
15:42something that is totally identified with that role now. I'm very proud of that because it was my idea.
15:48It was a black flight jacket covered in patches and badges and safety pins and it was a kind of
15:56a real statement. Did she have any iconic moments? What people probably remember me for and will maybe
16:02go on my gravestone is she beat up a Dalek with a baseball bat. You actually replaced the role in 2022.
16:10You're sort of part of the folklore of the programme now, aren't you? It was so brilliant to be invited
16:16back and I beat up another Dalek with a baseball bat, so... You did it again. I did it again.
16:22Well, let's see how you do on General Knowledge. Sophie, you start with seven points. The score to beat
16:27as it stands is 15 points and you've got two minutes on General Knowledge. Here we go. The term
16:32Auf Wiedersehen means goodbye in what European language? German. Yes. What large mammal,
16:37native to Africa and Asia, is sometimes referred to as the Ship of the Desert? Elephant? No,
16:44Camel. What prehistoric stone circle is coupled with nearby Avebury and associated sites in the name
16:50of a UNESCO World Heritage Site in southern England? Stonehenge. Yes. In the 1980s, the British athletes
16:57Tessa Sanderson and Fatima Whitbread were Olympic medalists in what throwing events? Javelin. Yes.
17:02What relation was Edward VIII to George VI, who succeeded him as king in 1936?
17:10Father. No, brother. Between 2003 and 2009, which British band topped the UK albums chart with
17:16Absolution, Black Holes and Revelations and The Resistance? Pass. Homburg,
17:22Bota and Trilby are styles of what clothing accessory? Hat. Yes. What decimal number is written in binary
17:29notation as 1-1? 11. No, three. The 1970 film starring Richard Harris as an English aristocrat
17:39who is captured by a Native American tribe is entitled A Man Called What? Pass.
17:49The Gravelly Hill interchange on the M6 near Birmingham, noted for its complex network of flyovers
17:55and underpasses, is commonly known by what pasta-related nicknames? Spaghetti.
18:00More? Spaghetti Junction. Yes. What television series about newly qualified police officers working
18:05in Belfast won a BAFTA in 2025 in the drama series category? Oh, Line of Duty? No, Blue Lights.
18:12In mythology, the powerful ancient Egyptian deity known as Re or Ra was primarily associated with which
18:18celestial body? Sun. Yes. The Haight-Ashbury district noted as a centre of the 1960s counterculture
18:25is in which California city? LA? No, San Francisco. The actress Patsy Kensic gave birth to a son...
18:33I've started, so I'll finish. The actress Patsy Kensic gave birth to a son named Lennon in 1999
18:38while she was married to which singer? Hmm. Oh. Don't know. Pass. It's Liam Gallagher. Oh, yes, of course.
18:51Sophie, you had two other passes. The 1970 film with Richard Harris as an English aristocrat is A Man Called
18:57Horse. Oh. And the British band that topped the UK album's chart with Absolution, Black Holes and
19:02Revelations. That's Muse. So, at the end of that round, Sophie, you've got 13 points. Thank you.
19:19Next up, it's Ashley.
19:27Ashley, people will recognise you as the regular social commentator on This Morning.
19:33Tell us about your role on the show. I would like to say my role is fighting for social injustice.
19:39I love it. I think, you know, we try to discuss the things that people at home are talking about
19:45and it's really important that we have differing opinions so that we can show that you can have
19:49healthy debate. Are there any particular topics then that you're focused on, that you're passionate about?
19:55I'd say my biggest passion is equality. So, whether that's, well, equality in all forms,
20:00but my lived experience as a woman would be feminism. I mean, your special subject was Lady Constance
20:06Lytton, a suffragette. Why did you choose her in particular? I think she was a bit of a badass,
20:11if I'm allowed to say that. Kind of an unsung hero of the movement. And I think so often we hear
20:16people died for our right to vote get thrown around, but we don't necessarily hear the individual
20:21stories. Right. So, what's next? Hopefully do well on this. That's about the only thing that I can
20:27think of right now. All right. Let's check out your general knowledge then because, Ashley,
20:33you start with eight points. The score to beat as it stands is 15 points. You've got two minutes on
20:38general knowledge. Here we go. A palpitation is a noticeable change or irregularity in the functioning
20:44of which organ in the human body? Heart. Yes. In 1985, an expedition led by the oceanographer
20:50Robert Ballard located the wreck of which famous ocean liner? Titanic? Yes. The chorus of what UK
20:57number one single for Gloria Gaynor features the words, oh, as long as I know how to love,
21:03I know I'll stay alive. Am I saying a singer? A song? I'll read the question again. The chorus of
21:12what UK number one single for Gloria Gaynor features the words, oh, as long as I know how to love,
21:17I know I'll stay alive. I will survive. Yes. On a standard London Monopoly board,
21:22the red properties are The Strand, Trafalgar Square and what street? Strand...
21:27Parmal? No, Fleet Street. The nickname Henman Hill for one of the spectator areas at the Wimbledon
21:35tennis tournament was given in honour of a British player with what first name?
21:39Tim? Yes. A 2025 film directed by James Gunn stars David Correnswet as which comic book hero and title
21:47character? Superhero? Superman? No, I have to accept your first answer. It is Superman. The positive numbers
21:55that are factors of ten as well as one and ten itself are two and what other number? Four? No,
22:02five. Old Deuteronomy, Rum Tum Tugger and Moncus Trap are characters in which musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber?
22:10Oh, a side story. No, Cats. In the 2010s, Susan Phillips, Helen Martin and Lubaina Himid
22:16were winners of which prestigious annual British art award? BAFTA. No, the Turner Prize. The word
22:22hi-fi is an abbreviation of what two-word term for good quality sound equipment?
22:29Hi. More? Five. No, fidelity. In July 2025, the drummer George Daniel, an early member of the band
22:39in 1975, married which singer? Charlie XCX. It was Charlie XCX. Ashley, at the end of that round,
22:48you had no passes. You got 13 points. Thanks. And finally, let's have Mobin again, please.
23:09Mobin, you're a BAFTA award-winning documentary maker, journalist known for your hard-hitting
23:14documentaries. And your latest project, which is on BBC Three, is all about prisons.
23:20I've been working on it for about a year with an amazing team. I spent quite a lot of time
23:25with drug dealers that get contraband into prison, with prison guards who've been corrupted and speak
23:32openly. It's basically all the people that you can imagine who would normally run in the other
23:38direction and wouldn't want to speak about their experiences. Have you found yourself in any really
23:42difficult situations? I've been in one situation where I've been shot at by the Taliban for a panorama.
23:50It's always been touch wood. It's always been okay in the end and it's always been worth it.
23:54And you chose Prince as your specialist subject. You've seen him 53 times. I'm sorry,
24:00I'm going to have to get BBC verified to check that. Is that true? Yeah. 53 times. I spent a lot of
24:07my time following Prince around. And thankfully, he came to the UK a lot. Clive, I'll tell you
24:13something. I've even been on stage with Prince. Really? Yeah, it was in 2014. It was the Montreux
24:18Jazz Festival. And I kind of half-strolled, half-danced over to him. He was at his keyboard. He was just
24:25about to sing When Doves Cry. And I told him that I loved him. And he put his hand on his chest and
24:30nodded at me. It was a beautiful moment. It will stay with me forever. Mobin, you start with 10
24:36points. The score to beat to become a celebrity mastermind is Ewan's 15 points. You've got two
24:41minutes on general knowledge. Here we go. In which sport does the slang term, the 19th hole,
24:46refer to the bar attended after a game? Golf. Yes. According to the title of a song written by
24:51Jules Stein and Leo Robin. For a 1949 stage musical, what gemstones are a girl's best friend?
24:58Diamonds. Yes. Which chess piece is sometimes called a castle?
25:05A boss? No. Rook. In the phrase, Richard of York gave battle in vain, used to remember the order of
25:11the colours of the rainbow. What colour is represented by the name Richard? Green. No. Red. Cagliari is the
25:17largest city on which Italian island in the Mediterranean Sea? Uh, Sicily. No. Sardinia.
25:23Which Canadian singer had a UK hit album in 2025 entitled Swag, featuring the chart-topping single
25:29Daisies? Justin Bieber. Yes. In the children's animated television series Pingu, the title character
25:34is what type of flightless bird? Penguin. Yes. The UK joined the European Economic Community,
25:39the EEC, in 1973, at the same time as Denmark and which other country? Holland. No. Ireland.
25:46What term for an animal with a mainly meat-based diet is derived from a Latin word meaning flesh-eating?
25:52Carnivore. Yes. In the 1996 biographical film Basquiat, based on the life of the New York graffiti
25:57artist, David Bowie plays which American pop artist? Pass.
26:07What two-word French term used in English to denote top-quality cooking in the traditional French
26:12style translates literally as high cookery? Pass. What's the professional first name of the award-winning
26:21comedian, musician, and writer born in Bath in 1965 as Mark Robert Bailey?
26:27Tom? No. Bill. In the acronym R.I.C.E. for the recommended procedure to help reduce swelling
26:33and pain in minor injuries? The letter R stands for what word?
26:39Rheumatoid. No. Rest. The words Kesh, which refers to uncut hair. I've started so I'll finish. The words
26:45Kesh, which refers to uncut hair, and Kanga, a name for a small wooden comb, relate to two of the
26:52articles of faith that signify a commitment to which religion?
26:56Sikhism. It is Sikhism. Mobin, you had two passes. The two-word French term used in English to denote
27:04top-quality cooking, haute cuisine. Of course. And in the film Basquiat, David Bowie plays the American
27:11pop artist Andy Warhol. Andy Warhol. But it doesn't matter. Mobin, at the end of that round, you've got 16
27:19points. You are a celebrity mastermind champion. I'm so pleased. Thank you.
27:32Let's have a look at the final scores. In joint third place with 13 points each, Sophie Aldred and
27:38Ashley James. In second place with 15 points, it's Ewan Thomas, which means in first place with 16
27:43points. He just squeaked it. It's Mobin Azhar. So he takes home the trophy and is tonight's celebrity
27:49mastermind winner.
27:55Many, many congratulations, Mobin.
27:57This is getting pride of place. Thank you so much. I am so pleased. I really am.
28:02Wonderful. Well done. Thank you.
28:04You don't have to be a celebrity to take part in the regular mastermind program. If you'd like to
28:08appear in the next series, you can apply online at bbc.co.uk slash mastermind. And you can follow
28:14us at mastermind quiz. Join us again next time for more masterminds. Thanks for watching. Bye for now.
28:26My mind is blown. You know, the thing is, everyone does this. Yeah, it's great to take part. Yeah,
28:31it's great to step up. I really wanted to win. And now I have some so pleased.
28:38I'll see you next time.
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