| The presenters
Robert Llewellyn
Scrapheap Challenge has inspired garden-shed engineers up and down the country, but presenter Robert Llewellyn is most proud of the inspiration the series gives to children.
'Kids love the show,' says Robert, who lives in Gloucestershire with his wife and two children. 'We get tons of letters from children with diagrams of their mad inventions. My son Louis is seven and he rushes over to his Duplo set to build things after the show has gone out.
'A lot of kids just arent interested in science at the moment, but the series seems to inspire them they go out and look at their parents cars and washing machines and they understand the principles that make them work.'
Kicked out of school
But despite his current enthusiasm for learning, Robert was actually kicked out of school. He puts this down to two things: 'Well, I was a ghastly, horrible kid at 16. But the teaching was pretty terrible too I used to refuse to do maths because I couldnt see the point and the art master let me sit in on his lessons instead.
'I wish Id shut up and listened a bit more. I have regrets that I could have done so much more. But they decided to kick me out and I became a professional hippy.'
Rubber mask
Roberts apparent early lack of promise is now well in the past. Today he is a respected comedy actor, with credits including Red Dwarf (he plays rubber-faced robot Kryten) and The Joeys, which, although Perrier-nominated at the Edinburgh Festival, he describes as an agitprop '70s theatre group with horrible '80s haircuts.
'I started in comedy around the time that the Comic Strip and the Comedy Store were at their peak,' says Robert. 'We used to play in pubs and clubs all over London as well as the Edinburgh Festival. We became pretty successful in fact, my claim to fame is that Ben Elton used to be our warm-up man.
'I used to write most of the material and I ended up getting a call from Paul Jackson, whos now head of comedy at the BBC. He offered me the part of Kryten on Red Dwarf and were still going strong were shooting a film next year. The show has been very good for me, but fortunately I dont get recognised much because of the rubber mask I wear.'
Rave reviews
Robert has also written a number of books. These include The Man in the Rubber Mask, a comic memoir of his time in Red Dwarf, chock full of back-stage stories, and Thin He Was and Filthy-Haired, about the first year he lived away from the parental home, when he was just 17, and did the washing up for the future rulers of England at Oxford.
His first novel, The Man on Platform Five, is now in paperback and is being developed into a movie, set in New York. His second, Punchbag, received rave reviews. A third, Sudden Wealth, has just come out.
A collection of junk
Robert has now found his vocation cajoling the teams on Scrapheap Challenge. Hes full of admiration for the contestants who, using only a collection of junk, have just ten hours to construct outlandish machines.
'Its great fun to work on and I take my hat off to the guys. They can muster up anything from a flying machine to a steam-powered car in less time than I could put up a shelf.'
Robert Llewellyn's website
www.llew.co.uk/
Red Dwarf
www.reddwarf.co.uk/.
Robert Llewellyn speaks ...
www.bwebb.tv/
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