Tenable
Tenable is a British game show that aired on ITV from 14 November 2016 to 30 August 2024. Hosted primarily by Warwick Davis, with Sally Lindsay serving as a guest host for a brief period in 2021, the programme features teams of contestants answering questions based on lists of the top ten in various categories, aiming to reach a "Tenable" score in the final round.[1][2] Produced by Thief Productions for ITV Studios, it ran for multiple series and specials, including celebrity editions.[3]Overview
Concept and Format
Tenable was a British daytime quiz show on ITV1 featuring teams of five contestants, typically close-knit groups such as family members or friends, who collaborated to answer questions drawn from pre-researched top-10 lists across varied categories including history, pop culture, and sports.[4][5] One contestant was designated as the team captain, responsible for selecting categories and assigning players to individual challenges, while also possessing the ability to overrule answers in certain situations to guide the team's progress.[5][6] The show was axed after seven series, with the cancellation announced in September 2024 and no revival planned as of November 2025.[7] The central premise revolved around constructing the "Tenable Tower," a 10-letter word built progressively by successfully completing these top-10 lists, with each list corresponding to a specific letter and requiring players to name relevant items—such as the first ten James Bond films for a pop culture category—to advance the tower.[5] The objective was to accumulate cash through accurate responses while ensuring team survival, as individual players risked elimination if they failed to contribute at least five correct answers in their solo attempts, thereby preventing them from participating in the final jackpot round.[4][5] Prize mechanics centered on banking money per completed list, where five correct answers yielded £1,000, scaling up incrementally to £25,000 for all ten items, allowing the team pot to grow with each successful contribution to the tower.[5] The maximum potential jackpot of £125,000 was achievable if the full amounts were banked across the game's stages, with winnings ultimately split among the remaining team members who reached and performed in the endgame.[5][6] Episodes ran for approximately 45 minutes and were scheduled in ITV1's weekday daytime slot.[8]Hosts
Warwick Davis served as the primary host of Tenable from its premiere on 14 November 2016 until the final episode on 30 August 2024, presenting over 300 regular episodes and all specials aside from periods of substitution.[9][10] An English actor renowned for his roles as Professor Flitwick and Griphook in the Harry Potter film series and as Wicket the Ewok in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi, Davis brought his established screen presence to the quiz show, hosting solo without co-hosts or assistants. His hosting style featured a humorous and engaging delivery, often incorporating jokes and light-hearted interactions to encourage team collaboration among contestants.[11][12] In April and May 2021, actress Sally Lindsay substituted for Davis across 25 episodes of series five, stepping in due to his scheduling conflicts with other filming commitments.[13] Known for portraying Shelley Unwin in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street from 2001 to 2006, Lindsay adopted a warm and relatable approach, describing her style as relaxed while focusing on building rapport with contestants and cheering them on.[14][15] There was no permanent host transition following Lindsay's stint, as Davis returned to full duties for subsequent episodes and series. Davis's celebrity status from major film franchises enhanced the show's visibility and appeal during its eight-year run.[16]Production
Development and Production Company
Tenable debuted on 14 November 2016 on ITV1 as a daytime quiz show.[10] The program was developed by Initial, a production company that forms part of Banijay UK, focusing on a team-based format where contestants answer questions drawn from top 10 lists to build a virtual tower and accumulate cash prizes.[17] ITV commissioned the show for multiple series, leading to the production of seven regular series totaling 306 episodes, in addition to variants like All-Stars editions.[10] The core production team at Initial was led by executive producer Richard Greenwood, with no individual creators credited beyond the company's involvement.[18] Designed as an efficient daytime production, Tenable featured escalating prize pots that could reach £125,000 for a perfect final round, appealing to a broad audience through its play-along style.[19] The series concluded after its seventh run in 2024, when ITV opted not to renew it.[20]Filming and Set Design
The first series of Tenable was filmed at the BBC Elstree Centre in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, in 2016. Subsequent series from 2017 to 2024 were recorded at Pinewood Studios in Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, selected for its expansive facilities suitable for television production.[21][22] The set features a central "Tenable Tower," a prominent structure with 10 illuminated slots designed to represent the top 10 positions in each category list, lighting up progressively as contestants correctly name entries. Teams stand at dedicated podiums equipped for multiple players, while surrounding digital screens display category prompts, answer lists, and visual aids to enhance the on-air presentation. Episodes are typically shot in blocks of around 3 per day in front of a live studio audience to capture energetic responses, with post-production handling the addition of graphics, sound effects, and thematic music to finalize each 60-minute program. Technical aspects include custom software developed for real-time verification of contestant answers against pre-researched top 10 lists, ensuring accuracy during gameplay. Dynamic lighting focuses on the tower to highlight progress and tension as slots fill. Over the run, the core set design remained consistent, with minor updates to lighting and digital elements for refreshed visuals in later series, maintaining the show's signature look without major overhauls.Gameplay
Rounds 1 to 4
The first four rounds of Tenable consist of individual challenges where non-captain team members attempt to name items from top-10 lists in assigned categories, building the team's cash pot while qualifying players for later stages. A team of five—comprising one captain and four teammates—competes, with the captain selecting which teammate plays each round based on the announced category, ensuring each teammate participates exactly once across these rounds. Categories typically involve survey-based top-10 lists tied to a theme, such as the top 10 countries beginning with a specific letter or the top 10 films in a series.[3][5] In each round, the selected player provides answers sequentially, aiming for at least five correct responses to qualify personally and contribute to the team's progress. Correct answers are validated against the pre-determined list, and the player may choose to stop after five or more to secure the winnings or continue for higher amounts, though two incorrect answers (including failed overrules) end the round without banking if fewer than five were achieved. The team has access to limited aids: up to three "nominate" lifelines per game, allowing the player to solicit a suggestion from a teammate (which they can accept or reject), and one "overrule" per round, where the captain proposes a replacement for a given answer that is then verified separately. Eliminated players (those with fewer than five correct) sit out subsequent participation but the banked money from successful rounds carries over to the team's total with no risk of loss. The Tenable Tower is a display board that reveals correct answers from the top-10 list as they are provided.[3][5] Winnings scale with the number of correct answers achieved in a round, as shown below:| Number of Correct Answers | Amount Added to Pot |
|---|---|
| 5 | £1,000 |
| 6 | £2,500 |
| 7 | £5,000 |
| 8 | £10,000 |
| 9 | £15,000 |
| 10 | £25,000 |
Round 5
In Round 5, the team captain plays solo, attempting to name items from a top 10 list in the announced category to bank additional prize money and potentially reinstate teammates. Unlike Rounds 1 to 4, the overrule option is unavailable, forcing the captain to rely solely on their own knowledge without substituting teammate answers, though remaining nominate lifelines may be used with non-eliminated teammates. The captain provides answers one at a time and can stop after any correct response or continue until giving an incorrect one, with each correct answer revealed on the Tenable Tower display.[3] If the captain names fewer than five correct answers before stopping or erring, no money is banked from this round, though the captain always advances to the final. Achieving five or more correct answers locks in prize money according to the ladder: £1,000 for five, £2,500 for six, £5,000 for seven, £10,000 for eight, £15,000 for nine, and £25,000 for ten, added to the total accumulated from prior rounds. The round concludes upon an incorrect answer, voluntary stop, or completion of the list.[3][23] A distinctive mechanic in Round 5 allows the captain to reinstate eliminated teammates from previous rounds, potentially enlarging the team for the final. After any correct answer that reaches or advances a money level (starting from the fifth correct), the captain can opt to bring back one eliminated player by forfeiting the incremental prize value for that step, effectively regressing the money ladder by one position—for instance, sacrificing the upgrade from £1,000 to £2,500 to reinstate after six correct answers. This process can be repeated after each subsequent money-awarding answer, enabling up to four reinstatements (one per eliminated teammate), but each comes at the cost of reduced winnings from the round. Reinstated players advance to the final alongside the captain only if the captain completes the list or stops successfully, but contribute no additional cash from Round 5. Non-reinstated players are permanently eliminated.[3][24] Strategically, Round 5 demands the captain weigh aggressive play for maximum earnings against selective reinstatements to bolster team strength, as more players in the final provide diverse input for collaborative answering. The banked total from this round, net of any sacrifices, combines with prior accumulations to set the stake for the ensuing final.[3]Final Tenable
The Final Tenable serves as the climactic endgame of the quiz show, where the surviving team of 2 to 5 players—potentially including those reinstated during Round 5—works together to name all 10 items from a new top-10 list to win the jackpot. If no money has been banked prior to the final, £500 is added to the pot and the captain plays alone. The jackpot, comprising the cumulative cash banked across prior rounds, stands as the prize to be split equally among the remaining players upon successful completion of the list.[25][5] Gameplay proceeds with the team selecting one of two offered categories, after which host Warwick Davis reveals a top-10 list for the chosen subject. Players participate one at a time, with the order determined by the team captain; each has 60 seconds per turn to deliver correct answers, which progressively reveal items on the Tenable Tower. A wrong answer immediately eliminates that player, heightening the pressure as the team strives to reach all 10 without depleting its roster. Players take turns without conferring. Davis actively manages the proceedings by unveiling the category, confirming answers against the list, and amplifying dramatic tension through commentary and reveals.[25] Successful progression reveals all 10 items, securing the entire jackpot for equal division. Should all players be eliminated prior to full completion, the team wins nothing (a consolation tea towel from series 6 onward). This mechanics-driven format underscores high-risk teamwork, where partial success yields no monetary reward.[25]Variants and Specials
Tenable: All-Stars
Tenable: All-Stars was a four-episode celebrity spin-off of the quiz show Tenable, which aired sporadically on ITV throughout 2019.[26] The series featured teams composed of well-known personalities from various fields, including former Olympians, reality television contestants, pantomime performers, and politicians, competing collaboratively to fill top-10 lists in pursuit of substantial prizes.[27][28][29] The format retained the core gameplay of the regular series, where teams attempted to complete a "Tenable Tower" of 10 lists to reach a potential jackpot of £125,000, but with key adaptations for the celebrity edition. All winnings were donated to charities selected by the participants, and failing teams received a consolation prize of £1,000 per member for their causes in most episodes.[26] Question categories were often customized to align with the teams' shared expertise or backgrounds, such as sports-related lists for Olympians or political themes for former MPs, enhancing the entertainment value through the celebrities' personal anecdotes.[27][30] Hosted by Warwick Davis, the episodes were filmed at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire. The first episode, titled "The Medal Heads" and aired on 5 May 2019, featured Olympians Kriss Akabusi, Tessa Sanderson, Iwan Thomas, Jade Johnson, and Sharron Davies, who won £38,500 for their charities.[27][31] "The Junglist Massive," broadcast on 12 May 2019, brought together I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! alumni Tony Blackburn, Christopher Biggins, Joe Pasquale, Martin Roberts, and Kim Woodburn, securing £4,000.[30] The pantomime-themed "It's Behind You," a Christmas special aired on 26 December 2019, starred Debbie McGee, Paul Chuckle, Louie Spence, Rustie Lee, and ventriloquist Paul Zerdin with his puppets, raising £2,500.[28][32] Finally, "The Party Animals" on 29 December 2019 showcased politicians Edwina Currie, George Galloway, John Sergeant, Ann Widdecombe, and Lembit Öpik, who claimed £10,500 for charity-supported causes.[30][33] As a promotional initiative by ITV, Tenable: All-Stars leveraged celebrity appeal to boost viewership during off-peak slots, incorporating elevated production elements like thematic team intros and light-hearted banter to differentiate it from standard episodes.[29] The series was generally received as an enjoyable diversion that highlighted charitable giving, though its limited run underscored its role as an occasional variant rather than a mainstay format.[34]Other Special Episodes
In addition to the celebrity-focused All-Stars format, Tenable has produced several themed special episodes featuring civilian contestants, often tied to charitable causes or seasonal events. These one-off installments maintain the core gameplay structure of answering Top 10 list questions to build the Tenable Tower, with potential prizes up to £125,000, but incorporate minor adaptations such as holiday-themed categories or event-specific question sets to align with the episode's focus.[35][36] The Christmas Cracker special aired on 25 December 2020, featuring a team of five panto performers known as The Panto Loons, who competed in a festive edition with holiday-related Top 10 lists, such as Christmas traditions and seasonal trivia. Hosted by Warwick Davis, the episode emphasized family-friendly entertainment and culminated in the standard final Tenable round, though no specific prize amount won was publicly detailed beyond the format's maximum potential. This installment highlighted the show's adaptability for holiday broadcasting, drawing on pantomime themes to engage audiences during the Christmas period.[37][38][35] Soccer Aid specials represent another key category of non-recurring themed episodes, produced in support of UNICEF through the Soccer Aid for UNICEF initiative. The first such episode, broadcast on 1 September 2021 and hosted by Sally Lindsay, featured the London City Lionesses, a women's football team, answering football-themed Top 10 questions while competing for funds to benefit the charity.[39][40] A follow-up special aired on 8 June 2022, with five teammates from Glasgow Rangers Women's FC, dubbed The Teddy Bears, tackling similar sports-oriented lists in a bid to raise £125,000 for Soccer Aid, underscoring the show's occasional ties to major charitable football events.[35][41][42] A third Soccer Aid special aired on 7 June 2023, featuring a team of Primark colleagues named "Quick Off the Primark," who competed with sports-themed questions to support UNICEF. These episodes included subtle rule tweaks, like prioritizing soccer-related categories in early rounds, but preserved the intact core mechanics of the regular series.[43][44] At least four such specials have been confirmed beyond the All-Stars variants, with no ongoing series for these formats; they occasionally feature sports personalities as contestants, but detailed celebrity participation is covered separately in the All-Stars section.[3][35]Broadcast History
Regular Series Overview
Tenable ran for seven series as a regular daytime quiz show on ITV from 2016 to 2024.[45] The programme produced a total of 306 regular episodes, excluding specials and variants, with production batched in advance to support consistent weekday broadcasts in the 3–4 PM slot.[46][45] Scheduling followed a standard pattern of extended runs interrupted by summer breaks, allowing for seasonal hiatuses typical of ITV daytime programming.[47] The series breakdown reflects increasing episode volumes over time: Series 1 aired 20 episodes across late 2016 and early 2017; Series 2 expanded to 60 episodes from 2017 to 2018; subsequent series maintained high output, culminating in Series 7 with 25 episodes from 2023 to 2024.[48] Key milestones included the 100th episode, broadcast in 2018 during Series 3, marking the show's growing popularity in the daytime lineup.[49] Prize outcomes varied, with the maximum potential jackpot of £125,000 achieved multiple times by teams completing all five rounds perfectly, though such full wins were rare.[20] Typical episode payouts ranged from £20,000 to £30,000, establishing the show's reputation for substantial daytime rewards.[17] Throughout its run, the core format remained stable, with minor evolutions such as expanded category variety to refresh question types while preserving the Top 10 list structure and Tenable Tower mechanic.[3]Transmission Schedule
Tenable premiered on ITV1 on 14 November 2016 and concluded its original run on 30 August 2024, airing as a weekday daytime programme across seven series and various specials.[10][35] The regular series were broadcast in the following periods:| Series | Start Date | End Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 14 November 2016 | 9 December 2016 | 20 episodes |
| 2 | 30 October 2017 | 11 May 2018 | Extended run with breaks |
| 3 | 3 September 2018 | 8 March 2019 | |
| 4 | 14 October 2019 | 14 February 2020 | Interrupted by COVID-19 scheduling |
| 5 | 15 February 2021 | 1 September 2021 | Post-pandemic resumption |
| 6 | 8 June 2022 | 15 September 2023 | Included Soccer Aid special opener; 30 episodes |
| 7 | 7 June 2023 | 30 August 2024 | Final series; 25 episodes |