TV
and radio personality Chris Evans will replace Jeremy Clarkson as the
lead presenter of an all-new Top Gear line-up, the BBC has announced.
Evans said he was "thrilled" to get the job, describing the motoring show as his "favourite programme of all time".
"I promise I will do everything I possibly can to respect what has gone on before and take the show forward," he added.
Clarkson was dropped in March after punching a producer while on location.
Car
enthusiast Evans, who has signed a three-year deal with the BBC Two
show, had been tipped to replace his good friend Clarkson but had
previously insisted he was not interested.
An "all-new" line-up means Clarkson's co-hosts Richard Hammond and James May will not be involved.
The
BBC's David Sillito said that while Chris Evans was a household name,
Clarkson had a long-running association with Top Gear and his were big
shoes to fill.
"Everything about Top Gear was Clarkson, May and Hammond, primarily Clarkson," he said.
"We
have no idea who Evans will be filming the new series with. It could be
one presenter, two, a whole team, or it could be a different set of
presenters every week."
Top Gear is watched by some 350 million
viewers worldwide and is one of the BBC's biggest shows, with overseas
sales worth an estimated £50m a year.
'Cheeky unpredictability'
Once the news broke, Evans tweeted:
"First tweet as new Top Gear host. I would like to say Jeremy, Richard
& James are the greatest. And NO I'm not leaving the R2 Breakfast
Show."
And in a statement, he said: "I'm thrilled, Top Gear is my favourite programme of all time.
"Created
by a host of brilliant minds who love cars and understand how to make
the massively complicated come across as fun, devil-may-care and
effortless.
"When in fact of course, it's anything but and that's the genius of Top Gear's global success."
Chris Evans, seen here with Jeremy Clarkson,
currently hosts the BBC Radio 2 breakfast show and the One Show
Controller of BBC Two and BBC
Four Kim Shillinglaw said she was "delighted" that Evans would be
presenting the next series of Top Gear.
"His knowledge of and
passion for cars are well known, and combined with his sheer
inventiveness and cheeky unpredictability, he is the perfect choice to
take our much-loved show into the future," she said.
"Chris is a
huge fan of Top Gear and has great respect for the craft and work ethic
of one of the best production teams in the world.
"He knows the
phenomenal attention to detail it takes to make a single sequence of Top
Gear, let alone a whole series. He is already full of brilliant ideas
and I can't wait for him to get started."
Analysis: Mark Savage - BBC News entertainment reporter
There's
a very telling line in Chris Evans' statement: "I promise I will do
everything I possibly can to respect what has gone on before and take
the show forward."
The 49-year-old is acutely aware of Top Gear's reputation - and the reaction his appointment will provoke.
On
paper, he's a perfect replacement for his good friend Jeremy Clarkson. A
car nut with a motor mouth and a track record in steering a television
juggernaut to success.
But he's also a divisive figure, with many viewers put off by the unruly, egotistical behaviour of his tabloid years.
Evans even admitted there was a "50/50 split" among Top Gear fans over whether his involvement was a good idea.
However, he added: "In TV or radio, if you get a 50/50 love/hate reaction that usually equals massive hit."
Only time will tell. Production
on the new series of Top Gear will start in the next few weeks and the
BBC said more information would be announced in due course.
Jeremy Clarkson was suspended, then dropped, by the BBC in March following a "fracas" with a producer at a hotel.
His
final appearance on Top Gear will be shown on 28 June. The episode will
be made up of two films shot before Clarkson was suspended, with
Hammond and May presenting links from the studio.
Viewers will see
Clarkson, Hammond and May behind the wheel of classic cars and
beaten-up 4x4s in their final challenges as a trio.
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