Daily Mail

Top Gear reunited … but are BBC stars planning to launch rival show?

- By Media and Technology Editor

TOP Gear might be close to the end of the road – but it looks as though its three stars are working out an alternativ­e destinatio­n.

A mystery meeting between Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond yesterday fuelled speculatio­n that the trio could be getting ready to announce a new motoring show with another broadcaste­r.

Also present at the meeting was Andy Wilman, the show’s executive producer and a close friend of Mr Clarkson. Regarded as the brains behind Top Gear, Mr Wilman quit his role yesterday.

And just hours earlier, Mr May declared that he and Mr Hammond would not return to the show without Mr Clarkson.

Pictured together for the first time since Mr Clarkson was sacked last month, the three hosts of the BBC2 series looked relaxed and jovial after the meeting at Mr Clarkson’s flat in West London.

The presence of Mr Wilman will only heighten speculatio­n that the group could move en masse and launch a new show on a rival channel. ITV is tipped as a potential contender, alongside Netflix, the online video streaming service.

Mr Wilman’s departure comes a month after he sent the show’s team an email titled ‘au revoir’.

It was written soon after Mr Clarkson, 55, was sacked for punching producer Oisin Tymon in a row over steak. At the time, Mr Wilman denied it was a ‘resignatio­n statement’, but it thanks staff for their efforts and says: ‘At least we left ’em wanting more. And that alone, when you think about it, is quite an achievemen­t for a show that started 13 years ago.’

He added: ‘For those of you who still rely on it for work, don’t worry, because the BBC will make sure the show continues.

‘Our stint as guardians of Top Gear was a good one, but we were only part of the show’s history, not the whole of it. Those two words are bigger than us.’ In a newspaper interview yesterday, Mr May, who has co-hosted the series since 1999, insisted it would be ‘daft’ to do it without Mr Clarkson.

‘Me and Hammond with a surrogate Jeremy is a non-starter. It has to be the three of us,’ he said.

Last night Mr May’s agent tried to play down rumours of defection, insisting the 53-year- old has not formally left the BBC and that ‘conversati­ons regarding the future of BBC’s Top Gear are ongoing’.

The BBC, which still owns the rights to the Top Gear name and format, has said it will bring it back next year in a new incarnatio­n. The brand raised around £50million a year before Mr Clarkson left.

 ??  ?? Mystery meeting: A relaxed Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond in London yesterday
Mystery meeting: A relaxed Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond in London yesterday
 ??  ?? Old friends: With Andy Wilman
Old friends: With Andy Wilman

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