528 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
528 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
Monty Python Interview
|
|||
|
"Q" Magazine
|
|||
|
August, 1987
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It could have been The Toad-Elevating Moment. Or, had their eyes been more
|
|||
|
firmly focused on ratings, simply Sex & Violence. A Horse, A Bucket, A Spoon
|
|||
|
was another possibility, and, at one pint, the name Gwen Dibley figured in the
|
|||
|
negotiations. It very nearly was Owl-Stretching Time. But after hours of
|
|||
|
furious argument and compromise it became Monty Python's Flying Circus. Comedy
|
|||
|
would never be the same again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Monty Python is the most successful comedy team these Isles have yet produced,
|
|||
|
outstripping such precursors as The Goons and Beyond The Fringe outfits as well
|
|||
|
as talented later ensembles like the Not The Nine O'Clock News crew. Python's
|
|||
|
was a quintessentially British type of humour that found favour as far afield
|
|||
|
as America, Japan and Russia, and disfavour - in the form of censorship - in
|
|||
|
almost as many places. They brought a new word, "Pythonic", into the language,
|
|||
|
with sketches like The Spanish Inquisition, The Summarise Proust Competition,
|
|||
|
Blackmail, The Dead Parrot, The Australian Philosophy Department and Sam
|
|||
|
Peckinpah's Salad Days, and characters like The Colonel, Mr. Gumby, and Da
|
|||
|
Bishop. And they even devised a joke so funny it could only be told in German.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The various books, records, films and spin-off series have enabled with six
|
|||
|
individual Pythons to suffer the torture of the comfy chair whenever they wish.
|
|||
|
Indeed, Terry Gilliam is now so rich he could afford to buy an old church bell-
|
|||
|
tower and stick it on top of the gazebo at the bottom of his beautifully
|
|||
|
manicured and landscaeped garden; why, he's so rich, even his pond has won
|
|||
|
awards!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now, just as the BBC has embarked on a re-run of the second Python series, the
|
|||
|
group members themselves have decided, after more than a decade concentrating
|
|||
|
on their individual projects, to team up again as a film development company,
|
|||
|
Prominent Features. Four films - Gilliam's Adventures of Baron Munchausen,
|
|||
|
Terry Jones's Erik The Viking, John Cleeses's A Fish Called Wanda and Michael
|
|||
|
Palin's American Friends - are already at various stages of development, and
|
|||
|
more are to follow shortly. At the last count, since the birth of Python, the
|
|||
|
six have participated in some 21 films, nine TV series, 13 TV one-offs, four
|
|||
|
plays and an opera, and released 10 LPs, published 22 books, founded two
|
|||
|
magazines and two video companies, with plenty more products in the pipeline.
|
|||
|
It all seems a long, long way from the time six callow Oxbridge graduates were
|
|||
|
hustling writing spots on The Frost Report and making their first tentative
|
|||
|
steps with At Last The 1948 Show and Do Not Adjust Your Set. What can they
|
|||
|
have been thinking of, back in those fabulous '60's?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"We had no idea what we were doing when we set out - it was very vague," says
|
|||
|
Idle, at 44 the youngest of the pythons. "I think we had more of an idea of
|
|||
|
what we didn't want to do than what we did, so the early reaction was a bit
|
|||
|
puzzling. And then it found its audience- or its audience found it - helped by
|
|||
|
some eccentric programme planning which made it an outsider show."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Graham Chapman concurs with this view on the Beeb: "The BBC thought it was
|
|||
|
getting another in a long line of unsuccessful late-night ex-undergraduate
|
|||
|
'satire' shows. They were trying to find a successor to That Was The Week That
|
|||
|
Was then, and they still are."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The conventionally acknowledged precursor of Python was The Goon Show (although
|
|||
|
Idle was more influenced by the Beyond The Fringe team of Cook, Moore, Miller
|
|||
|
and Bennett - "when I saw that in 1962 I didn't know you were allowed to be so
|
|||
|
funny!"), TV comedy int he '60s being a pretty primitive affair, its pinnacles
|
|||
|
being Galton & Simpson's scripts for Hancock's Half Hour and Steptoe & Son, and
|
|||
|
Johnny Speight's for Till Death Us Do Part, all of which remained rooted in the
|
|||
|
single-set tradition inherited from stage comedy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Funnily enough," Says Michael Palin, "it was radio comedy like The Goons which
|
|||
|
was the more visually interesting. I know that's a silly thing to say but
|
|||
|
telly was not really dealing in an imaginative, surrealist way with images at
|
|||
|
all. Spike Milligan was the only person. In his Q series (started 1968) he
|
|||
|
succeeded in doing some very intersting and strange visual effects: pulling
|
|||
|
the camera back to reveal people carrying trees past a railway carriage
|
|||
|
repeatedly to show it going through the countryside, things like that. But
|
|||
|
very few others were experimenting with different images on telly, whereas The
|
|||
|
Goon Shows, in a strange way, had been about the imagination. That's what's so
|
|||
|
good about them, and why they didn't work on TV, because people tried to pin
|
|||
|
down what these Goon characters were, whereas on radio you imagined them. They
|
|||
|
were in your head."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Though five of the six Pythons were writer-performers with pedigrees as sketch,
|
|||
|
sitcom and gag-merchants - their pre-Python credits include such programmes as
|
|||
|
The Frost Report, Doctor In The House, No That's Me Over Here, I'm Sorry I'll
|
|||
|
Read That Again, The Illustrated Weekly Hudd, Marty (Feldman), We Have Ways Of
|
|||
|
Making You Laugh, Twice A Fortnight, The Late Show, A Series Of Birds, The Ken
|
|||
|
Dodd Show, Billy Cotton Bandshow and The Complete And Utter History of Britain
|
|||
|
- it was one of animator Terry Gilliam's earlier works, a Do Not Adjust Your
|
|||
|
Set animation called Elephants, that provided the structural format of the
|
|||
|
Python shows.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It was just a cyclical piece, totally stream of consciousness," says Gilliam.
|
|||
|
"I remember Harold Wilson's head was a hot-air balloon at one point and there
|
|||
|
were a pair of lovers on a park bench, hit by Cupid's arrow - only it's not
|
|||
|
Cupid, it's Indians... the main thing was there was a sign that said Beware Of
|
|||
|
The Elephants, and this guy walks past and an elephant falls from the sky and
|
|||
|
kills him. It was the idea of this continually changing, transmogrifying
|
|||
|
stream of consciousness images. I think Terry Jones was the most impressed
|
|||
|
with it, and felt we should have the shows in the same style."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I was very concerned, at the beginning, about giving soe shape to Python, some
|
|||
|
sort of texture that was different from other TV shows," explains Terry Jones.
|
|||
|
"Spike Milligan had just started his Q shows and I thought what he was doing
|
|||
|
was fantastic. He'd broken all the moulds. He didn't think about beginnings,
|
|||
|
middles and ends of the sketches any more - nothing had to pay off, it could
|
|||
|
just go into something else.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I was at my parents' home, just walking upstairs, and I remembered Terry
|
|||
|
Gilliam's Elephants animation, and I suddenly thought, That's it! We should do
|
|||
|
a whole show like that, one that just flows! We could have sketches that
|
|||
|
start, go into animation and then become something else, and nothing ever
|
|||
|
stops! I got terribly excited and rang up Mike and Terry, who immediately saw
|
|||
|
what I was on about."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the form of Python came from Gilliam via Jones, the content was more
|
|||
|
democratically arrived at, each writing team bringing ideas and sketches to the
|
|||
|
communal script conferences for criticism and/or development.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It was quite schoolboyish, in the sense that there was a lot of glee around,"
|
|||
|
recalls Palin. "We'd get something silly and inconsequential that made us all
|
|||
|
laugh. Python was already just a question of juxtapositions - something that
|
|||
|
didn't mean very much, or a name that was completely out of left field, putting
|
|||
|
that up against something else: connections between two completely incongruous
|
|||
|
points making a funny whole.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"When things were going right at a Python session, a sort of impetus got going
|
|||
|
that was very difficult to stop. What was difficult was writing it all down,
|
|||
|
the connections that were made by people sparking one another off. It was a
|
|||
|
glorious freedom. No-one was ever saying, A sketch has to be like this, or, It
|
|||
|
has to be this long, or, We have to have a singing act there; it was whatever
|
|||
|
we wanted it to be. And of course sometimes that involved wandering around in
|
|||
|
the wilderness and not coming up with anything at all. But when the ball
|
|||
|
started rolling we could have two or three-hour sessions that were
|
|||
|
extraordinary, both in the prodigiousness and the freshness of the material,
|
|||
|
because everyone in Python brought a slightly different way of looking at the
|
|||
|
material. Nothing was ever a convention."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It's weird," says Gilliam, "because it needsa ll of us to make it work. It's
|
|||
|
just this fortuitous combination that seems to click. Terry (Jones) and Mike
|
|||
|
worked together and they did more atmospheric pieces, like Njal's Saga, things
|
|||
|
that weren't sharp and precise - they rambled more, and were more conceptual in
|
|||
|
what they were doing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"John and Graham wrote together too. John is always thinking, trying to
|
|||
|
control things, put things in a different way, and Graham wanders off into
|
|||
|
strange, floating ideas that just come out of nowhere - 'Lemon Curry?' - so the
|
|||
|
combination is very interesting. Eric is the most chameleonic in the group; he
|
|||
|
does these great verbal diarrhoea things - the Travel Agent sketch is perhaps
|
|||
|
the most celebrated - that are just fantastic, all the wordplay things. But he
|
|||
|
would actually change his style and become something that blended styles, that
|
|||
|
held it all together a bit more."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cleese and Chapman, particularly, is a strange combination for a writing team.
|
|||
|
Cleese's hyperrational, step-by-step intellectual approach seems, on the face
|
|||
|
of it, far too rigid and pedestrian to gel with Chapman's more quixotic style.
|
|||
|
Chapman was capable of flashes of cruelty in his humour, which surfaced in
|
|||
|
Python as the sketches featuring animals (usually maltreated or dead, like the
|
|||
|
notorious Dead Parrot and Crunchy Frog ideas), confrontation and/or loud abuse,
|
|||
|
as in the Five-Minute Argument sketch. Basically, any sketch involving two
|
|||
|
people sitting at a desk arguing was Cleese and Chapman's. On one occasion,
|
|||
|
whilst filming a German Python show in Bavaria, the group visited Dachau
|
|||
|
concentration camp, only to find the guards on the point of closing it. Quick
|
|||
|
as a flash, Chapman blurted out "But we're Jewish, let us in!", a remark he
|
|||
|
immediately regretted. "Graham had flashes of sheer manic inspiration that
|
|||
|
transformed material, quite literally, from being something that was
|
|||
|
conventionally funny to being something quite extraordinary, that became known
|
|||
|
as Pythonic," says Palin. "There were long periods where Graham would sit and
|
|||
|
puff his pipe and not say very much, and large parts of the sketch would be
|
|||
|
written, and then Graham would just come in with an idea or suggestion that was
|
|||
|
so completely unexpected and odd that it gave itt the stamp of Python.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"John and Graham had a lot more reference books than Terry and I, and they
|
|||
|
would write what we called 'Thesaurus Sketches' - they would find a word and
|
|||
|
then repeat it endlessly, in all the synonyms. We tried to do abuse but no
|
|||
|
one's as good at abuse as John is, except Graham. As a partnership they're
|
|||
|
most intimidating."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It would be hard to find a more difficult method of writing a comedy show than
|
|||
|
to have six people sitting round at a table furiously criticising each other's
|
|||
|
work. Inevitably there wre rivalries and tensions, mostly originating in the
|
|||
|
almost total incompatibility between Cleese and Jones, who seem to have
|
|||
|
operated on a basis of something like mutual loathing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"John and Terry, at meetings, would be at opposite sides - John reason and
|
|||
|
Terry emotion - and they sort of battle dnad the rest of us would sort of dance
|
|||
|
around between them," says Gilliam, while Chapman, in his frank and revealing A
|
|||
|
Liar's Autobiography, reports that as early as the meeting which determined the
|
|||
|
group name, Cleese's patronising attitude towards Jones, and his references to
|
|||
|
the high-pitched wheedling noises with which Jones characteristically
|
|||
|
introduced his suggestions, drove the emotional Welshman to the very brink of
|
|||
|
violence. (For the record, Jones' suggestion was A Horse, A Bucket, A Spoon,
|
|||
|
while Chapman favoured his own Owl-Stretching Time and Palin Sex & Violence;
|
|||
|
the others' preferences are not noted.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It's the worst audience in the world," says Idle. "If you get big laughs
|
|||
|
there, then the piece is in."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Whilst the direction credit for And Now For Something Completely Different went
|
|||
|
to the series director Ian MacNaughton, Holy Grail was directed jointly by the
|
|||
|
two Terrys. For Gilliam, it was not a particularly pleasant job trying to
|
|||
|
direct his fellow Pythons.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I hated it. It was particularly bad because I'd been in my little
|
|||
|
cartoonist's garret for years and hadn't had to have any skills for dealing
|
|||
|
with people, as opposed to dealing with pieces of paper. We were suddenly out
|
|||
|
there with all these pressures on and it was quite clear I wasn't explaining
|
|||
|
myself very well. I was doubly angered because there were several shots that
|
|||
|
were technically complicated - scenes the others had written - that I was
|
|||
|
trying to get to work, and they didn't want ot bend down in their knee-armour
|
|||
|
because it was painful. I actually walked off a couple of times, went off in a
|
|||
|
snit, y'know - Fuck you, you wrote the sketch, you direct it!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It was very painful, that film. In the end, the way we did it was that Terry
|
|||
|
Jones - who was far better at working with the others - dealt with them, and I
|
|||
|
dealt with the camera and all this stuff and made it look the way it did. Most
|
|||
|
of the time it was all right because we agreed, but when we didn't agree it was
|
|||
|
ridiculous for the crew to have to listen to two directors arguing!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The style of the film was largely determined by economic necessity, says
|
|||
|
Gilliam, who showed great initiative in cutting corners such as, for one
|
|||
|
landscape shot, using a picture from a calendar with a candle held between
|
|||
|
camera and picture to give a hea1t haze.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"We've always cheated; we've always had to," he claims, "and it forces you into
|
|||
|
situations where you make these huge leaps of imagination, because there's
|
|||
|
nothing else you can do. The thing that frightens me, as we've worked with
|
|||
|
larger and larger budgets, is that it might limit the imagination. Because you
|
|||
|
can build a huge city you build a huge city, whereas if you've got a couple of
|
|||
|
bricks and a stick and you've got to make the appearance of a city you use
|
|||
|
cardboard castles like those in Holy Grail."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All of the Pythons bar Palin - whose forte lies more in performance and writing
|
|||
|
- have since tried their hand at direction, with varying degrees of success.
|
|||
|
Eric Idle, who directed Robin Williams and Teri Garr in The Frog Prince, thinks
|
|||
|
it's a specialist field of its own, outside the usual run of feature
|
|||
|
film-making.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"To successfully direct comedy you have to have some knowledge of it or have
|
|||
|
been in it," he says. "I think the fact that Spielberg's only flop is a comedy
|
|||
|
(1941) shows that no matter how good a director you are, directing comedy is a
|
|||
|
different kettle of fish. Most people don't even understand the basic grammar
|
|||
|
of it - ie showing the joke correctly onscreen at the right time, hiding
|
|||
|
something then revealing it correctly. I've seen some peoples's work in comedy
|
|||
|
where they've got the feedline after the punchline - just simple, basic errors,
|
|||
|
because they like the shots, or all the other things which count in normal
|
|||
|
cinema but don't apply in comedy."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Despite the success of Holy Grail, the Pythons ran into a little difficulty
|
|||
|
financing their next feature, Life Of Brian. (Original title: Jesus Christ -
|
|||
|
Lust For Glory). Although EMI's production chiefs had agreed a budget of $4
|
|||
|
million, Lord Delfont cancelled the agreement over their heads. Graham
|
|||
|
Chapman's drinking buddy Keith Moon then tried to raise the readies, and Eric
|
|||
|
Idle called George Harrison, who said that when The Beatles had been breaking
|
|||
|
up he'd spent hours and hours watching Python shows on the video to help him
|
|||
|
through, and he felt the least he could do was try and find some money for the
|
|||
|
Pythons' film. Thus was formed HandMade Pictures, one of the more successful
|
|||
|
pillars of the 'alleged' British Film Industry.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Life Of Brian was directed solely by Terry Jones, with Terry Gilliam preferring
|
|||
|
to confine himself to art direction (although he did direct the little sequence
|
|||
|
involving the spaceship). Similarly, Gilliam provided the short film The
|
|||
|
Crimson Permanent Assurance which opened the subsequent Jones-directed The
|
|||
|
Meaning Of Life - which went on to win the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film
|
|||
|
Festival.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"We announced we were going to win when we got there," says Eric Idle, "because
|
|||
|
we said we'd bribed the jury. The cannes paper carried the story PYTHON BRIBES
|
|||
|
JURY, so it was quite a good joke. Then when we were givent he prize Terry
|
|||
|
Jones got up and told them the money was hidden in the third washroom along!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Like Idle, Terry Jones wasn't as surprised as most about the film's success.
|
|||
|
But to this day he feels snubbed by the British press.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"What I was really surprised about was how little coverage it got over here,"
|
|||
|
he says. "Nothing like The Mission, which is all over the place. I kmnow it
|
|||
|
won First Prize, but the Grand Jury Prize is Second Prize, and there was hardly
|
|||
|
any coverage. The only coverage in the British press was sort of arfronted
|
|||
|
that Python had won Second Prize at Cannes - 'What's gone wrong?' - no sort of
|
|||
|
celebration or anything.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Another example is when Life Of Brian came out it was the most successful
|
|||
|
British film of that year in terms of the money it made; and when it came to
|
|||
|
the round-ups of the year's films, there wasn't a single critic who mentioned
|
|||
|
Life Of Brian. I couldn't believe it! It's as though, Oh, we don't count
|
|||
|
that. That's not part of the British Film Industry."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By 1973, the group was starting to fray at the edges. A working life of
|
|||
|
constant mutual criticism could easily degenerate into bickering, and the
|
|||
|
differences between the individuals which made the Python brew so potent were
|
|||
|
becoming more noticeable. Graham chapman, inparticular, rarely socialised with
|
|||
|
the others, being separated by them by dint of both his homosexuality and his
|
|||
|
drink problem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One of very few gay alcoholic mountaineering comedians ever to hang-glide over
|
|||
|
live volcanoes in Ecuador with the Dangers Sports Club, Chapman had come out of
|
|||
|
the closet early on, while he and Cleese were involved with At Last The 1948
|
|||
|
Show. The future Basil Fawlty was quite stunned at the time. As Chapman tells
|
|||
|
it in his autobiography: "It was totally, totally alien to him - such a thing
|
|||
|
was unthinkable and this was going to be the ruin of my life. Although he was
|
|||
|
still friendly he was completely at a loss to give his feelings." It came as
|
|||
|
quite a shock, too, to Eric Idle, the only other of the future Pythons to be
|
|||
|
acquainted with Chapman at the time: "Obviously he was quite young then, but I
|
|||
|
had to explain to him what it all meant... Now, of course, he's probably even
|
|||
|
more liberated than I am - not in the same way, but in 750 other ways. Being
|
|||
|
the only child of a mother who looks exactly like Mary Whitehouse can't have
|
|||
|
helped to give him an open outlook towards other human beings, or could it?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Chapman helped to found Gay News in 1969, in the hope that fellow homosexuals
|
|||
|
in the less enlightened parts of hte country might take hope and succour in the
|
|||
|
knowledge that they weren't alone. On a more personal level, he helped to
|
|||
|
spread the word as best he could by being at times brutally frank and
|
|||
|
confrontational about his sexuality when in the company of bigots. He
|
|||
|
confesses to never feeling comfortable in a town until he'd pulled there, and
|
|||
|
on the Python tours of the early '70s he'd go off alone after the shows in
|
|||
|
search of a partner - easy in somewhere like LA, but a matter for considerable
|
|||
|
pride in places like Glasgow and Sunderland.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Besides, while the constant criticism inside Python made for shows of extremely
|
|||
|
high quality, the individual members found that they had ideas which didn't fit
|
|||
|
into the format, and the six started to pull away from the centre. Says
|
|||
|
Chapman, "We all need to reassure ourselves that we have a separate identity."
|
|||
|
The fourth (and final) series of Monty Python, in 1974, was a mere six shows,
|
|||
|
done with little animation from Gilliam, little writing from Idle, and no
|
|||
|
participation at all from Cleese, who had, a few years earlier, set up the
|
|||
|
Video Arts company to make a series of highly lucrative training films for the
|
|||
|
service industries, and was by then developing a comedy series of his own.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Fawlty Towers would become one of hte most successful sitcoms of all time,
|
|||
|
eventually being the BBC's best export of 1977/8, with sales to 45 TV stations
|
|||
|
in 17 countries. Though Cleese admits the Basil Fawlty character featurs the
|
|||
|
part of himself that can't really express rage properly, the initial prototype
|
|||
|
was an hotelier the Pythons encountered on one of their earliest location
|
|||
|
shoots in darkest Torquay. Terry Gilliam remembers him well:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"He was unbelievable. The first day I arrived we were all having dinner - I'd
|
|||
|
just got off the train and was rather tired - and we'd finished and were all
|
|||
|
sitting there, but the table hadn't been cleared and dessert hadn't been
|
|||
|
offered. We were wondering what was going on. Eventually he walks in and
|
|||
|
looks at me and says, In our country, we signify that we have finished eating
|
|||
|
by placing the knife and fork so; then we will know, and your friends won't
|
|||
|
have to wait! He gave me this huge lecture! A frightening man! John has
|
|||
|
invented very little in that particular instance."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After a few days at this particular hotel, during which time the manager -
|
|||
|
sorry, owner - mistook a bag containing Eric Idle's football kit for a bomb,
|
|||
|
and made it virtually impossible to get a drink from the hotel bar, most of the
|
|||
|
Pythons moved out, leaving their hapless film crew to endure the further brunt
|
|||
|
of the man's demented authority.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Idle, by the fourth series, was drifting in the direction of his own series,
|
|||
|
Rutland Weekend Television, which was to produce the spin-off programme All You
|
|||
|
Need Is Cash, a documentary - or, if you will, rockumentary - about The Rutles.
|
|||
|
Always the pre-eminent wordsmith of the group (he edited the bestselling Python
|
|||
|
books), he also wrote a novel, Hello Sailor, and a play, Pass The Butler, which
|
|||
|
proved remarkably successful, for some reason, in Sweden, where no fewer than
|
|||
|
three productions were at one point running concurrently. More recently he's
|
|||
|
added another string to his bow by app0earing in Johnathan Miller's production
|
|||
|
of The Mikado.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Palin and Jones continued as a team with the Ripping Yarns weries, in which
|
|||
|
their penchant for atmosphere and period detail reached its apogee. Jones's
|
|||
|
library still bears, alongside the books of children's fairy tales he's
|
|||
|
written, the original volume of Ripping Tales For Boys that provided the
|
|||
|
initial stimulus for such top-hole yarns as Tomkinson's Schooldays, Across The
|
|||
|
Andes By Frog, Roger Of The Raj, and The Testing Of Eric Olthwaite: daft genre
|
|||
|
parodies that take the piss out of everything that made Britain grate: public
|
|||
|
school, exploring, the British Raj in India, and boring little tits.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Palin - along with Cleese - has just been asked whether he'd like to take part
|
|||
|
in Prince Edward's It's A Royal Knockout. Well, would he?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Absolutely!" he enthuses. "We're all after knighthoods, aren't we love? A
|
|||
|
baronetcy - I fancy being a baron, Baron Gumby, or Baron Vercotti, maybe..."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Mikey" always was the most likeable Python, the least intimidating persona
|
|||
|
both on and offscreen, as well ast he best actor of the group. It's some
|
|||
|
testa- ment to his thespian skills that he managed to make such appalling
|
|||
|
characters as Arthur Putey and Eric Olthwaite almost sympathetic - well,
|
|||
|
pitiable, at least - without detracting from their comprehensive awfulness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Mike's almost too good an actor for his own good, in a way," says Jones,
|
|||
|
"because you can forget him as a person; he sort of becomes the part, whatever
|
|||
|
he'S doing. One just doesn't realise how many things he's doing in Python -
|
|||
|
he's always appearing as diferent characters. One example: in Life Of Brian
|
|||
|
there's a ctu from the Pilate character to the centurion, Nicus Wettus, and
|
|||
|
it's Mike as both; cutting from Mike as one Roman to Mike as another Roman, and
|
|||
|
you never think about it!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I couldn't do it. When I was doing Life Of Brian I was doing the Hermit In
|
|||
|
The Hole and I was on my own, early in the morning, with no clothes on, sitting
|
|||
|
in this hole. I did my first line and the Assistant Director said it sounded
|
|||
|
exactly like another character I was playing, Brian's mum. I was doing this
|
|||
|
old man, and he sounded exactly the same! The whole film unit was standing
|
|||
|
around waiting and I was having to re-think the character!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Palin, of course, has appeared in several films, including all of Terry
|
|||
|
Gilliam's and the HandMade hits A Private Function and The Missionary (which he
|
|||
|
also wrote), profiting greatly fromt he increased complexity of character
|
|||
|
possible in a full-length movie. Surprisingly, though he acknowledges his
|
|||
|
forte lies in acting rather than writing, if asked to choose between the two
|
|||
|
he'd probably stop acting, "because writing gives you much greater control."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apart from the slim volume of literary criticism Chaucer's Knight, Jones has
|
|||
|
focused his energies on film. Besides being sole director of the last two
|
|||
|
Python films, he wrote the Bowie/Muppet movie Labyrinth and is currently
|
|||
|
working on an adaptation of his book Erik, The Viking. His most recent film,
|
|||
|
Personal Services, has just been released to some acclaim and, like his
|
|||
|
previous pictures, some controversy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"There's only four films that have been refused a certificate in Ireland int he
|
|||
|
history of censorship," he says, bemusedly. "One is Ken Russell's Crimes Of
|
|||
|
Passion and the other three have all been directed by me! As a Welshman I feel
|
|||
|
rather upset that my fellow Celts have turned against my entire film output!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For his part, John Cleese has, since Fawlty Towers, starrred in two films,
|
|||
|
Privates On Parade and Clockwise, and has had supporting roles in several
|
|||
|
others, including Silverado and The Great Muppet Caper, and still found time to
|
|||
|
write a serious psychology book, Families - How To Survive Them, and direct the
|
|||
|
two Secret Policeman's Ball benefits for Amnesty International. At the moment,
|
|||
|
he's preparing for his first stab at fimlm direction with his self-penned A
|
|||
|
Fish Called Wanda, which he'll co-direct with Charles Crichton, veteran
|
|||
|
director of Ealing comedies such as The Titfield Thunderbolt and The Lavender
|
|||
|
Hill Mob. Plus, of course, taking time out ot do the odd promo slot for the
|
|||
|
SDP.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"John's always been interested in power," says Idle, who clearly isn't, "and
|
|||
|
it's a natural followup for him, I think." Certainly, his interest in politics
|
|||
|
was noticeable long ago, when his entry in the International Film & TV Yearbook
|
|||
|
included appearances in such non-existent biopics as The Young Anthony Barber
|
|||
|
and The Bonar Law Story.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sadly, Cleese's former writing partner Chapman has fared least successfully
|
|||
|
since the demise of Python. His black comedy film The Odd Job Man - about a
|
|||
|
cowardly would-be suicide who hires an odd-job man to bump him off, then
|
|||
|
changes his mind - was a terrible flop, largely because, he believes, the
|
|||
|
financial backers wouldn't countenance having Keith Moon play the part of the
|
|||
|
hit-man, as Chapman intended (the part eventually went to David Jason). His
|
|||
|
spoof swash- buckler movie Yellowbeard, which proved to be Marty Feldman's
|
|||
|
final film, was such a disaster in America that it was never released in
|
|||
|
Britain. Though hardly allergic to hard work - in 1970, he co-scripted no
|
|||
|
fewer than 37 half-hour TV comedies - it's perhaps true that he, more than the
|
|||
|
others, needs the kind of collaborator(s) who can focus his unique, offbeat
|
|||
|
comedic inspiration to best effect. At present he's a frequent lecturer at
|
|||
|
American colleges and is developing a film project called Ditto.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the other end of the success scale would be, surprisingly, Terry Gilliam,
|
|||
|
who's managed to develop his particular talent into a career as a film director
|
|||
|
of some magnitude, one admired by peers such as Stanley Kubrick and Steven
|
|||
|
Spielberg. His early lessons in making do on a Pythonic pittance have stood
|
|||
|
himin good stead as he's progressed from picture to picture, shooting handsome
|
|||
|
features for a fraction of their usual budget. Jabberwocky, which was made in
|
|||
|
1976 for a mere L500,000, received special praise from Kubrick, who said it was
|
|||
|
more successful at re-creating its period than was his (vastly more expensive)
|
|||
|
Barry Lyndon, Time Bandits, which, with receipts of $18 million, is the most
|
|||
|
successful of any Python product, was made for an unbelievable $5 million,
|
|||
|
though experts int he American film industry reckoned it must have cost three
|
|||
|
to four times as much. Likewise, his last film, Brazil, was estimated, on
|
|||
|
appearances, to have cost between $25 million and $30 million, when in fact
|
|||
|
Gilliam brought it in for a paltry $13 1/2 million, $1/2 million under budget.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Brazil was recieved rapturously everywhere from American to Eastern Bloc
|
|||
|
countries like Poland, Bulgaria and Russia, where, at the Leningrad Film
|
|||
|
Festival, it was admired as part of something called the New Symbolism ("the
|
|||
|
new symbolic cinema that's sweeping the world - you've probably noticed!").
|
|||
|
Everywhere, in fact, but Britain, where the savagery of the Stoppard/Gilliam
|
|||
|
vision was deemed a tad traumatic for our genteel sensibilities. None of his
|
|||
|
films has been an out-and-out comedy (though all have contained funny elemetns)
|
|||
|
and Gilliam admits he finds the form rather constricting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I really like using comedy as a weapon, as a way of twisting things and
|
|||
|
pulling the rug out from under people's feet. I really did want Brazil to
|
|||
|
hurt, yet for people to be able to laugh at the same time. Tehre are as many
|
|||
|
laughs as there are in most comedies, but people don't remember it as a comedy,
|
|||
|
they remember it for the other things."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Undeterred by talk of recession in the movie business and the general trend
|
|||
|
away from big budgets to small-scale, low-risk pictures, Gilliam's next film,
|
|||
|
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, which he's currently working on at
|
|||
|
Cinecitta Studios in Rome, is budgeted at a hefty $25 million.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Munchausen is really closer to Time bandits in feel. It's more of a romp,
|
|||
|
except that Death is a character in it as well. It's also about old age and
|
|||
|
youth - there's lots of themes in it - but it's much funnier than Brazil. It
|
|||
|
has a happy ending too."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Since the Rutland Weekend Television series, Eric Idle's gravitated towards the
|
|||
|
laidback lush life as practised by well-off comedians and rock stars, at one
|
|||
|
moment ot be found in the South of France, at another dropping in on Mick and
|
|||
|
Jerry's pad in Barbados. Mostly though, he's spent a lot of time in recent
|
|||
|
years in America, working with comedians like Robin Williams, Chevy Chase and
|
|||
|
Steve Martin, and writing a string of (so far) unmade filmscripts: The Rutland
|
|||
|
Isles, The Road To Mars, Hot Property, The Rutland Triangle, Hamlet Prince Of
|
|||
|
Dallas, And Now This, and most recently The Legendary Syd Gottleib.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Like Chapman, Idle seems to work best within a group, though he sees little
|
|||
|
chance of the Pythons getting together again as a team.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It seems very unlikely, because once you get to a certain stage and have the
|
|||
|
freedom to do what you want to do, you don't want to accept the restraints of a
|
|||
|
group. But at least we've been smart enough to get together and form this film
|
|||
|
company. we read each others' scripts - because that was the strongest thing
|
|||
|
we ever had, criticism of each others' scripts and material. It's a writer's
|
|||
|
group. And that's the thing that you miss when you're on your own - you don't
|
|||
|
get a sensible balance. You get all these idiots from the studios saying what
|
|||
|
they think, and that's... well, you can throw it out the window, it's usually
|
|||
|
useless, worthless. But if you get a read from Mike or Terry or Graham,
|
|||
|
they'll give you what they honestly think, and you know where they're coming
|
|||
|
from, what their quirks are. You know you're going to get the honest truth,
|
|||
|
even if you don't like it."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Ten years ago nobody would admit it," adds Palin, "but of course we were
|
|||
|
desperately, desperately interested in what the others were doing. Now, it's
|
|||
|
slightly more open, because we've formed Prominent Features and decided to pool
|
|||
|
the resources of Python again, re-use the professional side of our friendship.
|
|||
|
We're a bit less bashful about submitting our scripts and criticising each
|
|||
|
other's, because we've all got a certain amount of confidence that we can do
|
|||
|
our own things. No-one has done anything solo that has superseded what the
|
|||
|
group could do together. No-one has done something better than Life Of Brian
|
|||
|
or Holy Grail or Meaning Of Life; people have done different things, but not
|
|||
|
done anything better."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, will their new collaboration go any deeper than just checking on each
|
|||
|
other's projects? Will there be another Python film? Unlikely, according to
|
|||
|
Terry Gilliam.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"The only thing, I think that would bring Python together is... greed, the
|
|||
|
need for large sums of cash. It hones the comic sense!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|