761 lines
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761 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
==================================
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B R I T C O M E D Y D I G E S T
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==================================
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VOL. II OCT 1995
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No. 4
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A monthly electronic newsletter on British comedies.
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What's Inside
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=============
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The Comedy Store Players Celebrate Ten Years
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Eddie Izzard -- Part 2
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Reviews:
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* Eddie Izzard Live at the Shaftesbury Theatre
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* Bottom: The Big Number 2 Tour
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"Knowing Me, Knowing You"
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Regular Departments:
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===================
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Mailbox
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Britcomedy News
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Spotted on the Internet
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etc.
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Circulation/Back Issues
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Staff
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=====
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Managing Editor..................Melinda 'Bob' Casino
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Co-Editor........................Michelle Street
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Assistant Editor................ James Kew
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Copy Editor......................Cynthia Edwards
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Contributing writers: Jan Staff, Michelle Street, Caroline von Oosten de
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Boer, Richard Vranch.
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HTML logo by Nathan Gasser.
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Britcomedy Digest (ISSN 1077-6680) Copyright (c) 1995 by Melinda Casino.
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Reproduction for personal and non-profit use is permitted only if this
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copyright notice is retained. Any other reproduction is prohibited without
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permission. Britcomedy Digest may be uploaded without the editor's
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permission to bulletin boards as long as it remains fully intact.
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NOTICE: In order to preserve the integrity of Britcomedy Digest, use of
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the "BRITCOMEDY DIGEST" name to gain interviews, etc., is forbidden
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without the express permission of the Managing Editor.
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EDITOR'S PAGE
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=============
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Since I'm in an Alan Partridge frame of mind I'll greet you with a hearty
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"ah-HAA" from the good ol' Uncle US of Stateside. So what's up over here
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this month? Well, even though my unhealthy obsession with the Melanie
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Griffith/Tony Flags (excuse me, Antonio Banderas) romance* continues, the
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show must go on and we've managed to put together an October BD full of
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lots of treats and hopefully no tricks.
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But first I do have some good news to report in the "much more sensible
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and believable" romance department. My two BD compatriots, James "Thank"
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Kew and Melinda "No Relation To The Upcoming DeNiro Movie" Casino were
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joined in holy wedlock (along with, one must assume, their most excellent
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collection of Britcomedy videos) on October 7th and I'd just like to take
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this opportunity to wish them a happy life together and good luck in the
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future.
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What's in store in this month's BD? I must send a special thanks out to
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Richard Vranch of "The Comedy Store Players" and "Whose Line Is It
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Anyway?" He kindly took time out of his schedule to write an article
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about the Tenth Anniversary of the Comedy Store Players and not to be
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missed is the section where he smacks Tony Slattery around. (All right,
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all right... I'm kidding)
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Eddie Izzard fans will be happy -- nay, ecstatic -- as we have both the
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conclusion of Caroline vonB's interview with Eddie as well as Jan Staff's
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review of Izzard's current West End show. If you're into "Bottom" there's
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also a review of the "Big Number 2 Tour" currently oozing its way through
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the UK, more than likely fueled by gas power. There's also Alan Partridge,
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Britcomedy News, and well... you get the picture. Just dig in and read.
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-- Michelle Street
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Co-Editor
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* They were last spotted smooching away in Paris. I was sure you'd want
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to know. :)
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MAILBOX
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=======
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Does anyone have any information on actor Karl Howman who starred in the
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BBC's "Mulberry" (1992/93) and for several seasons (c.1988-1990) in "Brush
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Strokes"? He has a new series in production with Scottish Television: "Bad
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Boys." I am writing an article on (what else!) British comedy and have had
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miserable luck getting biographical information about him.
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Margery Wilson, <WILS@mit.edu>
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EDITOR'S RESPONSE: Fans can email Margery at the address above. While
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you're at it, if you would be willing to write an article on "Mulberry"
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and have the fame, prestige and power that results in having it appear in
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BD, do email the editor at <melinda@badger.idiscover.co.uk>.
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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I really love "Chef." Please do an article on the members of the cast, any
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information about the show, etc.
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Leticha, <Lhill@hr.hq.nasa.gov>
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EDITOR'S RESPONSE: Look for a review of "Chef" in the next issue of BD!
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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Spotted a slight (debatable) slip in the most recent issue. When discussing
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"Men Behaving Badly," it was mentioned that a third series was due this
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fall/autumn. Well, it'll actually be (I believe) the *fifth* series. There
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have been two series on BBC, but the show was with ITV before that. I
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think there were two series on ITV as well, before they inexplicably gave
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it to the Beeb.
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Also, Harry Enfield originally played opposite Martin Clunes.
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MAD Mosher, a.k.a. That Long-haired Git
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<irpurdie@bradford.ac.uk>
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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I just wanted to say that I have just discovered Britcomedy Digest and it
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is fantastic! It is usually hard to keep up with all my favorite British
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shows living in Australia, but this is very informative,the only problem
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is it's so depressing to read the Events Guide, as I'd desperately love to
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go to the "Press Gang" convention (Oct 21 ) but it's a little out of the
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question to pop half way around the world for it...
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Keep up the good work, I'd love to write an article for the Digest one
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day...
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Sarah Jenkin-Bell, <Andrew@cbr.dwr.csiro.au>
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EDITOR'S RESPONSE: Glad you enjoy BD. If you'd like to write about your
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favorite British comedy -- either on radio, TV, film, book, or stage --
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*please* contact me at: <melinda@badger.idiscover.co.uk>. We could sure
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use the writers. :)
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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I just read the new issue of BD. This is great! Where have you been all my
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life? Where have I been all your life? Where have I been all my life?
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Suzanne Saunders, <ssaunder@ix.netcom.com>
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Denver, Colorado
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EDITOR'S RESPONSE: If *only* we'd met a few months ago -- I was a single
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woman then! ;)
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BRITCOMEDY NEWS
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---------------
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GREG PROOPS FORCED TO LEAVE THE UK
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Popular "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" performer Greg Proops has been forced
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to leave the United Kingdom due to immigration laws.
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The Department of Employment refused to renew the American comic's work
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permit on the grounds that he had apparently not been seeking employment
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in his own country. This violates immigration rules which state that
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American workers in the UK must also make themselves available for jobs in
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their homeland.
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Proops and his wife have returned to the States but are expected to return
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to Britain in the New Year.
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ONLY FOOLS AND HORSES NEED APPLY
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We recently received information about a club for fans of "Only Fools and
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Horses." Formed in 1993, it has just over 500 members. They put out
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a quarterly newsletter called Hookie Street which contains news, reviews,
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photos, and interviews.
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The society is in regular contact with all the actors from the show, who
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contribute to the magazine. Recent exclusive interviews include John
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Challis ("Boycie"), Ken MacDonald ("Mike" the barman), John Sullivan
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(writer), and Gareth Gwenlan (producer). They also run competitions and
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prizes which come from their own range of merchandise (t-shirts, badges,
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posters, etc.) The clubs archives include autographed photos from (nearly)
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ever actor in the show, original scripts and props and even a yellow
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Reliant van!
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For more information contact Perry Aghajanoff at
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<fools&horses@mail.bogo.co.uk>.
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WHY "BOB?"
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"Blackadder" fans are probably quite familiar with the character of "Bob,"
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the young woman who disguised herself as man and then went on to become
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the managing editor of an Internet ezine. (Ok, I con-FESS... that last
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part isn't exactly true.)
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Ben Elton recently gave some background on this character: "When we [Elton
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and co-writer Richard Curtis] created a girl character, we deliberately
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chose the name Bob because we knew what Rowan would do with it. He would
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be the only comedian in the world who would take that name and do what he
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did to it. We take credit for this entirely!"
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--> Please send news items to Michelle Street at <michelle@cathouse.org> or
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<mtstreet@prairienet.org>. Special thanks to BD Ace Reporter Michael
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"Scoop" Clarkson.
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============================================
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THE COMEDY STORE PLAYERS CELEBRATE 10 YEARS
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by Richard Vranch
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============================================
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The Comedy Store Players improv group celebrates 10 continuous years of
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Sunday night shows at the London Comedy Store on 29th October 1995. They
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have also played on Wednesday nights since 1989. The shows last two hours,
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and are based on audience suggestions. They don't get suggestions in
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advance, and every show is genuinely spontaneous and unique.
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Of the original members, only Neil Mullarkey remains. Dave Cohen and Kit
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Hollerbach soon left (replaced by Paul Martin who became Paul Merton) and
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in 1986 Mike Myers went off to Second City, then Saturday Night Live and
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Wayne's World.
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The six players are now Neil Mullarkey, Paul Merton, Richard Vranch, Josie
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Lawrence, Lee Simpson and Jim Sweeney. If anyone has to miss a show they
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are replaced a guest, for example Greg Proops, Mike Myers (when in London)
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Andy Smart, Tony Hawks, Mike McShane, Siobhan Finneran, Caroline Quentin
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and Tony Slattery, to name only a few.
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All six Players have appeared on the TV improv show "Whose Line Is It
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Anyway?" The early shows featured the Players heavily since they already
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had 3 years experience of improv, though Lee and Neil only appeared once
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each (in Series 2, 1989) and Richard only gets to improvise the music --
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very frustrating since Richard is an actor who plays a full part in the
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games as well as the music at the Comedy Store. Despite the claims of
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various disgracefully inaccurate WWW "Whose Line" sites, there are only
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six Comedy Store Players, as listed above, and John Sessions was never one
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of them! They've tried to get these errors changed. Any suggestions?
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The Players also do theatre shows around the UK to crowds of up to 2300,
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and they all combine improv with a variety of other work...
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Neil is about to star in a TV sketch show, and he has just directed a
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theatre show. He also writes screenplays and books, and used to have a
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double act with Mike Myers.
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Paul made his name as a brilliant stand-up comic, but he now has a
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successful topical comedy show on BBC TV called "Have I Got News For You?"
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He recently did a live tour and a season at the London Palladium in a
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sketch show written and performed with Lee and Richard.
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Richard has presented a science series on Channel 4 TV, and has toured the
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world from Mexico to the Occupied West Bank as an actor in various comedy
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shows. He has a Physics Ph.D. and a double act with Tony Slattery.
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Josie is currently Kate in "The Taming Of The Shrew" at the Royal
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Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon, and is recording the third
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series of the popular cricketing TV comedy "Outside Edge." Like Paul, she
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had her own series on Channel 4 TV, and has done several movies.
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Jim has been improvising professionally for 21 years, as well as appearing
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in children's TV shows (something all the Players have done at one time or
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another), plays and comedy series. He was in the original cast of Richard
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O'Brien's follow-up the "The Rocky Horror Show."
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Lee has done lots of acting in plays (which he often co-devises), TV
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series and films. He recently began a new job as the Breakfast DJ on the
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new commercial radio station in London, Heart 106.2 FM.
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All the Players do commercials, voice-overs and BBC radio panel games.
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Yet you'll have to come to the Comedy Store to see them all together, a
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group of old friends having fun doing improv. It's never been recorded
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for audio or video, and the 400 seats do sell fast. It's still a bit of a
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cult thing, and as long as the Players are having fun, and the audience is
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laughing, they'll keep doing it.
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###
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The Comedy Store is located near Leicester Square at Haymarket House, No. 1
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Oxendon Street, London SW1. Their web page is at
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http://micromedia.co.uk/comedy.
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KNOWING ME, KNOWING YOU
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----------------------- by Michelle Street
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It all began when my friend George kept going and on about this show
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"Knowing Me, Knowing You." I didn't have much of a clue as to what it
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was, but he said it was great and promised to send me the cassettes.
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True to his word, three tapes arrived a few weeks later on a beautiful
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spring day. I decided to listen to the first episode on my Walkman while
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I took a stroll.
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Bad move. If I didn't have a reputation as the village loony before, I
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did following that walk. I'm not saying I was laughing hard, but there
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were people yelling out their windows: "Hey, you wanna shut up? I'm
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trying to hear my new Metallica CD!" Many more just peered out their
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curtains and shook their head.
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I then listened to the other episodes in the privacy of my own home and
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understood why George had raved. This was damn funny stuff. It is not easy
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to parody something which, in essence, has already become a parody of
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itself but, like Garry Shandling's "The Larry Sanders Show," this show
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succeeds beautifully in taking the piss out of the chat show format and
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the peculiar people who inhabit it.
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The "star" of "KMKY" is Perrier Award winner Steve Coogan, who plays Alan
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Partridge. An extraordinarily talented comic and impressionist, Coogan
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started out doing voices for "Spitting Image" and first introduced the
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character of Partridge as a sports presenter on the Radio 4 comedy series
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"On The Hour."
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One gets the impression that Coogan is more comfortable facing the audience
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as one of his many characters than as himself. Like Peter Sellers, he
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completely inhabits every character he creates. From the details and
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subtle nuances, it is obvious that Coogan has given a lot of thought and
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care to character development.
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And what a character Alan Partridge is. He is described as the talk show
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host from hell and proves it every time someone sits down to be
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interviewed. He is openly smug and disdainful towards his guests. He tells
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them to "shut up" and goes so far as to accuse one of his guests of being
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unable to father children.
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The characters who brave Alan's show are a motley assortment, including a
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member of the royal family, one of Hollywood's legendary show-biz couples,
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and an eighty-four year old Lord with whom Alan has the following
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exchange:
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Alan: You've just published your autobiography. What's that about?
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Lord Morgan: It's about my life, you ass.
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A little later Alan asks Lord Morgan about his adolescence.
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Alan: What was that like?
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Lord Morgan: Like childhood... but with more pubic hair.
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Finally, Alan asks why the Lord has been such an outspoken defender of
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pornography:
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Lord Morgan: What a man chooses to do in the privacy
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of his own attic is his business alone.
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Perhaps the best episode has Alan getting flustered by nine-year old child
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prodigy Simon Fisher. Pretentious and snotty to the bone, Simon makes the
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fatal error of showing off his knowledge:
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Simon: Have you seen "Hamlet?"
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Alan: Yes, I have.
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Simon: I saw it with Alan Rickman. Who did you see it with?
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Alan: My wife Carol.
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But a clip around the ear from Alan sets Simon straight and by the end of
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the program he has been so harangued by Alan and the other guests that he
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wets his pants.
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Just reading the scripts does not give you a good impression of what goes
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on here. As in much of British comedy, the laughs don't come from
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one-liners but from the quality of the acting and the subtleties of
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character. This is definitely a case of
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it's-not-what-you-say-but-how-you-say-it. Listening to Partridge cheerily
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introduce a guest as "still suffering from post traumatic stress syndrome"
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is absolutely priceless.
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That isn't to say that the scripts aren't a terrific skewering of show-biz
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pretensions and artificiality. They *are* and part of the fun is figuring
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out what real life figures are being parodied. The character of Shirley
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Dee, an aging sexpot with connections to the underworld, is probably based
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on "Carry On" star Barbara Windsor, who had connections to the Kray
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Brothers. And perhaps the character of the "funny voice man impressionist"
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Steve Thompson is Steve Coogan's look at his own early career.
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It's all part of the bluring of reality and art which KMKY does so well,
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sort of similar to the "Saturday Night Live" commercial parodies. This was
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taken to even greater heights on the parody news programmes "On The Hour"
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and "The Day Today," so it should come as no suprise that all of these are
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all the product of a group of people who, like "The Young Ones/Comic
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Strip" group, enjoy working together and have formed a clique.
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The gang who provide fabulous support to Coogan are Patrick Marber, Rebecca
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Front, Doon McKichan, and David Schneider. In fact, since they are
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responsible for creating so many different characters their job is almost
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harder than that of Coogan, who stays put, so to speak, as Partridge. They
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deserve a lot of credit for the show's success.
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Also given credit for extra material is the man with the coolest name in
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the universe -- Armando Iannucci. (If he has problems getting dates with
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*that* name then there is something seriously wrong.) Iannucci is a bit of
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a jacks of all trades. He was the producer of KMKY and also worked with
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Chris Morris and Peter Baynham on "The Day Today" and "On The Hour." And
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he had a weekly column in "The Guardian" newspaper. Last summer saw his
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debut as a presenter when he fronted a satirical show called "Saturday
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Night Armistice." Despite his presence along with that of both David
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Schneider and Peter Baynham, the show didn't quite live up to
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expectations.
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After being both on Radio 4 and (as Alan Partridge always dreamed of while
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on the radio) BBC2, a new series of "Knowing Me, Knowing You" would no
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doubt be welcome by its fans. However, Coogan seems determined not to let
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himself get typecast as Partridge. He has made a couple of successful
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programs playing the characters of Paul and Pauline Calf, most notably
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"Three Fights, Two Weddings, and A Funeral," which was nominated for
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several BAFTA awards last year. Coogan also toured, showing off some new
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characters, which resulted in the "Steve Coogan Live and Lewd" video.
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Up next, however, Coogan is set to play "Mole" in the Terry Jones
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version of "The Wind In The Willows." He'll also return to TV in the
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eagerly anticipated "Coogan's Run."
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To read some of the KMKY episodes, and explore some other Alan Partridge
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web sites, visit The cathouse.org British Comedy Pages at
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http://www.cathouse.org/BritishComedy/.
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###
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Thanks to Paul Rhodes for supplying additional information.
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KING EDDIE THE FIRST... DOING HIS OWN SWEET THING
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-------------------------------------------------
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by Caroline von B, <vonb@xs4all.nl>
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The conclusion of an article about the life and career of Eddie Izzard.
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When I talk to him on the phone, Izzard sounds decidedly "southern/posh" to
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my only half-trained ears. His voice was different on stage and again for
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"Have I Got News for You" and Radio 4's "Missed Demeanors." If his "self"
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is so strongly present, then which is the voice that goes with said
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"self"?
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"Oh really? Well I think I have my noooormal... well I don't know, perhaps
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I'm just Zelig... the Woody Allen character, but... I can change it
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around, I do find that if I go down a market place, I will sort of crush
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the vowel sound a bit more, or something... I'll move it around. And also
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when I go into stand-up I sort of jump around from weird strangulated
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voice to another one. But I think that... there's supposed to be a central
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one that's me, but perhaps it gets lost in there."
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Sometimes the central Eddie tends to resort to French on-stage --
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everybody knows his "la singe est dans l'arbre" skit -- and during the
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interview. He has his eye on Europe and he recently played two nights in
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Amsterdam. Does he feel the need to expand?
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"I like languages. Eventhough my Dutch only goes as far as 'poffertjes'...
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which I've had for the first time, even though I'd seen them before... I
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didn't realise... I had some in Amsterdam and.... they're hugely doughy! I
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like languages, I like to try and have a go in different languages
|
|
eventhough if you do it in Dutch everyone will just go 'yes, we can speak
|
|
English, just shut up!', and so I wanted to play there and other places in
|
|
Northern Europe, I think, you know, in Belgium people might go for
|
|
stand-up as well. I mean I'd like it if stand-up was all across Europe,
|
|
but it's tricky because of the language thing and people thinking: 'How
|
|
dare you come in and fucking speak in a different language!' I'm wary of
|
|
that, but I just know, you'd have to learn such a truckload of different
|
|
languages, you know... rock and roll, everybody can just go around a do it
|
|
and sing in English and everyone just goes 'yeah, fine no problem.' But
|
|
the Dutch seem to swing with it, cause everyone's English is so good."
|
|
|
|
This is a common misconception. The thing with the Dutch is that a large
|
|
percentage of them have a basic grasp of English. Not many have enough to
|
|
be able to follow 2 hours of stand-up comedy. During the interval in
|
|
Eddie's show, some Dutch people, who couldn't keep up, left, leaving the
|
|
odds strongly in favour of the Brits -- around 60 to 70%. It caused some
|
|
hilarity when Eddie expressed his surprise at the audience's level of
|
|
comprehension. "That's because we're all English!" someone replied. Would
|
|
Eddie be prepared to slow down to draw a bigger audience?
|
|
|
|
"Really? I had slowed down... but yes, I would go even slower, but when
|
|
you just come straight in it is ... I just misjudged it. But yeah, I would
|
|
go as slow as need be, I wanna get as many Dutch people... I don't wanna
|
|
come and play to English and American people. Yeah, I would slow down as
|
|
much as need be, to get as many people as possible, without getting down
|
|
to a crawling number. I just want to keep coming back and building and
|
|
building, as opposed to just going there once and going away and expecting
|
|
something to just happen. I mean in London, well, I started in 1980, now
|
|
it's 15 years later now I've managed to get an audience..."
|
|
|
|
If all goes well, he'll soon be drawing another audience altogether as he
|
|
starts showing his stuff on the big screen.
|
|
|
|
"I wanna play kind of Tim Roth/Gary Oldman kind of areas. That's where I
|
|
want to go into... that's what I like. Film is a big love of mine.
|
|
Shitheads I like doing, in serious acting anyway, and playing American
|
|
characters and doing an American accent, so therefore not doing an
|
|
'English-person-abroad' kind of thing, I'd like doing that as well. But
|
|
I've got to feel my way in those parts. I'm doing a film called 'Secret
|
|
Agent' later this year, directed by Christopher Hampton who just did
|
|
Carrington -- which made a lot of noise down at the Cannes film festival.
|
|
He won 'prix-de-jury' and Jonathan Price won best actor. And Gerry
|
|
Depardieu is in it, Bob Hoskins and Robin Williams. It's a small part,
|
|
it's only two/three days filming, so I'll just be at the back waving. But
|
|
I just love film."
|
|
|
|
Taking his act to the big screen may seem a big step, but nothing can beat
|
|
the giant leap of coming out, which is what Eddie did ten years ago at the
|
|
age of 23 and again on-stage, three years ago.
|
|
|
|
"It's a difficult thing to do, because it's so visual," Eddie tells me.
|
|
Not many people come out transvestite -- and it's even more rare in
|
|
showbiz. There's the Dutch novelist Maarten 't Hart, who, a few years
|
|
back, came out for the whole country to see, at a literary gala night.
|
|
There was the film director Ed Wood, currently the subject of a feature
|
|
film. It's important to Eddie, taking a lot of focus (which he says
|
|
shouldn't really happen, but unfortunately does) yet it is the one thing
|
|
he would least publicise himself on. It would confuse too many people. On
|
|
stage, he wants to be as casual, as "fuck off" as possible about it -- but
|
|
admits that one of the reasons he'd rather not see the audience during
|
|
performance is that it could throw him, especially if he's doing
|
|
something difficult on being transvestite.
|
|
|
|
When I probe him about his stand-up and whether he will always make being
|
|
tv part of it he answers: "Maybe, maybe not. It's something that's true
|
|
and it's me." Does he feel a responsibility? "No, no responsibility. Just
|
|
information, you know, what do people know about being tv? Nothing." Would
|
|
he be prepared to go as far as explaining in detail what it means to him,
|
|
just to educate people? "Yes. Probably in print, more likely than on
|
|
stage, on stage it would get really boring..."
|
|
|
|
In Holland, transvestism has become marketable. It has become "in" to be
|
|
tv or rather, "in" to be a drag queen. We have a prime time television
|
|
show called "The Transvestite Show," which is really a drag queen thing --
|
|
electing a "Miss Transvestite" and "Best Drag Act" each week. In
|
|
Amsterdam, drag cabaret and tv-bars have become quite popular. Irish
|
|
singer Gavin Friday, who is no stranger to flamboyant attire himself, sees
|
|
it as a fin-de-siecle thing, "As the world goes under, they are the
|
|
pom-pom girls." It's a romantic view -- but there is another side. There's
|
|
a kind of commercialising going on which is okay -- introducing different
|
|
lifestyles to the masses, but doesn't seem really very helpful for the
|
|
average closet tv, who sees himself up against a larger-than-life image.
|
|
Entertainment without information can only confuse the man in the street.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah. There was a period, just recently, where it went through this, with
|
|
gay people and aids... all these drag balls happening... Journalists
|
|
always look for movements, and perhaps there was a wave just because
|
|
everybody started talking about a wave... but I just came out, in '85. I'm
|
|
doing my own sweet thing. If this thing doesn't happen, if there is a
|
|
'scene' and a bubble burst in that 'scene,' that has nothing to do with
|
|
me. My thing is just purely coming out and just trying to knit being tv
|
|
into society, cause that's the trouble. Gay and lesbian people have
|
|
knitted being gay and lesbian into society. They say: 'Look, this is our
|
|
sexuality, it's got nothing to do with our work, more to do with play, or
|
|
life, or whatever. We work in a bookshop, we're only good at selling
|
|
books, that's the point, and then we have a sexuality which has nothing to
|
|
do anyone except us.' You know, and then... heterosexuals they go off and
|
|
play rugby or play bridge and go and snog people of the opposite sex in
|
|
straight bars and they do their thing and it has nothing to do with their
|
|
job. So that's what they've done: they've separated sex and sexuality from
|
|
what they do for a living. That's what I'll do: I'll work, and I'll wear
|
|
the clothes I want to wear and it's got nothing to do with my stand-up and
|
|
from now on, in fact, I'm not going to talk about it. I only talked about
|
|
being tv there in Holland, because otherwise people would go 'What the
|
|
fuck's he wearing that for?'"
|
|
|
|
[Amsterdam is the place where people would be least likely to stop and
|
|
wonder about someone's appearance. -- CvB]
|
|
|
|
"It's just information, you know. Once people have worked it all out... it
|
|
will never be everyone. There'll still be people, 10, 15, 20 of them will
|
|
be saying: 'What, so you're a drag queen?' 'No! Fucking hell! There's been
|
|
thousands of column inches on this, haven't you fucking read anything?'"
|
|
|
|
Eddie's line of reasoning is that by western standard there are no female
|
|
transvestites -- and therefore he says there are no male ones either. He
|
|
has come out tv, but does not call himself tv. He does not wear 'women's
|
|
clothing,' he just wears what he wants to wear. But isn't it more about
|
|
how people feel themselves, rather than how the world perceives them? If
|
|
there are men who feel the need to genderfuck, there are women as well.
|
|
There is no label for women with similar needs - and although not even
|
|
having a label to stick on yourself can be quite confusing, women can get
|
|
away with more without attracting too much attention. There's less fear of
|
|
getting your head kicked in, or people shouting at you. All in all it
|
|
perhaps is a little easier on women.
|
|
|
|
"Yes. This is my point. There are two sides to it. One is how people feel
|
|
and the other is how people perceive it. Tv people are a minority, and it
|
|
is really... I think the bigger problem with trying to knit being tv into
|
|
society is dealing with people who are not tv and how they perceive it.
|
|
Because they are the people who have no information at all, so how can
|
|
they make a judgement? Tv people have their own decisions or hang-ups and
|
|
whatever and that's a separate thing. If I can put out logical points for
|
|
the people who are not tv, so they can go 'oh yeah, that's a point, we are
|
|
cooler on women who wear trousers, so why are we so fucked about men who
|
|
wear skirts'... if you can put that out so they go 'Yeah, why do we do
|
|
that, we're kind of odd doing that,' and just point out indiscrepancies
|
|
like that, then maybe people can just bring down barriers. Or force
|
|
themselves to bring down their own barriers, which is what you got to do
|
|
-- because you can't force them, they have to choose to bring it down
|
|
themselves. Then perhaps you can make some progress with people seeing
|
|
'Oh, it's more relaxed now, and there are people and they're tv, and
|
|
they're tv and no one is giving them hassle, so I'll come out.' And that's
|
|
what you got to encourage. We got to get people, you know, in their teens
|
|
and in their early twenties look towards coming out."
|
|
|
|
And with that, the terminally busy Izzard bids us farewell -- off to
|
|
consider more projects. He mentions wanting to write a book at some stage,
|
|
but admits he hasn't come to terms with the writing process yet. His
|
|
sit-com "The Cows," co-written with Nick Whitby, should come to a small
|
|
screen near you by September this year.
|
|
|
|
###
|
|
|
|
The author maintains "The Eddie Izzard Sort Of Groovy Homepage" at
|
|
http://www.xs4all.nl/~pj/izzard.html.
|
|
|
|
====================================================
|
|
Review: Eddie Izzard Live At The Shaftesbury Theatre
|
|
by Jan Staff
|
|
====================================================
|
|
|
|
Eddie Izzard is back! And where better to see him than in a place where he
|
|
enjoys himself as much as the audience enjoys him -- on stage in London's
|
|
West End.
|
|
|
|
I had the good fortune to do just that when I attended Eddie's "Definite
|
|
Article" tour at the Shaftesbury Theatre shortly after it opened on
|
|
October 10th. But Eddie fans need not worry -- there is still plenty of
|
|
time to see him before the final curtain call on December 16th, though
|
|
whether tickets will be available is another question. They are selling
|
|
very quickly, and the show is receiving very good reviews. As well it
|
|
should.
|
|
|
|
In certain respects this a case of "the more things change the more they
|
|
stay the same." Without giving away too much, Eddie has altered the
|
|
entrance he used on previous tours and the new one is magnificent. A less
|
|
desirable change, however, is that the amount of social commentary that he
|
|
allows himself has decreased. This is regrettable because he has the
|
|
ability to express some brilliant insights on important topics.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, Izzard fans will certainly appreciate the usual "bollocks on
|
|
top of bollocks" presented almost the same as his last two video releases.
|
|
Basically, Eddie is as "Izzardish" as before or maybe even more. He's
|
|
purified his timing, his appearance, and his "acting" since his last stage
|
|
show -- all for the better.
|
|
|
|
And those of you who aren't an Eddie fan? Go see this show if possible or
|
|
at the very least get ahold of one of his live videos. Chances are good
|
|
that you'll come away a convert.
|
|
|
|
===================
|
|
Review: BOTTOM LIVE
|
|
by Jan Staff
|
|
===================
|
|
|
|
At first I thought Edina Monsoon must be in charge of publicity for the
|
|
tour appropriately titled "Bottom: The Big Number 2 Tour." When I
|
|
collected my ticket the day of the show there was no sign of that
|
|
evening's performance. No poster, no program, no anything.
|
|
|
|
Yet somehow word had gotten round because the Brighton Dome was almost
|
|
full to capacity when the title tune started and the curtain raised to
|
|
give a glimpse of a crappy, unhealthy flat. The audience cheered and it
|
|
wasn't because they were thinking "Hey, this is just like where I live!"
|
|
No, they were applauding the expected arrival of their two favourite
|
|
bummed out blokes -- Richie (Rik Mayall) and Eddie (Adrian Edmondson).
|
|
|
|
The "Bottom" tours are an offspring of the successful television series
|
|
written by and starring Rik Mayall and Ade Edmondson. If you're familiar
|
|
with their characters from "The Young Ones" or "Filthy Rich and Catflap,"
|
|
then you've got the idea of "Bottom," where potty gags and juvenile
|
|
crudeness abound.
|
|
|
|
When Mayall and Edmondson made their appearance the applause grew even
|
|
louder and the first thing I noticed was their ability to handle their
|
|
audience. They have a good sense of how the crowd is going to react and
|
|
the best ways to deal with them.
|
|
|
|
The guys use this tour to make the most of the fact that they are free
|
|
from the limitations of television. The amount of dirty jokes and extra
|
|
genitalia gags gives the impression that they used this tour to let off
|
|
steam from their more "clean" BBC writing.
|
|
|
|
The only weak point of the Bottom Tour is the weakness of the plot. There
|
|
is even less of a story being told than on the first stage tour, and it's
|
|
not really enough to justify a one-and-a half hour show. Yet that didn't
|
|
keep the audience from having a good time and participating in the fun.
|
|
"Have a wank!" rose from the crowd every time Richie asked "What shall I
|
|
do?" and there was also a resurrection of the classic "Hah! You missed
|
|
*both* my legs!" gag from "The Young Ones."
|
|
|
|
The laughter and cheering from the amused audience made it clear that they
|
|
felt they had gotten their money's worth.
|
|
|
|
To get the dates for the "Bottom Live" tour, point your web browser to:
|
|
http://www.cathouse.org/CathousePeople/MelindaCasino/.
|
|
|
|
###
|
|
|
|
QUOTE-O'-THE-MONTH:
|
|
===================
|
|
With thanks, again, to Ralph G. Johnson <RALPH@fis1.qc.edu>.
|
|
|
|
"You'll have to get married one day. You can't be
|
|
happy all your life."
|
|
|
|
CHARACTER: Alec (or Alex) Callender
|
|
SHOW: "May to December"
|
|
|
|
SPOTTED ON THE INTERNET
|
|
=======================
|
|
Thanks to David B. Feland <decibel@tibalt.supernet.ab.ca>.
|
|
|
|
=============================== ("`-''-/").___..--''"`-._
|
|
David B. Feland `6_ 6 ) `-. ( ).`-.__.`)
|
|
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada (_Y_.)' ._ ) `._ `. ``-..-'
|
|
decibel@tibalt.supernet.ab.ca _..`--'_..-_/ /--'_.' ,' (If I'm "lion",
|
|
=============================== (il),-'' (li),' ((!.-' I'm dyin'!)
|
|
|
|
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
GOODIES-L is a discussion mailing list for fans of the men who sang that
|
|
classic pub song, "Jolly Rock." Join the fun by sending a message to
|
|
LISTSERV@LISTSERV.AOL.COM with "subscribe GOODIES-L firstname_lastname" in
|
|
the body. (Example: subscribe GOODIES-L Bill Oddie) For more info. see:
|
|
http://www.cathouse.org/BritishComedy/Goodies/FanClub/Info/GOODIES-L.html
|
|
or send an inquiry email note to <goodies@badger.idiscover.co.uk>.
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
WANTED: Fan seeks episode guides of all sorts, but esp. to "Allo, 'Allo"
|
|
series 6-9. Please contact Jeff at <peck@dickinson.edu>
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
Jeffrey Rice <JRICE@pluto.pomona.edu> has put a "One Foot In The Grave"
|
|
episode guide on the web at http://www.webcom.com/~jrice/grave.html
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
Brian Clay <brian@clay.dungeon.com> has recently expanded his BRITTAS
|
|
EMPIRE pages! Now you can "share the dream" by visiting "The Whitbury New
|
|
Town Leisure Centre" at: http://www.dungeon.com/~clay/gordon4.html
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
Check out Susan Goetcheus' <susan@atria.com> "Whose Line is it Anyway?"
|
|
page, at http://id.wing.net/~susang/wliia.html
|
|
__________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
CIRCULATION/SUBSCRIPTIONS:
|
|
==========================
|
|
Britcomedy Digest (ISSN 1077-6680) is a free electronic newsletter posted
|
|
monthly to alt.comedy.british and rec.arts.tv.uk.comedy.
|
|
|
|
DELPHI: In the "UK-American Connexion" forum, cf 171.
|
|
|
|
GENIE: In the "Showbiz" roundtable, page 185.
|
|
|
|
SUBSCRIPTIONS: To receive an issue every month, send your email address to:
|
|
|
|
<bd@badger.idiscover.co.uk>
|
|
|
|
with the word "SUBSCRIBE" in either the subject header or body of the
|
|
message.
|
|
|
|
BACK ISSUES:
|
|
============
|
|
WWW:
|
|
|
|
[US] http://www.cathouse.org/BritishComedy/BD/
|
|
[UK] http://paul.acorn.co.uk:8080/Britcom/
|
|
|
|
FTP:
|
|
|
|
Log on as "anonymous," giving your email account as your password.
|
|
|
|
ftp://ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/BritComedy
|
|
ftp://ftp.cathouse.org/pub/cathouse/british.humour/britcomedy.digest
|
|
|
|
===
|
|
End
|