
The Goodies
1 9 7 0 - 1 9 8 2 (UK)
73 x 30 minute episodes
1 x 50 minute episode
1 x 45 minute episode
1 x 25 minute episode
By
the second series of Broaden Your Mind, the trio of
Brooke-Taylor, Garden and Oddie were assembled and determined to
continue working together, focusing on the filmed visual comedy
they so enjoyed writing and performing.
They approached the BBC's Head of TV Comedy, Michael Mills,
with an idea based on 'an agency of three blokes, who do anything,
any time' and Mills, despite receiving many similar outlines, had
enough faith in the three comics to let them proceed.
The resulting show, which had the working title Narrow Your
Mind to follow its predecessor, was first titled Super
Chaps Three, and ultimately The Goodies - whence it
became a landmark in British comedy.
The Goodies were essentially a "fix-it" team,
committed to help those in need (and hopefully get rich and famous
or take over the world in the process). Tim, Bill and Graeme
nursed sick pets, launched rockets to the moon, house-sat
lighthouses and competed in the Olympics.
Each week the three climbed aboard and promptly fell off their
customised bicycle for three (the 'Trandem') before remounting to
pedal off to their task.
The show featured some ingeniously entertaining ideas,
including Kitten Kong where a giant kitten terrorised London, and
an episode which showed only too clearly the dire consequences
should there be a breeding epidemic of Rolf Harrises!
Like live-action versions of a Warner Brothers cartoons,
episodes incorporated speeded-up footage, sight gags, surrealism,
and good old-fashioned violent slapstick.
Each show would feature a song played during the chase
sequences. Bill Oddie and Michael Gibbs wrote all the music,
including the classic Funky Gibbon. Most episodes also
included one or a few mock TV advertisements, which delightfully
sent up the genre.
The BBC seemed to treat The Goodies as virtually a
children's program, a state of affairs that led to them become
increasingly disillusioned with the Corporation. Critics never
accorded The Goodies the same degree of cultural standing
as Monty Pythons Flying Circus, probably considering their
corny jokes and blatant slapstick less worthy than the Pythons'
verbal artistry.
If this snub bothered The Goodies they did not show it, and in
one famous sequence they even featured John Cleese in a cameo
role, as a genie taunting them with the jibe "Kids'
program!".
Mary Whitehouse certainly didn't see them as children. She once
described them as being "too sexually orientated",
taking particular issue with Tim Brooke-Taylor who had always
seemed about as unlikely a sex symbol as Harry Worth. Mrs
Whitehouse stated: "Tim Brooke-Taylor was seen undressing,
then dressing to mock John Travolta in an exceedingly tight pair
of underpants with a distinctive carrot motif on the front".
Celebrity appearances were a feature of The Goodies,
editions of which often spoofed other programs and so were
tailor-made for cameos, with all manner of unlikely TV
personalities turning up, including Michael Aspel, Sue Lawley,
John LeMesurier, Jane Asher, Mollie Sugden, David Dimbleby, Terry
Wogan, Tony Blackburn, John Peel, soccer commentator Kenneth
Wolstenholme, quizmaster Magnus Magnusson, astronomer Patrick
Moore and, perhaps most memorably of all, the rugby league
commentator Eddie Waring.
The Goodies was ultimately axed by the BBC to make way
for Hitch Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy. Bill Oddie was
summoned into an office at the BBC and told that the BBC were
planning a TV version of Hitch Hikers and unfortunately
they didn't have enough money to service the special effects on The
Goodies AND Hitch Hikers Guide.
Naturally, they looked for a new home and found it at LWT,
albeit just for one more series.
During their BBC years The Goodies twice won the Silver
Rose of Montreux (Kitten Kong, the 1972 winner, was a partial
remake of an episode which had first aired on 12 November 1971).
The Goodies also appeared in-character on Top Of The Pops, Crackerjack,
Seaside Special and in the 1976 fund-raiser A Poke In
The Eye (With A Sharp Stick).
They further performed a short, self-contained comedy segment
in each episode of the 13-week BBC1 show Engelbert With The
Young Generation, starring the singer Engelbert Humperdinck (9
January-2 April 1972).
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