From their days at Cambridge, the Pythons (John Cleese, Graham
Chapman, Michael Palin, Terry Jones and Eric Idle) graduated,
though not altogether, through such sixties shows as At Last
The 1948 Show, The Frost Report, Do Not Adjust Your
Set and The Complete and Utter History of Britain.
Securing a BBC commitment for the new comedy troop, the series
went into production. What the series didn't have was an air date,
a time-slot or even a name! With episodes already being filmed,
the group found themselves under increasing pressure from the BBC
to name their show.
Owl-Stretching Time, Whither Canada?,The
Whizzo Easishow, The Toad Elevating Moment and The
Venus Di Milo Panic Show were all seriously considered before
the team duly informed the BBC that the show would simply be
called It's.
The conservative network was not impressed and the series was
given a Siberian time slot at 10:30 on Sunday nights, and told to
come up with a more memorable name. Eventually they came up with Monty
Pythons Flying Circus and took to the air in earnest.
By the end of their second run there were mounting fears from
within the BBC hierarchy. They used phrases like 'disgusting',
'appalling taste' and 'wallowed in sadism'. But the Pythons
pressed on.
In 1972 they won the BAFTA award for Best Light Entertainment
Program, a sure sign of finally being accepted, and went on to
make a fourth series (just called Monty Python) without
John Cleese. The brilliant ensemble cast of Cleese, Palin, Idle,
Jones, Gilliam and Chapman left it's footprint on every TV
skit-fest since.
What was so funny? Well, where does one start?
Hairdressers scaling Mount Everest (and opening a salon in
the process, using the last of their oxygen to power the
dryers)
Anne Elk (Miss) and her theory about Brontosauruses
Bounder of Adventure
Dead Parrot
The Proust recital contest where they couldn't decide who
should win so they gave the trophy to the "woman with the
biggest tits"
Arthur 'Two-Sheds' Jackson
Nudge, Nudge
The funniest joke in the world
A man with three buttocks
How to recognise different types of tree from quite a long
way off
A man with a tape recorder up his nose
Arthur Pewtie, who suspects his wife is being unfaithful and
goes for marriage counselling, only to watch the counsellor
make love to his wife
The Lumberjack Song
Albatross
"Me Doctor?"
The Spanish Inquisition (totally unexpected!)
Gumby Flower Arranging
Spam, spam, spam and spam
The Fish Slapping Dance
The man who believes he's qualified to be a lion tamer
because he already has the hat
'Hitting On The Head' Lessons
Kilimanjaro expedition with double vision
A cheese-shop owner whose shop is "uncontaminated by cheese"
Woody And Tinny Words . . .
Films
like Monty Python and the Holy Grail and The Life Of
Brian helped establish them worldwide.
In 1976 they sued the BBC for selling the television series to
America without their permission, and the BBC allowed them to buy
back the copyright.
Michael Palin says: "Their attitude was, 'oh well, Python
had its day, so you can have the foreign rights and good luck to
you', which meant of course they missed, by about two years, the
huge explosion in cable and video and ancillary markets, which we
can now sell".
Graham Chapman summed up the feeling that the Pythons were
always felt to be outcasts at the BBC: "I don't think the BBC
really wanted us around the building very much. In fact we seemed
to get worse and worse offices as went along. For the last series
we were in a shed near the gate".
The Python theme music is actually John Philip Sousa's Liberty
Bell March.
Video
Clips
Cheese shop
Dead Parrot
Ministry of Silly Walks
Argument Clinic
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Graham Chapman
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Terry Jones
Terry Gilliam