The Two Ronnies
1 9 6 9 - 1 9 8 7 (UK)
72 x 45 minute episodes, 20 x 50 minute episodes, 2 x 60 minute
episodes
1 x 30 minute special, 1 x 55 minute special
The Two Ronnies firmly placed Ronnie Corbett and Ronnie
Barker on the same level of popularity as that other great 70’s duo
Morecambe and Wise. Barker and Corbett had appeared together in
The Frost Report and, although each was to have a successful career on
his own - Corbett did cabaret work and later starred in sitcom
Sorry!,
Barker was the shining star of Porridge and
Open All Hours,
two of the BBC very best comedies - their partnership in this
joke-and-sketch show was a television triumph until Barker's
retirement in 1988.
The opening of the show had the pair sat at a news desk in
fluorescent jackets (the sort golfers might wear) and one would
announce; "In a packed program tonight..." followed by some
of the 150 or more joke news items the writers had submitted every
week, delivered very fast. The number was whittled down to a final
eighteen often only minutes before the start of the show.
Over
the years the format of the shows changed little; there were always
sketches involving dressing up as women (though Ronnie B hated drag -
he said it made his wife Joy sick to watch him) and there was always a
grand musical number near the close. The duo usually appeared as old
codgers somewhere in the show and as rock singers or punks, looking
particularly gruesome.
The centrepieces were sometimes brilliant adventure serials such as
The Phantom Raspberry Blower Of Old London Town (with Charley
Farley & Piggy Malone) and The Worm That Turned, a funny
futuristic mini-drama about a world where women had taken over the
world Gestapo-style.
It was a fairytale world where men were made to wear dresses,
whilst the women walked around in leather shorts, thigh length boots
and peaked caps and did the dominatrix thing. The serial featured
Diana Dors as a woman Prime Minister - a concept we found laughable at
the time . . .
Other favourite segments included; The cocktail party
sketches, The Village Idiots/ Country Bumpkins, The two blokes in the
pub (one of whom would try to finish the sentences of the other), and
Ronnie Corbett's waffling monologues - usually one (rather poor) joke
spun out to 5 minutes by endless repetitious references to the
producer drinking too much, the BBC canteen and Corbett's own slight
stature.
All of the Rons' humour was very British in style and very gentle.
They didn’t go out of their way to offend, preferring
seaside-postcard rudeness which made the show irresistible to
children. But adults loved the cleverness of much of the writing,
often the work of Ronnie B whose pen name for many years was Gerald Wiley.
And it's good night from him . . .
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