The Hamilton Spectator

Hold the Sunset offers a quieter, still biting John Cleese

- ROBERT LLOYD

That John Cleese is starring in a scripted series is automatica­lly news — there have been odd appearance­s through the years, but the short-lived “Wednesday 9:30 (8:30 Central),” on ABC in 2002, was his last outing as a regular cast member. Before that, we run back into the 1970s, to “Fawlty Towers,” a legend in 12 episodes, co-created by Cleese and his then-wife, Connie Booth. And then, of course, to “Monty Python’s Flying Circus.”

Now we come to “Hold the Sunset,” a new BBC series that made its way here Wednesday via the streaming service BritBox. That Cleese’s co-star in this project is the great Alison Steadman, perhaps best known in the States as Mrs. Bennet in the 1995 Jennifer Ehle-Colin Firth “Pride and Prejudice,” makes this news even newsier.

Phil (Cleese) and Edith (Steadman) are old friends in a latebloomi­ng romantic relationsh­ip. Phil thinks they should get married, for practical as well as personal reasons, perhaps sell their houses — they are neighbours as well — and move somewhere sunny and foreign. (“It could give us 10 more years, or finish us off,” says Phil, who seems fine with either possibilit­y.) Edith has been reluctant to commit, but just as she does, her middle-aged son moves back home, unannounce­d.

Written by Charles McKeown, who collaborat­ed with Python Terry Gilliam on the screenplay­s of “Brazil,” “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen” and “The Imaginariu­m of Doctor Parnassus,” “Hold the Sunset” is not, on early evidence, the work by which either actor will be best remembered. (Only two episodes, out of six, were made available for review.)

But it’s tonally secure, with its own pleasures and music. (Do not come here looking for Basil Fawlty.) If some of the plotting feels arranged just to keep the characters from leaving the scene, while creating maximum trouble for them there — maybe that’s just one definition of a farce.

Having left his family in what his mother seems to correctly have diagnosed as a “perfectly routine midlife crisis,” son Roger’s (Jason Watkins) idea of moving forward is to go back — all the

way back — looking for his old comics and toy cars, wanting to repaint his room to its old colour, fetching back their old housekeepe­r (a great turn by Anne Reid, who starred opposite Derek Jacobi in “Last Tango in Halifax,” a much-loved, less silly December-December romance) and seemingly happy to have returned all responsibi­lity for his keep to his mother.

He is followed shortly by his abandoned wife Wendy (Rosie Cavaliero) and his competitiv­e sister Sandra (Joanna Scanlan), who has come softly to importune upon their mother herself. The women seem comparativ­ely reasonable at first, given Roger, but each is trouble in her own

way. None of them are monsters exactly — they think they know what’s best, which makes their selfishnes­s invisible to them.

Though everyone is excellent — regular viewers of British television will recognize all these actors — Cleese is the reason most will come to “Hold the Sunset,” and it’s reason enough.

A daredevil in his youth, his acting full of sharp turns and tumbles, he is, at 78, too old for slapstick — but though Phil walks (briskly) with a cane, there are, happily, few jokes about the infirmitie­s and indignitie­s of age, and when he says to Edith, “Due to medical science, I am now over 25 per cent titanium,” it’s to say that he’s sturdy, not that he’s

falling apart. When he refers to a bad back, it’s usually just to get out of doing something.

He speaks more softly now, with a new tenderness. But there is still a dry, imperious bite you can trace all the way back to Python. There is a nice acid whimsicali­ty in his delivery, as when, surprised skulking by a neighbour’s dog, he asks, “Would he like to see my passport? Is he going to insist on an explanatio­n, or would he just like to escort me to wherever it is dogs take people when they’re going to interrogat­e them?” or when he says, by way of an excuse for leaving a scene, “I’ve got to paint my lawn — otherwise, the barnacles start building up, you know.”

 ?? ADAM LAWRENCE BBC/SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Phil (John Cleese) and Edith (Alison Steadman) are two friends who were thinking of moving in together until her middle-aged son, Roger, (Jason Watkins, centre) moved back home
ADAM LAWRENCE BBC/SHUTTERSTO­CK Phil (John Cleese) and Edith (Alison Steadman) are two friends who were thinking of moving in together until her middle-aged son, Roger, (Jason Watkins, centre) moved back home

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