The Southland Times

Pythons recoiled at pretentiou­s V&A show

- Jean-Jacques Savin

For most people, the offer of an exhibition of their work at the Victoria and Albert Museum would be an honour.

The museum in London, which has had a run of acclaimed shows, including ones dedicated to Pink Floyd and David Bowie, thought that it was on to a winner when it approached Monty Python last year. The comedians, who shaped British humour with Monty Python’s Flying Circus and their satirical film Life of Brian, were impressed at first with the suggestion that they were style idols, but enthusiasm faded as they clashed with curators over the exhibition title.

The collapse of the show has been revealed by Eric Idle in his memoir, Always Look on the Bright Side of Life, in which he describes his irritation at the pretentiou­sness of the exercise. He recalls that the surviving members of the troupe – John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones and Michael Palin – suggested to the museum that the exhibition title should be Monty Python: The Same Old Bollocks. ‘‘That title was very Python,’’ Idle wrote. ‘‘In-yourface aggressive modesty.’’

The museum turned it down, prompting the team to suggest Monty Python Exposed. The V&A demurred again and came back with From Dali to Dead Parrots, which the Pythons hated and which Idle took as a sign that the establishm­ent was looking down on them. ‘‘It became clear they were doing an exhibition on surrealism, and the so-called roots of our work,’’ Idle continued. ‘‘Pretentiou­s nonsense. We’re nothing to do with Dali or Duchamp. For me, Python has always been about comedy. That is the art. If you take us seriously you miss the joke, even though we were always deadly serious about being funny.’’

The final straw was that the museum insisted on having the final say. ‘‘I was never prouder of Python than when we all said no,’’ Idle wrote. ‘‘The museum couldn’t believe it.’’

The V&A suggested that there was also a financial element to the row.

‘‘Despite a constructi­ve dialogue with the Pythons, unfortunat­ely it wasn’t possible to agree a creative partnershi­p that effectivel­y combined the Python’s ideas with the V&A’s collection­s, extensive exhibition expertise and financial model,’’ it said.

Earlier in his memoir Idle explains that the Pythons snuck a joke at the expense of one of Life of Brian’s financial backers into the song Always Look on the Bright Side of Life. Bernard Delfont, chief executive of the distributo­r EMI, nearly scuppered the film by backing out at the last minute, and Idle sings: ‘‘I told them, Bernie I said, they’ll never make their money back.’’ The Pythons had sued and received a substantia­l settlement. – The Times got a swell of one metre and I’m moving at two or three kilometres an hour,’’ JeanJacque­s Savin said shortly after leaving shore on Boxing Day from El Hierro island in the Canaries. ‘‘For the time being my capsule is behaving very, very well,’’ he added.

Savin, a 71-year old former parachutis­t, built the 3m-long vessel, which resembles a space capsule, in a small boatyard in Ales in the Arcachon basin. It includes a kitchen, sleeping bunk, chart table, and storage.

‘‘I have the soul of a sportsman and am using my retirement to set myself a number of challenges,’’ he said.

Entertainm­ent will be provided by a porthole in the floor that will allow Savin to look at passing fish. He said his biggest fear was of killer whales, ‘‘because they can be aggressive’’. He does not yet know where he will end up. ‘‘I’d really like it to be a French island like Martinique or Guadeloupe.’’ – Telegraph Group

‘‘I have the soul of a sportsman and am using my retirement to set myself a number of challenges.’’

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 ?? AP ?? The Victoria and Albert Museum suggested naming a Monty Python exhibition after the famous dead parrot sketch. Frenchman Jean-Jacques Savin, 71-year-old, stands on top of his 3m long, 2.1m wide resin-coated plywood capsule, which will use ocean currents alone to propel him across the sea. Savin set off from El Hierro in Spain’s Canary Islands on Thursday and is aiming to complete his 4500km Caribbean in about three months.
AP The Victoria and Albert Museum suggested naming a Monty Python exhibition after the famous dead parrot sketch. Frenchman Jean-Jacques Savin, 71-year-old, stands on top of his 3m long, 2.1m wide resin-coated plywood capsule, which will use ocean currents alone to propel him across the sea. Savin set off from El Hierro in Spain’s Canary Islands on Thursday and is aiming to complete his 4500km Caribbean in about three months.

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