Daily Mail

Cruel and in appalling taste... BBC top bosses’ verdict on first Pythons

- By David Wilkes

MONTY Python are universall­y acclaimed nowadays as the most influentia­l comedy group of their generation.

But as they celebrate their 50th anniversar­y today, a new archive of documents shows that BBC bosses were shocked by some of their early shows’, ‘disgusting’ content and ‘cruel’ humour.

Two sketches from the last episode in the second series from 1970 called The Queen Will Be Watching, which lampooned the National Anthem, and The Undertaker’s Sketch, starring John Cleese as a man unsure of how to dispose of his mother’s body, came under fire.

Minutes of a programme review board state: ‘Aubrey Singer [the head of features group] said that he had found parts of this

‘Treatment of Anthem not amusing’

edition disgusting. ‘Controller BBC1 said the programme was continuall­y going over the edge of what was acceptable: this edition had contained two really awful sketches– the death sequence had been in appalling bad taste, while the treatment of the National Anthem had simply not been amusing.’

It added: ‘Stephen Hearst [the head of arts features] was critical of the fact that the values of the programme were so nihilistic and cruel... Bob Reid [the head of science features] felt the team seemed to wallow in the sadism of their humour.’

Monty Python’s Flying Circus, starring Michael Palin, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam and the late Graham Chapman alongside Cleese, first aired on October 5, 1969 on BBC1 and ran for four series.

Photos of rarely-seen moments from the making of the show have also been released to mark the anniversar­y, including shots from the sketch ‘Sam Peckinpah’s ‘Salad Days’.

Featured in the third series, it is a parody of the film director’s blood-soaked Westerns featuring members of the upper-class in an idyllic garden who suffer violent injuries from a tennis racquet and a piano.

BBC bosses also took umbrage with the pranks the quintet played on fellow comic Sir David Frost. In the Mouse Problem sketch, Cleese gave out his home phone number, while his home address was used in the Marriage Guidance Counsellor skit.

The Pythons had worked with Sir David’s on his hit satire programme The Frost Report so their jokes were friendly, but they caused concern for BBC executives, reported the Times. Reflecting on the prank, Sir David said: ‘I think it was John who, for some bizarre reason, said on live TV: “So, if you’re a mouse and you need some cheese, then this is the number to ring,” and he then gave out my home phone number.’

Yesterday, Shane Allen, BBC Controller of Comedy Commission­ing, said: ‘ The Pythons tore up the rule book of comedy grammar, convention­s and traditions, but thankfully the support for creative freedom won the day.

BBC History’s ‘Monty Python at 50’ collection is at www.bbc.com/historyoft­hebbc anniversar­ies/ october/python50

 ??  ?? Black humour: John Cleese and Graham Chapman in The Undertaker’s Sketch
Black humour: John Cleese and Graham Chapman in The Undertaker’s Sketch
 ??  ?? Prank victim: David Frost Concerns: The Python sketch in which Mr Frost’s home address was revealed
Prank victim: David Frost Concerns: The Python sketch in which Mr Frost’s home address was revealed

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