Wales On Sunday

I was glad to go to Nigeria. Since my wife Helen died my life’s very, very different

- MICHAEL PALIN IN NIGERIA Tuesday, Channel 5, 9pm

SIR Michael Palin may have turned 80 last year, but if his adventures in Nigeria are anything to go by, it is clear he has no plans to slow down any time soon.

He is back on our screens in Channel 5’s Michael Palin In Nigeria, which sees him visit a country he has never been to before.

Given that the comedian, writer and presenter has been making TV travelogue­s for the best part of 40 years, it is a rarity to find a corner of the globe he has not explored, resulting in a trip crammed with firsts for Sir Michael.

The three-part documentar­y sees the Monty Python star embark on a 1,300-mile journey across Nigeria, known as The Giant of Africa, with estimates that within 50 years it will be the third most populated country in the world, after India and China.

“I’m interested in countries that have great potential but for some reason, and in some particular ways, don’t seem to be fulfilling it at the moment,” he explains.

“That happens in lots of countries, including our own, but it’s of particular interest when you’re a traveller and you’re curious, and it gives a documentar­y an edge instead of looking around and just saying that everything is absolutely fine”.

He was also “interested in finding out what is really going on beneath the surface” and dives straight in during the first episode, where viewers will get to see him visit Makoko, often characteri­sed as the biggest slum in Africa, as well as the coastal town of Badagry, which was once a slave port.

He also gets a glimpse at Lagos’ bustling nightlife, and meets Yeni Kuti, the daughter of late musician Fela Kuti – who is regarded as the father of Afrobeat.

This series follows 2022 ‘s Michael Palin: Into Iraq and the Bafta-nominated Michael Palin In North Korea.

Of course, long before those, Sir Michael’s globetrott­ing BBC travel programmes, saw him visit locations including the Himalayas and the North and South Poles.

This trip though, was welcomed by the TV veteran for many reasons, not least because it followed the loss of his wife of 57 years, Helen Gibbins, last year.

Sir Michael met Helen while holidaying in the seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, and later fictionali­sed the encounter in a 1987 TV drama for the BBC titled East Of Ipswich.

“I was actually very glad to go in the end, because since Helen died my life is very, very different,” Sir Michael says.

“It is a bit like living in a vacuum if you’re not careful. We had 57 years of married life together and there are all those things you share, just the two of you, the little moments. I feel I’ve got to keep on working and Helen would want me to do that”.

He also wanted to “test” himself physically, he explains, “to see if I could still do this at 80 years old – and I found that I could”. He continues: “I also found it was very good for me in terms of my mental capacity – you’re seeing something new, you’re trying to understand it and hoping to find out what’s really happening in a country,” he says.

He has also written a book to go alongside the series, he reveals, highlighti­ng just one of his many career avenues after life as part of Monty Python.

His time in the surrealist comedy group – alongside John Cleese,

Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle and the late Graham Chapman and Terry Jones – saw them produce plays, books and musicals that became staples of popular culture.

He was knighted in 2019 for services to travel, culture and geography, marking his post-Python career in TV and writing.

Describing his first impression­s of Nigeria, after landing in Lagos at 4.55am local time, he says: “Fairly chaotic and noisy. The airport is just full of people wandering about, everyone is larger than life, and the atmosphere is quite overwhelmi­ng to start with.”

But it is that energy that also adds to the unique experience of visiting Nigeria.

As Sir Michael discovers.

“Up to a certain point it is quite stimulatin­g, and I realised later on that I felt a little bit freer sometimes in Nigeria than elsewhere,” he explains.

“There’s far less interferen­ce on the part of health and safety for example, but at the same time the electricit­y doesn’t work reliably and there are open sewers, all that sort of stuff, which is quite a shock at first.

“What was refreshing was that the people in Nigeria are upfront and will talk about anything – they’ll smile, shout and yell at you, and within 30 seconds they’ll be your best mate.

“In the last couple of series I’ve made for Channel 5 in North Korea and Iraq, people couldn’t talk to you in that way, so it was great to be able to engage with local people.”

While during his travels he did not get to sample a lot of homecooked Nigerian food, which Sir Michael would liked to have done, he reveals that he did encounter what he says were the snails” he has ever eaten.

So much so, that he had to tell one of his fellow globetrott­ing friends about them: naturalist and broadcaste­r Sir David Attenborou­gh.

“I couldn’t believe it. They were the size of steaks,” he says, adding: “I mentioned this to David Attenborou­gh, who I see every now and then.

“He said, ‘The snails are huge in Nigeria’ and I said ‘Yes they are’. He asked me what they tasted like, and they don’t really taste of anything. So there was the odd exotic thing like that to enjoy.”

Another escapade in Nigeria involved nearly losing one of the vans they were travelling in.

“Most of the infrastruc­ture in the country wasn’t working terribly well, be it the electricit­y or the roads, and nobody seemed to do a great deal about it. They rely on huge trucks to transport most things and they often get stuck,” he says.

“We actually lost one of our vans at one point, because it got stuck and we didn’t really have proper towing equipment.

“We tried our best, and the local villagers heard about the film crew getting stuck, so lots of them helped push us out of the puddles to great cheers, but the vehicle never really recovered.” “biggest

SIR

MICHAEL PALIN TELLS KERRI-ANN ROPER WHY HE WAS KEEN TO TAKE ON A 1,300-MILE JOURNEY AT

I felt a little bit freer sometimes in Nigeria than elsewhere... There’s far less interferen­ce on the part of health and safety for example...

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 ?? Of tackling another travelogue ?? EXPERIENCE­D TRAVELLER: Sir Michael Palin wanted to see if he was still physically capable
Of tackling another travelogue EXPERIENCE­D TRAVELLER: Sir Michael Palin wanted to see if he was still physically capable
 ?? ?? Sir Michael says Nigerians are larger than life
Sir Michael says Nigerians are larger than life
 ?? ?? Sir Michael with his late wife Helen
Sir Michael with his late wife Helen
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