The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

For Idle, life’s a laugh and death’s a joke

Founding member of Monty Python releases memoir.

- By Sopan Deb

The 50th anniversar­y of Monty Python, which debuted on the BBC in 1969, is coming soon, but don’t expect Eric Idle, one of the comedy troupe’s founding members, to celebrate.

“Absolutely not,” Idle said with a laugh, when asked if the group had any plans to commemorat­e a half-century of dead parrots, cheese shops and silly walks. “There’s no reason we actually should.”

That doesn’t mean the Python spirit isn’t still alive inside Idle. He was on the phone from Los Angeles, where he was penning new music for the still-in-developmen­t film based on his hit Broadway musical, “Spamalot.” And if you are wondering, Idle said Tiffany Haddish has been offered the role of the Lady of the Lake and that the script has mostly been “solved.”

He is about to take off on a book tour for his own memoir, “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life: A Sortabiogr­aphy.” It is named after the song he composed that closes the classic Python film “Life of Brian,” and it has since become an anthem of its own: commonly sung at soccer matches and funerals.

As for any future Python projects, Idle responded: “I think I’ve done my bit. I’m interested in my life, whatever is left of it.”

The comedy ground has shifted since Terry Gilliam, John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Idle united in the 1960s, in part because of Monty Python. Countless comedians over the years have counted the troupe as a seminal influence. Now, the comedy world is larger and more diverse. This didn’t escape the notice of the BBC’s comedy commission­er, Shane Allen, who raised the ire of multiple Pythons when he said recently, “If you’re going to assemble a team now, it’s not going to be six Oxbridge white blokes,” referring to Monty Python. “It’s going to be a diverse range of people who reflect the modern world.”

Gilliam responded vehemently, saying “I no longer want to be a white male, I don’t want to be blamed for everything wrong in the world.” Cleese accused Allen of “social engineerin­g.”

In a wide-ranging conversati­on — condensed and edited for clarity and length — Idle gave an update on “Spamalot,” and his reaction to Allen’s comments.

This is a good time to ask about the “Spamalot” film and how it’s going so far.

It’s always hard to tell. The film business is such an idiotic business. It’s chaos and confusion as usual. Fox bought it from me and John Du Prez about three years ago. We have been working on it. We have the wonderful Casey Nicholaw directing it, and we have interest from lots of wonderful stars and actors. So we’re hoping to shoot it next year. I can tell you we’re very excited.

What is it like walking down the street for you nowadays? Do people walk up to you and say “Nudge, Nudge”?

It’s kind of weird because Python just gets bigger and bigger. There’s a lot of Python respect, probably too much. We’ll take it. At my age, you’ll take anything really.

Nothing is more identified with you than the song “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,” which is, of course, the title of your memoir. Will you have it played at your funeral?

I don’t know. I won’t be there.

Are you a person who always looks at the bright side?

I think I am an optimist by day and a pessimist by nighttime. I am an optimist basically coming from a pessimisti­c background.

When you say a pessimisti­c background, what do you mean?

Losing a father. Going to boarding school for 12 years. It was pretty grim and not very much fun. And then suddenly, I got to Cambridge and everything changed. I met Cleese. I met them all within about two years of getting up to Cambridge. It was odd. All the Pythons had met by about 1965, one way or another, even though it would be another four years before we did Python.

In those grim times, when your father died and during boarding school, were you an optimist?

Humor is like a form of grim pessimism. They were saying when they were beating you, “This is for your own good.” Really? Why don’t I hit you then?

You were often writing by yourself in Python.

Deliberate­ly so because I can’t stand talking to people before lunch. I don’t think anybody civilized does.

I know you wrote with Cleese on the most recent tour the two of you did. Do you ever think about how the old sketches might have looked if you were paired up with the other Pythons?

Occasional­ly, I did write with John. We wrote “Bruces” together. There’s one about this guy trying to climb the twin peaks of Mt. Kilimanjar­o because he has double vision. We did have some good times. I also wrote with Michael Palin and we’d always just get obliterate­d and have too much red wine. Graham and I tried but Graham would never say anything so it was hard to get him to start something.

Do you see Terry Jones at all? [ Jones announced last year that he had dementia.]

I saw him last year at a Python meeting. It’s been getting progressiv­ely worse. It’s a dark world that they go into. It’s very sad. You see them but they’re not really them. I miss him like crazy.

A couple of your Monty Python colleagues weren’t happy with Shane Allen’s comment. What did you think?

I thought it was silly but then he wrote an article about it in The Guardian. He explained what he actually meant.

Of course, the British press are monkeys. They’ll do anything to create trouble. He was talking about the difference in time, and the BBC now has to be aware that times have changed and indeed they must. He got hammered for a bit of abuse from John. I know Terry Gilliam wrote something very funny which I advised him very strongly not to publish if he wanted anybody to see his movie.

The fact is times have, of course, changed. We were characteri­zed as being like Oxbridge, privileged people. I didn’t come from any kind of privileged background. We poured our way into the BBC through a backdoor and refused to leave.

 ?? EMILY BERL/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Eric Idle’s new memoir, “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,” tells stories about his rise through comedy and his many famous friends. And of course, Monty Python stories.
EMILY BERL/THE NEW YORK TIMES Eric Idle’s new memoir, “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,” tells stories about his rise through comedy and his many famous friends. And of course, Monty Python stories.

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