The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

A royal disaster for McGonagall film premiere

ARCHIVES: Biopic of Dundee’s worst poet turned out just as bad as his verse – thanks to The Goons

- GRAEME STRACHAN

It was the movie premiere of the biopic of “Dundee’s Bard” which was just as bad as one of his terrible poems.

Everything went wrong at the royal charity film premiere of The Great McGonagall which also gave Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon an eyeful of more than they bargained for.

Spike Milligan played the world’s worst poet William McGonagall in the humorous biopic which also featured his Goon Show partner Peter Sellers as Queen Victoria and Alfie actress Julia Foster as Mrs McGonagall.

The film premiere at the ABC in Bloomsbury in London is being remembered exactly 45 years since it got off to a Goon-show start on January 22 1975.

Princess Margaret, who was born at Glamis Castle near Forfar, had already agreed to meet a cardboard replica of Peter Sellers dressed as Queen Victoria on arrival.

But an exuberant guest knocked the replica over and broke it.

Princess Margaret was then to be presented with a copy of McGonagall’s poems.

But she received an apology from Spike Milligan because the book of poems was not published in time.

To top it all the first reel of the film didn’t work after hitting technical difficulti­es.

The film was produced by British pornograph­y producer David Grant who had forced director Joseph McGrath to put in some nude scenes and used the film as a tax write-off.

Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon saw full frontal nude scenes once the reels got rolling again but witnesses said they did not bat an eyelid.

Widely considered the worst ever poet in the English language, McGonagall was a Dundee carpet weaver with a side-line in terrible verse who was most famous for A Descriptiv­e Poem On The Silvery Tay .

He described how he was living in Paton’s Lane in the West End when he was moved by the “spirit of poetry”.

McGonagall, who also had spells as an actor, carried an umbrella to protect himself from rotten fruit thrown at him by strangers.

He never admitted to writing deliberate­ly bad poetry and maintained his persona as unintentio­nally hilarious until his death in 1902, aged 77.

The Great McGonagall was the seventh in a string of flops for Sellers whose next film was a return to the role of Inspector Clouseau in The Return Of The Pink Panther.

 ??  ?? The Goons share a laugh with members of the royal family. From left: Announcer Andrew Timothy, Spike Milligan, Lord Snowdon, Peter Sellers, Princess Margaret, Harry Secombe, Princess Anne and the Duke of Edinburgh.
The Goons share a laugh with members of the royal family. From left: Announcer Andrew Timothy, Spike Milligan, Lord Snowdon, Peter Sellers, Princess Margaret, Harry Secombe, Princess Anne and the Duke of Edinburgh.

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