Monty Python | |
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The Pythons in 1969:
Back row: Chapman, Idle, Gilliam Front row: Jones, Cleese, Palin | |
Medium |
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Nationality | British |
Years active | 1969–1983, 1989, 1998–1999, 2002, 2013–2014 |
Genres |
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Notable works and roles | Flying Circus (1969–1974) And Now for Something Completely Different (1971) Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) Life of Brian (1979) Live at the Hollywood Bowl (1982) The Meaning of Life (1983) Monty Python Live (Mostly) (2014) |
Members | |
Website | MontyPython.com |
Monty Python (also collectively known as the Pythons) were a British surreal comedy group who created their sketch comedy show Monty Python's Flying Circus, which first aired on the BBC in 1969. Forty-five episodes were made over four series. The Python phenomenon developed from the television series into something larger in scope and impact, including touring stage shows, films, numerous albums, several books, and musicals. The Pythons' influence on comedy has been compared to the Beatles' influence on music. Their sketch show has been referred to as "not only one of the more enduring icons of 1970s British popular culture, but also an important moment in the evolution of television comedy".
Broadcast by the BBC between 1969 and 1974, Monty Python's Flying Circus was conceived, written, and performed by its members Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin. Loosely structured as a sketch show, but with an innovative stream-of-consciousness approach, aided by Gilliam's animation, it pushed the boundaries of what was acceptable in style and content. A self-contained comedy team responsible for both writing and performing their work, the Pythons had creative control which allowed them to experiment with form and content, discarding rules of television comedy. Following their television work, they began making films, which include Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), Life of Brian (1979) and The Meaning of Life (1983). Their influence on British comedy has been apparent for years, while in North America, it has coloured the work of cult performers from the early editions of Saturday Night Live through to more recent absurdist trends in television comedy. "Pythonesque" has entered the English lexicon as a result.
In a 2005 poll of over 300 comics, comedy writers, producers and directors throughout the English-speaking world to find "The Comedian's Comedian", three of the six Pythons members were voted to be among the top 50 greatest comedians ever: Cleese at No. 2, Idle at No. 21, and Palin at No. 30.
Before Flying Circus
Jones and Palin met at Oxford University, where they performed together with the Oxford Revue. Chapman and Cleese met at Cambridge University. Idle was also at Cambridge, but started a year after Chapman and Cleese. Cleese met Gilliam in New York City while on tour with the Cambridge University Footlights revue Cambridge Circus (originally entitled A Clump of Plinths). Chapman, Cleese, and Idle were members of the Footlights, which at that time also included the future Goodies (Tim Brooke-Taylor, Bill Oddie, and Graeme Garden), and Jonathan Lynn (co-writer of Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister). During Idle's presidency of the club, feminist writer Germaine Greer and broadcaster Clive James were members. Recordings of Footlights' revues (called "Smokers") at Pembroke College
include sketches and performances by Cleese and Idle, which, along with
tapes of Idle's performances in some of the drama society's theatrical
productions, are kept in the archives of the Pembroke Players.
The six Python members appeared in or wrote these shows before Flying Circus:
- I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again (radio) (1964–1973) [Cleese: cast member and writer] – [Idle and Chapman: writers]
- The Frost Report (1966–1967) [Cleese: cast member and writer] – [Idle: writer of Frost's monologues] – [Chapman, Palin and Jones: writers]
- At Last the 1948 Show (1967) [Chapman and Cleese: writers and cast members] – [Idle: guest star and writer]
- Twice a Fortnight (1967) [Palin and Jones: cast members and writers]
- Do Not Adjust Your Set (1967–1969) [Idle, Jones, and Palin: cast members and writers] – [Gilliam: animation]
+ Bonzo Dog Band: musical interludes - We Have Ways of Making You Laugh (1968) [Idle: cast member and writer] – [Gilliam: animation]
- How to Irritate People (1968) [Cleese and Chapman: cast members & writers] – [Palin: cast member]
- The Complete and Utter History of Britain (1969) [Palin and Jones: cast members and writers]
- Doctor in the House (1969) [Cleese and Chapman: writers]
The BBC’s satirical television show, The Frost Report,
broadcast from March 1966 to December 1967, is credited as first
uniting the British Pythons and providing an environment in which they
could develop their particular styles.
Following the success of Do Not Adjust Your Set, broadcast on ITV
in the UK from December 1967 to May 1969, ITV offered Gilliam, Idle,
Jones, and Palin their own late-night adult comedy series together. At
the same time, Chapman and Cleese were offered a show by the BBC, which had been impressed by their work on The Frost Report and At Last the 1948 Show. Cleese was reluctant to do a two-man show
for various reasons, including Chapman's supposedly difficult and
erratic personality. Cleese had fond memories of working with Palin on How to Irritate People
and invited him to join the team. With no studio available at ITV until
summer 1970 for the late-night show, Palin agreed to join Cleese and
Chapman, and suggested the involvement of his writing partner Jones and
colleague Idle—who in turn wanted Gilliam to provide animations for the
projected series. Much has been made of the fact that the Monty Python
troupe is the result of Cleese's desire to work with Palin and the
chance circumstances that brought the other four members into the fold.
By contrast, according to John Cleese's autobiography, the origins of Monty Python lay in the admiration that writing partners Cleese and Chapman had for the new type of comedy being done on Do Not Adjust Your Set;
as a result, a meeting was initiated by Cleese between Chapman, Idle,
Jones, Palin, and himself at which it was agreed to pool their writing
and performing efforts and jointly seek production sponsorship. According to their official website, the group was born from a Kashmir tandoori restaurant in Hampstead in 1969.
Monty Python's Flying Circus
Development of the series
The Pythons had a definite idea about what they wanted to do with the series. They were admirers of the work of Peter Cook, Alan Bennett, Jonathan Miller, and Dudley Moore on Beyond the Fringe, and had worked on Frost, which was similar in style. They enjoyed Cook and Moore's sketch show Not Only... But Also.
One problem the Pythons perceived with these programmes was that though
the body of the sketch would be strong, the writers would often
struggle to then find a punchline funny enough to end on, and this would
detract from the overall sketch quality. They decided that they would
simply not bother to "cap" their sketches in the traditional manner, and
early episodes of the Flying Circus series make great play of
this abandonment of the punchline (one scene has Cleese turn to Idle, as
the sketch descends into chaos, and remark that "This is the silliest
sketch I've ever been in"—they all resolve not to carry on and simply
walk off the set). However, as they began assembling material for the show, the Pythons watched one of their collective heroes, Spike Milligan, recording his groundbreaking series Q5
(1969). Not only was the programme more irreverent and anarchic than
any previous television comedy, but Milligan also would often "give up"
on sketches halfway through and wander off set (often muttering "Did I
write this?"). It was clear that their new series would now seem less
original, and Jones in particular became determined the Pythons should
innovate.
After much debate, Jones remembered an animation Gilliam had created for Do Not Adjust Your Set
called "Beware of the Elephants", which had intrigued him with its
stream-of-consciousness style. Jones felt it would be a good concept to
apply to the series: allowing sketches to blend into one another. Palin
had been equally fascinated by another of Gilliam's efforts, entitled
"Christmas Cards", and agreed that it represented "a way of doing things
differently". Since Cleese, Chapman, and Idle were less concerned with
the overall flow of the programme, Jones, Palin, and Gilliam became
largely responsible for the presentation style of the Flying Circus
series, in which disparate sketches are linked to give each episode the
appearance of a single stream-of-consciousness (often using a Gilliam
animation to move from the closing image of one sketch to the opening
scene of another).
Writing started at 9 am and finished at 5 pm. Typically, Cleese
and Chapman worked as one pair isolated from the others, as did Jones
and Palin, while Idle wrote alone. After a few days, they would join
together with Gilliam, critique their scripts, and exchange ideas. Their
approach to writing was democratic. If the majority found an idea
humorous, it was included in the show. The casting of roles for the
sketches was a similarly unselfish process, since each member viewed
himself primarily as a "writer", rather than an actor eager for screen
time. When the themes for sketches were chosen, Gilliam had a free hand
in bridging them with animations, using a camera, scissors, and
airbrush.
While the show was a collaborative process, different factions
within Python were responsible for elements of the team's humour. In
general, the work of the Oxford-educated members (Jones and Palin) was
more visual, and more fanciful conceptually (e.g., the arrival of the Spanish Inquisition
in a suburban front room), while the Cambridge graduates' sketches
tended to be more verbal and more aggressive (for example, Cleese and
Chapman's many "confrontation" sketches, where one character intimidates
or hurls abuse, or Idle's characters with bizarre verbal quirks, such
as "The Man Who Speaks In Anagrams").
Cleese confirmed that "most of the sketches with heavy abuse were
Graham's and mine, anything that started with a slow pan across
countryside and impressive music was Mike and Terry's, and anything that
got utterly involved with words and disappeared up any personal orifice
was Eric's".
Gilliam's animations, meanwhile, ranged from the whimsical to the
savage (the cartoon format allowing him to create some astonishingly
violent scenes without fear of censorship).
Several names for the show were considered before Monty Python's Flying Circus was settled upon. Some were Owl Stretching Time, The Toad Elevating Moment, A Horse, a Spoon and a Bucket, Vaseline Review, and Bun, Wackett, Buzzard, Stubble and Boot. Flying Circus
stuck when the BBC explained it had printed that name in its schedules
and was not prepared to amend it. Many variations on the name in front
of this title then came and went (popular legend holds that the BBC
considered Monty Python's Flying Circus to be a ridiculous name, at which point the group threatened to change their name every week until the BBC relented). Gwen Dibley's Flying Circus
was named after a woman Palin had read about in the newspaper, thinking
it would be amusing if she were to discover she had her own TV show. Baron Von Took's Flying Circus was considered as an affectionate tribute to Barry Took, the man who had brought them together. Arthur Megapode's Flying Circus was suggested, then discarded. The name Baron Von Took's Flying Circus had the form of Baron Manfred von Richthofen's Flying Circus of WWI fame, and the new group was forming in a time when the Royal Guardsmen's 1966 song "Snoopy vs. the Red Baron" had peaked. The term 'flying circus' was also another name for the popular entertainment of the 1920s known as barnstorming, where multiple performers collaborated with their stunts to perform a combined set of acts.
Differing, somewhat confusing accounts are given of the origins
of the Python name, although the members agree that its only
"significance" was that they thought it sounded funny. In the 1998
documentary Live at Aspen during the US Comedy Arts Festival, where the troupe was awarded the AFI Star Award by the American Film Institute, the group implied that "Monty" was selected (Eric Idle's idea) as a gently mocking tribute to Field Marshal Lord Montgomery, a legendary British general of World War II;
requiring a "slippery-sounding" surname, they settled on "Python". On
other occasions, Idle has claimed that the name "Monty" was that of a
popular and rotund fellow who drank in his local pub; people would often
walk in and ask the barman, "Has Monty been in yet?", forcing the name
to become stuck in his mind. The name Monty Python was later described
by the BBC as being "envisaged by the team as the perfect name for a
sleazy entertainment agent".
Style of the show
Flying Circus popularised innovative formal techniques, such as the cold open, in which an episode began without the traditional opening titles or announcements. An example of this is the "It's" man: Palin, outfitted in Robinson Crusoe
garb, making a tortuous journey across various terrains, before finally
approaching the camera to state, "It's ...", only to be then cut off by
the title sequence and theme music.
On several occasions, the cold open lasted until mid-show, after
which the regular opening titles ran. Occasionally, the Pythons tricked
viewers by rolling the closing credits halfway through the show, usually continuing the joke by fading to the familiar globe logo
used for BBC continuity, over which Cleese would parody the clipped
tones of a BBC announcer. On one occasion, the credits ran directly
after the opening titles.
Because of their dislike of finishing with punchlines, they
experimented with ending the sketches by cutting abruptly to another
scene or animation, walking offstage, addressing the camera (breaking
the fourth wall),
or introducing a totally unrelated event or character. A classic
example of this approach was the use of Chapman's "anti-silliness"
character of "the Colonel", who walked into several sketches and ordered them to be stopped because things were becoming "far too silly".
Another favourite way of ending sketches was to drop a cartoonish
"16-ton weight" prop on one of the characters when the sketch seemed to
be losing momentum, or a knight in full armour (played by Terry Gilliam) would wander on-set and hit characters over the head with a rubber chicken,
before cutting to the next scene. Yet another way of changing scenes
was when John Cleese, usually outfitted in a dinner suit, would come in
as a radio commentator and, in a rather pompous manner, make the formal
and determined announcement "And now for something completely
different.", which later became the title of the first Monty Python film.
The Python theme music is the Band of the Grenadier Guards' rendition of John Philip Sousa's "The Liberty Bell" which was first published in 1893. Under the Berne Convention's "country of origin" concept, the composition was subject to United States copyright law which states that any work first published prior to 1923 was in the public domain due to copyright expiration. This enabled Gilliam to co-opt the march for the series without having to make any royalty payments.
The use of Gilliam's surreal, collage stop motion
animations was another innovative intertextual element of the Python
style. Many of the images Gilliam used were lifted from famous works of
art, and from Victorian illustrations and engravings. The giant foot which crushes the show's title at the end of the opening credits is in fact the foot of Cupid, cut from a reproduction of the Renaissance masterpiece Venus, Cupid, Folly and Time by Bronzino. This foot, and Gilliam's style in general, are visual trademarks of the programme.
The Pythons used the British tradition of cross-dressing comedy by donning frocks and makeup and playing female roles themselves while speaking in falsetto.
Jones specialised in playing the working-class housewife, with Palin
and Idle in being generally more posh. The other members played female
roles more sparsely. Generally speaking, female roles were played by
women only when the scene specifically required that the character be
sexually attractive (although sometimes they used Idle for this). The
troupe later turned to Carol Cleveland, who co-starred in numerous episodes after 1970. In some episodes, and later in Monty Python's Life of Brian, they took the idea one step further by playing women who impersonated men (in the stoning scene).
Many sketches are well-known and widely quoted. "Dead Parrot sketch", "The Lumberjack Song", "Spam" (which led to the coining of the term email spam), "Nudge Nudge", "The Spanish Inquisition", "Upper Class Twit of the Year", "Cheese Shop", and "The Ministry of Silly Walks" are just a few examples.
Introduction to North America and the World
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) added Monty Python's Flying Circus to its national September 1970 fall line-up. They aired the 13 episodes of series 1, which had first run on the BBC the previous fall (October 1969 to January 1970), as well as the first six episodes of series 2 only a few weeks after they first appeared on the BBC (September to November 1970).
The CBC dropped the show when it returned to regular programming after
the Christmas 1970 break, choosing to not place the remaining seven
episodes of series 2 on the January 1971 CBC schedule.
Within a week, the CBC received hundreds of calls complaining of the
cancellation, and more than 100 people staged a demonstration at the
CBC's Montreal studios. The show eventually returned, becoming a fixture on the network during the first half of the 1970s.
Time-Life Films
had the rights to distribute all BBC-TV programmes in the United
States; however, they decided that British comedy simply would not work
in America, so it would not be worth the investment to convert the
Python episodes from the European PAL standard to the American NTSC standard.
Sketches from Monty Python's Flying Circus were introduced to American audiences in August 1972, with the release of the Python film And Now for Something Completely Different, featuring sketches from series 1 and 2 of the television show. This 1972 release met limited box office success.
In the summer of 1974, Ron Devillier, the programme director for nonprofit PBS television station KERA in Dallas, Texas, started airing episodes of Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Ratings shot through the roof, providing an encouraging sign to the
other 100 PBS stations that had signed up to begin airing the show in
October 1974—exactly five years after their BBC debut. There was also
cross-promotion from FM Radio
stations across the country, whose airing of tracks from the Python LPs
had already introduced American audiences to this bizarre brand of
comedy. The popularity on PBS resulted in the 1974 re-release of the
1972 ...Completely Different film, with much greater box office success.
The ability to show Monty Python's Flying Circus under the American NTSC standard had been made possible by the commercial actions of American television producer Greg Garrison. Garrison produced the NBC series The Dean Martin Comedy World,
which ran during the summer of 1974. The concept was to show clips
from comedy shows produced in other countries, including tape of the
Python sketches "Bicycle Repairman" and "The Dull Life of a
Stockbroker". Payment for use of these two sketches was enough to allow
Time-Life Films to convert the entire Python library to NTSC standard,
allowing for the sale to the PBS network stations which then brought the
entire show to US audiences.
In 1975, ABC broadcast two 90-minute Monty Python
specials, each with three shows, but cut out a total of 24 minutes from
each, in part to make time for commercials, and in part to avoid
upsetting their audience. As the judge observed in Gilliam v. American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.,
where Monty Python sued for damages caused by broadcast of the
mutilated version, "According to the network, appellants should have
anticipated that most of the excised material contained scatological
references inappropriate for American television and that these scenes
would be replaced with commercials, which presumably are more palatable
to the American public." Monty Python won the case.
With the popularity of Python throughout the rest of the 1970s
and through most of the 1980s, PBS stations looked at other British
comedies, leading to UK shows such as Are You Being Served?
gaining a US audience, and leading, over time, to many PBS stations
having a "British Comedy Night" which airs many popular UK comedies.
In 1976 Monty Python became the top rated show in Japan. The literal translation of the Japanese title was The Gay Dragon Boys Show,
Cleese departs; the circus closes
Having considered the possibility at the end of the second season, Cleese left the Flying Circus
at the end of the third. He later explained that he felt he no longer
had anything fresh to offer the show, and claimed that only two Cleese-
and Chapman-penned sketches in the third series ("Dennis Moore" and the
"Cheese Shop") were truly original, and that the others were bits and
pieces from previous work cobbled together in slightly different
contexts.
He was also finding Chapman, who was at that point in the full throes
of alcoholism, difficult to work with. According to an interview with
Idle, "It was on an Air Canada flight on the way to Toronto,
when John (Cleese) turned to all of us and said 'I want out.' Why? I
don't know. He gets bored more easily than the rest of us. He's a
difficult man, not easy to be friendly with. He's so funny because he
never wanted to be liked. That gives him a certain fascinating, arrogant
freedom."
Jones noted his reticence in 2012, "He was good at it, when he did it
he was professional, but he’d rather not have done it. The others all
loved it, but he got more and more pissed off about having to come out
and do filming, and the one that really swung it, in my view, was when
we had to do the day on the Newhaven lifeboat."
The rest of the group carried on for one more "half" season before calling a halt to the programme in 1974. The name Monty Python's Flying Circus
appears in the opening animation for season four, but in the end
credits, the show is listed as simply "Monty Python". Although Cleese
left the show, he was credited as a writer for three of the six
episodes, largely concentrated in the "Michael Ellis" episode, which had
begun life as one of the many drafts of the "Holy Grail" motion
picture. When a new direction for "Grail" was decided upon, the subplot
of Arthur and his knights wandering around a strange department store
in modern times was lifted out and recycled as the aforementioned TV
episode. Songwriter Neil Innes contributed to some sketches, including
"Appeal on Behalf of Very Rich People".
While the first three seasons contained 13 episodes each, the
fourth ended after just six. Extremely keen to keep the now massively
popular show going, the BBC had offered the troupe a full 13 episodes,
but the truncated troupe (now under the unspoken 'leadership' of Terry
Jones) had come to a common agreement while writing the fourth series
that there was only enough material, and more importantly only enough
enthusiasm, to shoot the six that were made.
Life beyond the Flying Circus
Filmography
And Now for Something Completely Different (1971)
The Pythons' first feature film was directed by Ian MacNaughton, reprising his role from the television series. It consisted of sketches from the first two seasons of the Flying Circus,
reshot on a low budget (and often slightly edited) for cinema release.
Material selected for the film includes: "Dead Parrot", "The Lumberjack
Song", "Upper Class Twit of the Year", "Hell's Grannies", "Self-Defence Class", "How Not to Be Seen", and "Nudge Nudge". Financed by Playboy's UK executive Victor Lownes,
it was intended as a way of breaking Monty Python into America, and
although it was ultimately unsuccessful in this, the film did good
business in the UK, this being in the era before home video would make
the original material much more accessible. The group did not consider
the film a success.
Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975)
In 1974, between production on the third and fourth seasons, the
group decided to embark on their first "proper" feature film, containing
entirely new material. Monty Python and the Holy Grail was based on Arthurian legend
and was directed by Jones and Gilliam. Again, the latter also
contributed linking animations (and put together the opening credits).
Along with the rest of the Pythons, Jones and Gilliam performed several
roles in the film, but Chapman took the lead as King Arthur. Cleese
returned to the group for the film, feeling that they were once again
breaking new ground. Holy Grail was filmed on location, in
picturesque rural areas of Scotland, with a budget of only £229,000; the
money was raised in part with investments from rock groups such as Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull, and Led Zeppelin—and UK music industry entrepreneur Tony Stratton-Smith (founder and owner of the Charisma Records label, for which the Pythons recorded their comedy albums).
The backers of the film wanted to cut the famous Black Knight scene (in which the Black Knight loses his limbs in a duel), but it was eventually kept in the movie.
Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979)
Following the success of Holy Grail, reporters asked for the
title of the next Python film, despite the fact that the team had not
even begun to consider a third one. Eventually, Idle flippantly replied
"Jesus Christ – Lust for Glory", which became the group's stock answer
once they realised that it shut reporters up. However, they soon began
to seriously consider a film lampooning the New Testament era in the same way Holy Grail
had lampooned Arthurian legend. Despite them all sharing a distrust of
organised religion, they agreed not to mock Jesus or his teachings
directly. They also mentioned that they could not think of anything
legitimate to make fun of about him. Instead, they decided to write a
satire on credulity and hypocrisy among the followers of someone who had
been mistaken for the "Messiah", but who had no desire to be followed
as such. Chapman was cast in the lead role of Brian.
The focus therefore shifted to a separate individual born at the
same time, in a neighbouring stable. When Jesus appears in the film
(first, as a baby in the stable, and then later on the Mount, speaking the Beatitudes), he is played straight (by actor Kenneth Colley)
and portrayed with respect. The comedy begins when members of the crowd
mishear his statements of peace, love, and tolerance ("I think he said,
'Blessed are the cheesemakers'").
Directing duties were handled solely by Jones, having amicably
agreed with Gilliam that Jones' approach to film-making was better
suited for Python's general performing style. Holy Grail's
production had often been stilted by their differences behind the
camera. Gilliam again contributed two animated sequences (one being the
opening credits) and took charge of set design. The film was shot on
location in Tunisia, the finances being provided this time by former Beatle George Harrison, who together with Denis O'Brien formed the production company Hand-Made Films for the movie. Harrison had a cameo role as the "owner of the Mount".
Despite its subject matter attracting controversy, particularly
upon its initial release, it has (together with its predecessor) been
ranked among the greatest comedy films. A Channel 4 poll in 2005 ranked Holy Grail in sixth place, with Life of Brian at the top.
Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl (1982)
Filmed at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles during preparations for The Meaning of Life, this was a concert film (directed by Terry Hughes)
in which the Pythons performed sketches from the television series in
front of an audience. The released film also incorporated footage from
the German television specials (the inclusion of which gives Ian
MacNaughton his first on-screen credit for Python since the end of Flying Circus) and live performances of several songs from the troupe's then-current Monty Python's Contractual Obligation Album.
Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983)
The Pythons' final film returned to something structurally closer to the style of Flying Circus. A series of sketches loosely follows the ages of man from birth to death. Directed again by Jones solo, The Meaning of Life
is embellished with some of the group's most bizarre and disturbing
moments, as well as various elaborate musical numbers. The film is by
far their darkest work, containing a great deal of black humour, garnished by some spectacular violence (including an operation to remove a liver from a living patient without anaesthetic
and the morbidly obese Mr. Creosote exploding over several restaurant
patrons). At the time of its release, the Pythons confessed their aim
was to offend "absolutely everyone".
Besides the opening credits and the fish sequence, Gilliam, by
now an established live-action director, no longer wanted to produce any
linking cartoons, offering instead to direct one sketch, "The Crimson Permanent Assurance".
Under his helm, though, the segment grew so ambitious and tangential
that it was cut from the movie and used as a supporting feature in its
own right. (Television screenings also use it as a prologue.) This was
the last project on which all six Pythons collaborated, except for the
1989 compilation Parrot Sketch Not Included,
where they are all seen sitting in a closet for four seconds. This was
the last time Chapman appeared on screen with the Pythons.
Secret Policeman's Ball benefit shows
Members
of Python contributed their services to charitable endeavours and
causes—sometimes as an ensemble, at other times as individuals. The
cause that has been the most frequent and consistent beneficiary has
been the human rights work of Amnesty International. Between 1976 and 1981, the troupe or its members appeared in four major fund-raisers for Amnesty—known collectively as the Secret Policeman's Ball
shows—which were turned into multiple films, TV shows, videos, record
albums, and books. These benefit shows and their many spin-offs raised
considerable sums of money for Amnesty, raised public and media
awareness of the human rights cause, and influenced many other members
of the entertainment community (especially rock musicians) to become
involved in political and social issues. Among the many musicians who have publicly attributed their activism—and the organisation of their own benefit events—to the inspiration of the work in this field of Monty Python are U2, Bob Geldof, Pete Townshend, and Sting.
The shows are credited by Amnesty with helping the organisation develop
public awareness in the US, where one of the spin-off films was a major
success.
Cleese and Jones had an involvement (as performer, writer or
director) in all four Amnesty benefit shows, Palin in three, Chapman in
two, and Gilliam in one. Idle did not participate in the Amnesty shows.
Notwithstanding Idle's lack of participation, the other five members
(together with "Associate Pythons" Carol Cleveland and Neil Innes) all appeared together in the first Secret Policeman's Ball benefit—the 1976 A Poke in the Eye—where they performed several Python sketches. In this first show, they were collectively billed as Monty Python. (Peter Cook
deputised for the errant Idle in a courtroom sketch.) In the next three
shows, the participating Python members performed many Python sketches,
but were billed under their individual names rather than under the
collective Python banner. After a six-year break, Amnesty resumed
producing Secret Policeman's Ball benefit shows in 1987
(sometimes with, and sometimes without, variants of the iconic title)
and by 2006 had presented a total of 12 such shows. The shows since 1987
have featured newer generations of British comedic performers,
including many who have attributed their participation in the show to
their desire to emulate the Python's pioneering work for Amnesty.
(Cleese and Palin made a brief cameo appearance in the 1989 Amnesty
show; apart from that, the Pythons have not appeared in shows after the
first four.)
Going solo
Each member has pursued various film, television, and stage projects
since the break-up of the group, but often continued to work with one
another. Many of these collaborations were very successful, most notably
A Fish Called Wanda (1988), written by Cleese, in which he starred along with Palin. The pair also appeared in Time Bandits (1981), a film directed by Gilliam, who wrote it together with Palin. Gilliam directed Jabberwocky (1977), and also directed and co-wrote Brazil (1985), which featured Palin, and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988), which featured Idle. Yellowbeard
(1983) was co-written by Chapman and featured Chapman, Idle, and
Cleese, as well as many other English comedians including Peter Cook, Spike Milligan, and Marty Feldman.
Palin and Jones wrote the comedic TV series Ripping Yarns
(1976–79), starring Palin. Jones also appeared in the pilot episode and
Cleese appeared in a nonspeaking part in the episode "Golden Gordon".
Jones' film Erik the Viking also has Cleese playing a small part.
In 1996, Terry Jones wrote and directed an adaptation of Kenneth Grahame's novel The Wind in the Willows.
It featured four members of Monty Python: Jones as Mr. Toad, Idle as
Ratty, Cleese as Mr. Toad's lawyer, and Palin as the Sun. Gilliam was
considered for the voice of the river.
In terms of numbers of productions, Cleese has the most prolific
solo career, having appeared in dozens of films, several TV shows or
series (including Cheers, 3rd Rock from the Sun, Q's assistant in the James Bond movies, and Will & Grace), many direct-to-video productions, some video games, and a number of commercials. His BBC sitcom Fawlty Towers (written by and starring Cleese together with his then-wife Connie Booth) is the only comedy series to rank higher than the Flying Circus on the BFI TV 100's list, topping the whole poll.
Idle enjoyed critical success with Rutland Weekend Television in the mid-1970s, out of which came the Beatles parody the Rutles (responsible for the cult mockumentary All You Need Is Cash), and as an actor in Nuns on the Run (1990) with Robbie Coltrane. In 1976, Idle directed music videos for George Harrison songs "This Song" and "Crackerbox Palace",
the latter of which also featured cameo appearances from Neil Innes and
John Cleese. Idle has had success with Python songs: "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" went to no. 3 in the UK singles chart in 1991. The song had been revived by Simon Mayo on BBC Radio 1, and was consequently released as a single that year. The theatrical phenomenon of the Python musical Spamalot
has made Idle the most financially successful of the troupe after
Python. Written by Idle (and featuring a pre-recorded cameo of Cleese as
the voice of God), it has proved to be an enormous hit on Broadway,
London's West End, and Las Vegas.[39] This was followed by Not the Messiah, which repurposes The Life of Brian as an oratorio. For the work's 2007 premiere at the Luminato festival in Toronto (which commissioned the work), Idle himself sang the "baritone-ish" part.
After Python reunions
Since The Meaning of Life, their last project as a team, the Pythons have often been the subject of reunion rumours.[39] The final reunion of all six members occurred during the Parrot Sketch Not Included – 20 Years of Monty Python
special. The death of Chapman in 1989 (on the eve of their 20th
anniversary) put an end to the speculation of any further reunions.
Several occasions since 1989 have occurred when the surviving five
members have gathered together for appearances—albeit not formal
reunions. In 1996, Jones, Idle, Cleese, and Palin were featured in a
film adaptation of The Wind in the Willows, which was later renamed Mr. Toad's Wild Ride.
In 1998 during the US Comedy Arts Festival, where the troupe was awarded the AFI Star Award by the American Film Institute,
the five remaining members, along with what was purported to be
Chapman's ashes, were reunited on stage for the first time in 18 years. The occasion was in the form of an interview called Monty Python Live at Aspen, (hosted by Robert Klein, with an appearance by Eddie Izzard) in which the team looked back at some of their work and performed a few new sketches.
On 9 October 1999, to commemorate 30 years since the first Flying Circus television broadcast, BBC2
devoted an evening to Python programmes, including a documentary
charting the history of the team, interspersed with new sketches by the
Monty Python team filmed especially for the event. The program appears,
with a few omissions, on the DVD The Life of Python. Idle's
involvement in the special is limited, yet the final sketch marks the
only time since 1989 that all surviving members of the troupe appear in
one sketch, albeit not in the same room.
The surviving Pythons had agreed in principle to perform a live
tour of America in 1999. Several shows were to be linked with Q&A
meetings in various cities. Although all had said yes, Palin later
changed his mind, much to the annoyance of Idle, who had begun work
organising the tour. This led to Idle refusing to take part in the new
material shot for the BBC anniversary evening.
In 2002, four of the surviving members, bar Cleese, performed "The Lumberjack Song" and "Sit on My Face" for George Harrison's memorial concert. The reunion also included regular supporting contributors Neil Innes and Carol Cleveland, with a special appearance from Tom Hanks.
In an interview to publicise the DVD release of The Meaning of Life,
Cleese said a further reunion was unlikely. "It is absolutely
impossible to get even a majority of us together in a room, and I'm not
joking," Cleese said. He said that the problem was one of busyness
rather than one of bad feelings.
A sketch appears on the same DVD spoofing the impossibility of a full
reunion, bringing the members "together" in a deliberately unconvincing
fashion with modern bluescreen/greenscreen techniques.
Idle has responded to queries about a Python reunion by adapting a
line used by George Harrison in response to queries about a possible
Beatles reunion. When asked in November 1989 about such a possibility,
Harrison responded: "As far as I'm concerned, there won't be a Beatles
reunion as long as John Lennon remains dead."
Idle's version of this was that he expected to see a proper Python
reunion, "just as soon as Graham Chapman comes back from the dead", but
added, "we're talking to his agent about terms."
The Pythons Autobiography by the Pythons (2003), compiled
from interviews with the surviving members, reveals that a series of
disputes in 1998, over a possible sequel to Holy Grail that had been conceived by Idle, may have resulted in the group's permanent split. Cleese's feeling was that The Meaning of Life
had been personally difficult and ultimately mediocre, and did not wish
to be involved in another Python project for a variety of reasons (not
least amongst them was the absence of Chapman, whose straight man-like
central roles in the Grail and Brian films had been
considered to be an essential anchoring performance). Apparently, Idle
was angry with Cleese for refusing to do the film, which most of the
remaining Pythons thought reasonably promising (the basic plot would
have taken on a self-referential tone, featuring them in their main
'knight' guises from Holy Grail, mulling over the possibilities
of reforming their posse). The book also reveals that a secondary option
around this point was the possibility of revitalising the Python brand
with a new stage tour, perhaps with the promise of new material. This
idea had also met with Cleese's refusal, this time with the backing of
other members.
March 2005 had a full, if nonperforming, reunion of the surviving cast members at the premiere of Idle's musical Spamalot, based on Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
It opened in Chicago and has since played in New York on Broadway,
London, and numerous other major cities across the world. In 2004, it
was nominated for 14 Tony Awards and won three: Best Musical, Best Direction of a Musical for Mike Nichols, and Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical for Sara Ramirez, who played the Lady of the Lake, a character specially added for the musical. Cleese played the voice of God, played in the film by Chapman.
Owing in part to the success of Spamalot, PBS announced on 13 July 2005 that it would begin to re-air the entire run of Monty Python's Flying Circus and new one-hour specials focusing on each member of the group, called Monty Python's Personal Best.
Each episode was written and produced by the individual being honoured,
with the five remaining Pythons collaborating on Chapman's programme,
the only one of the editions to take on a serious tone with its new
material.
In 2009, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the first episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, a six-part documentary entitled Monty Python: Almost the Truth (Lawyers Cut)
was released, featuring interviews with the surviving members of the
team, as well as archive interviews with Graham Chapman and numerous
excerpts from the television series and films.
Also in commemoration of the 40th anniversary, Idle, Palin, Jones, and Gilliam appeared in a production of Not the Messiah at the Royal Albert Hall. The European premiere was held on 23 October 2009.
An official 40th anniversary Monty Python reunion event took place in
New York City on 15 October 2009, where the team received a Special
Award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.
In June 2011, it was announced that A Liar's Autobiography, an animated 3D movie based on the memoir of Graham Chapman, was in the making. The book A Liar's Autobiography
was published in 1980 and details Chapman's journey through medical
school, alcoholism, acknowledgement of his gay identity, and the tolls
of surreal comedy. Asked what was true in a deliberately fanciful
account by Chapman of his life, Terry Jones joked: "Nothing ... it's all
a downright, absolute, blackguardly lie."
The film uses Chapman's own voice – from a reading of his
autobiography shortly before he died of cancer – and entertainment
channel Epix
announced that the film will be released in early 2012 in both 2D and
3D formats. Produced and directed by London-based Bill Jones, Ben
Timlett, and Jeff Simpson, the new film has 15 animation companies
working on chapters that will range from three to 12 minutes in length,
each in a different style.
John Cleese recorded dialogue which was matched with Chapman's
voice. Michael Palin voiced Chapman's father and Terry Jones voiced his
mother. Terry Gilliam voiced Graham's psychiatrist. They all play
various other roles. Among the original Python group, only Eric Idle was
not involved.
On 26 January 2012, Terry Jones announced that the five surviving Pythons would reunite in a sci-fi comedy film called Absolutely Anything. The film would combine computer-generated imagery and live action. It would be directed by Jones based on a script by Jones and Gavin Scott.
The plot revolves around a teacher who discovers aliens (voiced by the
Pythons) have given him magical powers to do "absolutely anything". Eric Idle responded via Twitter that he would not, in fact, be participating, although he was later added to the cast.
Monty Python Live (Mostly): One Down, Five to Go
In 2013, the Pythons lost a legal case to Mark Forstater, the film producer of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, over royalties for the derivative work Spamalot.
They owed a combined £800,000 in legal fees and back royalties to
Forstater. They proposed a reunion show to pay their legal bill.
On 19 November 2013, a new reunion was reported, following months of "secret talks". The original plan was for a live, one-off stage show at the O2 Arena
in London on 1 July 2014, with "some of Monty Python's greatest hits,
with modern, topical, Pythonesque twists" according to a press release. The tickets for this show went on sale in November 2013 and sold out in just 43 seconds.
Nine additional shows were added, all of them at the O2, the last on 20
July. They have said that their reunion was inspired by South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, who are massive Monty Python fans.
Michael Palin stated that the final reunion show on 20 July would
be the last time that the troupe would perform together. The event was
first shown live from the UK nationwide and was titled Monty Python Live (Mostly) and was later reshown at select theatres in recorded form in August.
Python members
Graham Chapman was originally a medical student, joining the Footlights at Cambridge.
He completed his medical training and was legally entitled to practice
as a doctor. Chapman is best remembered for the lead roles in Holy Grail, as King Arthur, and Life of Brian,
as Brian Cohen. He died of spinal and throat cancer on 4 October 1989.
At Chapman's memorial service, Cleese delivered an irreverent eulogy
that included all the euphemisms for being dead from the "Dead Parrot"
sketch, which they had written. Chapman's comedic fictional memoir, A Liar's Autobiography, was adapted into an animated 3D movie in 2012.
John Cleese
is the oldest Python. He met his future Python writing partner,
Chapman, in Cambridge. Outside of Python, he is best known for setting
up the Video Arts group and for the sitcom Fawlty Towers
(co-written with Connie Booth, whom Cleese met during work on Python
and to whom he was married for a decade). Cleese has also co-authored
several books on psychology and wrote the screenplay for the
award-winning A Fish Called Wanda, in which he starred with Michael Palin.
Terry Gilliam, an American by birth, is the only member of the troupe of non-British origin. He started off as an animator and strip cartoonist for Harvey Kurtzman's Help! magazine, one issue of which featured Cleese. Moving from the US to England, he animated features for Do Not Adjust Your Set and was then asked by its makers to join them on their next project: Monty Python's Flying Circus. He co-directed Monty Python and the Holy Grail and directed short segments of other Python films (for instance "The Crimson Permanent Assurance", the short film that appears before The Meaning of Life).
When Monty Python was first formed, two writing partnerships were
already in place: Cleese and Chapman, Jones and Palin. That left two in
their own corners: Gilliam, operating solo due to the nature of his
work, and Eric Idle. Regular themes in Idle's contributions were
elaborate wordplay and musical numbers. After Flying Circus, he hosted Saturday Night Live
four times in the first five seasons. Idle's initially successful solo
career faltered in the 1990s with the failures of his 1993 film Splitting Heirs (written, produced by, and starring him) and 1998's An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (in which he starred), which was awarded five Razzies,
including 'Worst Picture of the Year'. He revived his career by
returning to the source of his worldwide fame, adapting Monty Python
material for other media. He also wrote the Broadway musical Spamalot, based on the Holy Grail movie. He also wrote Not the Messiah, an oratorio derived from the Life of Brian.
Terry Jones
has been described by other members of the team as the "heart" of the
operation. Jones had a lead role in maintaining the group's unity and
creative independence. Python biographer George Perry has commented that
should "[you] speak to him on subjects as diverse as fossil fuels, or Rupert Bear, or mercenaries in the Middle Ages
or Modern China ... in a moment you will find yourself hopelessly out
of your depth, floored by his knowledge." Many others agree that Jones
is characterised by his irrepressible, good-natured enthusiasm. However,
Jones' passion often led to prolonged arguments with other group
members—in particular Cleese—with Jones often unwilling to back down.
Since his major contributions were largely behind the scenes (direction,
writing), and he often deferred to the other members of the group as an
actor, Jones' importance to Python was often under-rated. However, he
does have the legacy of delivering possibly the most famous line in all
of Python, as Brian's mother Mandy in Life of Brian, "He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy!", a line voted the funniest in film history on two occasions.
Sir Michael Palin attended Oxford, where he met his Python writing partner Jones. The two also wrote the series Ripping Yarns
together. Palin and Jones originally wrote face-to-face, but soon found
it was more productive to write apart and then come together to review
what the other had written. Therefore, Jones and Palin's sketches tended
to be more focused than that of the others, taking one bizarre
situation, sticking to it, and building on it. After Flying Circus, Palin hosted Saturday Night Live
four times in the first 10 seasons. His comedy output began to decrease
in amount following the increasing success of his travel documentaries
for the BBC. Palin released a book of diaries from the Python years
entitled Michael Palin Diaries 1969–1979, published in 2007. Palin was appointed a K.C.M.G. in the 2019 New Year Honours, which were announced by Buckingham Palace in December 2018.
Associate Pythons
Several
people have been accorded unofficial "associate Python" status over the
years. Occasionally such people have been referred to as the 'seventh
Python', in a style reminiscent of George Martin (or other associates of the Beatles) being dubbed "the Fifth Beatle". The two collaborators with the most meaningful and plentiful contributions have been Neil Innes and Carol Cleveland.
Both were present and presented as Associate Pythons at the official
Monty Python 25th-anniversary celebrations held in Los Angeles in July
1994.
Neil Innes is the only non-Python besides Douglas Adams to be credited with writing material for Flying Circus. He appeared in sketches and the Python films, as well as performing some of his songs in Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl.
He was also a regular stand-in for absent team members on the rare
occasions when they recreated sketches. For example, he took the place
of Cleese at the Concert for George.
Gilliam once noted that if anyone qualified for the title of the
seventh Python, it would certainly be Innes. He was one of the creative
talents in the off-beat Bonzo Dog Band. He would later portray Ron Nasty of the Rutles and write all of the Rutles' compositions for All You Need Is Cash
(1978). By 2005, a falling out had occurred between Idle and Innes over
additional Rutles projects, the results being Innes' critically
acclaimed Rutles "reunion" album The Rutles: Archaeology and Idle's straight-to-DVD The Rutles 2: Can't Buy Me Lunch, each undertaken without the other's participation. According to an interview with Idle in the Chicago Tribune in May 2005, his attitude is that Innes and he go back "too far. And no further." Innes has remained silent on the dispute.
Carol Cleveland
was the most important female performer in the Monty Python ensemble,
commonly referred to as "the female Python". She was originally hired by
producer/director John Howard Davies for just the first five episodes of the Flying Circus. The Pythons then pushed to make Cleveland a permanent recurring performer after producer/director Ian MacNaughton brought in several other actresses who were not as good as she was.
Cleveland went on to appear in about two-thirds of the episodes, as
well as in all of the Python films, and in most of their stage shows, as
well.
Other contributors
Cleese's first wife, Connie Booth, appeared as various characters in all four series of Flying Circus.
Her most significant role was the "best girl" of the eponymous
Lumberjack in "The Lumberjack Song", though this role was sometimes
played by Carol Cleveland. Booth appeared in a total of six sketches and
also played one-off characters in Python feature films And Now for Something Completely Different and Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Douglas Adams was "discovered" by Chapman when a version of Footlights Revue (a 1974 BBC2 television show featuring some of Adams' early work) was performed live in London's West End.
In Cleese's absence from the final TV series, the two formed a brief
writing partnership, with Adams earning a writing credit in one episode
for a sketch called "Patient Abuse".
In the sketch, a man who had been stabbed by a nurse arrives at his
doctor's office bleeding profusely from the stomach, when the doctor
makes him fill in numerous senseless forms before he can administer
treatment. He also had two cameo appearances in this season. Firstly, in
the episode "The Light Entertainment War", Adams shows up in a
surgeon's mask (as Dr. Emile Koning, according to the on-screen
captions), pulling on gloves, while Palin narrates a sketch that
introduces one person after another, and never actually gets started.
Secondly, at the beginning of "Mr. Neutron", Adams is dressed in a
"pepperpot" outfit and loads a missile onto a cart being driven by Terry
Jones, who is calling out for scrap metal ("Any old iron ..."). Adams
and Chapman also subsequently attempted a few non-Python projects,
including Out of the Trees. He also contributed to a sketch on the soundtrack album for Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Other than Carol Cleveland, the only other non-Python to make a significant number of appearances in the Flying Circus was Ian Davidson.
He appeared in the first two series of the show, and played over 10
roles. While Davidson is primarily known as a scriptwriter, it is not
known if he had any contribution toward the writing of the sketches, as
he is only credited as a performer. In total, Davidson is credited as
appearing in eight episodes of the show, which is more than any other
male actor who was not a Python. Despite this, Davidson did not appear
in any Python-related media subsequent to series 2, though footage of
him was shown on the documentary Python Night – 30 Years of Monty Python.
Stand-up comedian Eddie Izzard,
a devoted fan of the group, has occasionally stood in for absent
members. When the BBC held a "Python Night" in 1999 to celebrate 30
years of the first broadcast of Flying Circus, the Pythons
recorded some new material with Izzard standing in for Idle, who had
declined to partake in person (he taped a solo contribution from the
US). Izzard hosted The Life of Python (1999), a history of the group that was part of Python Night and appeared with them at a festival/tribute in Aspen, Colorado, in 1998 (released on DVD as Live at Aspen).
Izzard has said that Monty Python was a significant influence on his
style of comedy and Cleese has referred to him as "the lost Python".
Series director of Flying Cirus, Ian MacNaughton, is also regularly associated with the group and made a few on-screen appearances in the show and in the film And Now for Something Completely Different. Apart from Neil Innes, others to contribute musically included Fred Tomlinson and the Fred Tomlinson Singers. They made appearances in songs such as "The Lumberjack Song" as a backup choir. In addition, various other contributors and performers for the Pythons included John Howard Davies, John Hughman, Lyn Ashley, Bob Raymond, John Young, Rita Davies, Stanley Mason, Maureen Flanagan, and David Ballantyne.
Timeline
Monty Python in films