Monty Python

by LittleToe 11 Replies latest social entertainment

  • LittleToe
    LittleToe

    I was recently reminded of John Cleese's [in]famous eulogy of Graham Chapman.
    Personally I think it was perhaps the funniest, albeit most shocking, thing that he's ever done.

    I offer it for your perusal:

    "Graham Chapman, co-author of the "parrot Sketch", is no more. He has ceased to be, bereft of life, he rests in peace, he has kicked the bucket, hopped the twig, bit the dust, snuffed it, breathed his last, and gone to meet the Great Head of Light Entertainmant in the sky, and I guess that we're all thinking how sad it is that a man of such talent, such capability and kindness, of such unusual intelligence should now be so suddenly spirited away at the age of only forty-eight, before he'd achieved many of the things of which he was capable, and before he'd had enough fun.

    Well, I feel that I should say: "Nonsense. Good riddance to him, the freeloading bastard! I hope he fries." And the reason I think I should say this is, he would never forgive me if I didn't, if I threw away this glorious opportunity to shock you all on his behalf. Anything for him but mindless good taste. I could hear him whispering in my ear last night as I was writing this: "Alright, Cleese, you're very proud of being the first person ever to say `shit on television. If this service is really for me, just for starters, I want you to be the first person ever at a British memorial service to say `fark!!!

    You see, the trouble is, I can't. If he were here with me now I would probably have the courage, because he always emboldened me. But the truth is, I lack his balls, his splendid defiance. And so I'll have to content myself instead with saying 'Betty Mardsen...'

    But Bolder and less inhibited spirits than me follow today. Jones and Idle, Gilliam and Palin. Heaven knows what the next hour will bring in Graham's name. Trousers Dropping, blasphemers on pogo sticks, spectactular displays of high-speed farting, synchronised incest. One of the four is planning to stuff a dead ocelot and a 1922 Remington typewriter up his own ass to the sound of the second movement of Elgar's cello concerto. And that's in the first half.

    Because you see, Gray would have wanted it this way. Really. Anything for him but mindless good taste. And that's what I'll always remember about him---apart, of course, from his Olympian extravagance. He was the prince of bad taste. He loved to shock. In fact, Gray, more than anyone I knew, emodied and symbolised all that was most offensive and juvenile in Monty Python. And his delight in shocking people led him on to greater and greater feats. I like to think of him as the pioneering beacon that beat the path along which fainter spirits could follow.

    Some memories. I remember writing the undertaker speech with him, and him suggesting the punch line, 'All right, we'll eat her, but if you feel bad about it afterwards, we'll dig a grave and you can throw up into it.' I remember discovering in 1969, when we wrote every day at the flat where Connie Booth and I lived, that he'd recently discovered the game of printing four-letter words on neat little squares of paper, and then quietly placing them at strategic points around our flat, forcing Connie and me into frantic last minute paper chases whenever we were expecting important guests.

    I remember him at BBC parties crawling around on all fours, rubbing himself affectionately against the legs of gray-suited executives, and delicately nibbling the more appetising female calves. Mrs. Eric Morecambe remembers that too.

    I remember his being invited to speak at the Oxford union, and entering the chamber dressed as a carrot---a full length orange tapering costume with a large, bright green sprig as a hat----and then, when his turn came to speak, refusing to do so. He just stood there, literally speechless, for twenty minutes, smiling beatifically. The only time in world history that a totally silent man has succeeded in inciting a riot.

    I remember Graham receiving a Sun newspaper TV award from Reggie Maudling. Who else! And taking the trophy falling to the ground and crawling all the way back to his table, screaming loudly, as loudly as he could. And if you remember Gray, that was very loud indeed.

    It is magnificent, isn't it? You see, the thing about shock... is not that it upsets some people, I think; I think that it gives others a momentary joy of liberation, as we realised in that instant that the social rules that constrict our lives so terribly are not actually very important.

    Well, Gray can't do that for us anymore. He's gone. He is an ex-Chapman. All we have of him now is our memories. But it will be some time before they fade.

  • Englishman
    Englishman
    You see, the trouble is, I can't. If he were here with me now I would probably have the courage, because he always emboldened me. But the truth is, I lack his balls, his splendid defiance. And so I'll have to content myself instead with saying 'Betty Mardsen...'

    Love the "emboldened"!

    Reminds me of that Simpsons episode where the spirit of Jebediah Sprinfiled embigenned the townspeople.

    Englishman

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Bloody marvelous. If a good eulogy makes people who didn't know the deceased wish they'd known him, that was a very good eulogy. Of course, that isn't the purpose of a eulogy at all, but I still think it was a very good one.

  • myauntfanny
    myauntfanny

    Fabulous, no one has ever been better than those guys. Splendid defiance! Olympian extravagance! Synchronised incest! And people think there's no god. Do they think Monty Python just HAPPENED?

  • stillajwexelder
    stillajwexelder

    just to bring you down to earth - no eulogising is allowed in Kingdom Halls -at any JW funerals - fu----g spoil sports.

  • talesin
    talesin

    Yes, stilla, which is one of the reasons I do not go to any JW funerals. The other one is that if I am not invited to weddings and other happy celebrations, why would I want to go to a funeral and be shunned there? *shrug* Oh well ...

    Ah, the dead parrot sketch! Monty Python's was one of the few shows I loved to watch on TV as a child. What a crew. You are right, MAF, they could almost make one believe in the existence of a creator!

    Thanks, LT, for sharing that with us.

    RIP Graham Chapman You are missed.

    talesin

    (edited for typo)

  • logansrun
    logansrun

    Ah Little Toe, I fart in your general direction!

  • reboot
    reboot

    Ah, LT. inspired genius..I remember having to watch Monty Python with my father..I was literally summoned, it was apparently compulsory for my education along with Peter Cook and Dudley Moore

    my mother would walk out of the room in disgust......lol

  • myauntfanny
    myauntfanny

    Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, they were fantastic too. The one legged man applying for the role of Tarzan. "I have nothing against your remaining leg, the problem is, neither have you". I heard that Peter Cook (who did get really eccentric later on) used to do these like raids on radio stations, take over the mike and anonymously start making his usual brand of chaos over the airwaves. God, I wished I'd ever caught one of those broadcasts.

  • Earnest
    Earnest

    Ah, Graham Chapman et al. would have been proud of your somewhat flamboyant exit from your congregation, LittleToe.

    Earnest

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