Have to share
this first off:
Ode to Sean Hannity
Aping urbanity,
Oozing with vanity
Plump as a
manatee, Faking humanity
Journalistic
calamity, Intellectual inanity
Fox Noise
insanity, You’re a profanity,
Hannity
John Cleese:
In the almost
unthinkable case that the reader doesn’t know who John Cleese is, he has been a
diehard Trump and Trump enabler critic for the last four years, a Python, A
knight who says “Ni,” an ascerbic innkeeper named Basil Fawlty, Tim the wizard,
and the head of the ministry for the development of silly walks.
Reading this,
and laughing as I did, I was flooded with several thoughts at once (it could
happen). The first was remembering being at weekend parties with Navy friends
in the late 60s and early 70s. It mattered little whose house, what
ranks/ratings were in attendance or what the occasion, but at 11:00 pm, the
television was turned on and tuned to PBS to watch Monty Python’s Flying
Circus.
This would have
been, as I said, the late 60s, very early 70s, and there was nothing even
remotely comparable on American television at the time. the late Steve Allen
and Ernie Kovacs had done some sketch comedy with zany premises, but neither
were as outré and
socially critical as the Pythons.
Allen’s
best shows ran from 1956 to 1961 and then in syndication several years later.
The primary difference was that Allen, a genuinely funny man and TV icon, was
always the host and left that role only briefly to do a sketch-based role. In
the main, Steve was always Steve. To give props where they are due, he did have
a cast of regulars, several of whom launched careers with his show. Allen was
also a man who appreciated comedic talent and was the only mainstream TV host
to give the stage to Lenny Bruce. For those who don’t remember, Bruce was the
man who paved the way for Carlin, Pryor, Williams and many modern stand-up
comics and paid for it with his life.
Ernie Kovacs
died in 1962 at just 42 years of age. In that shirt lifetime he, like Steve Allen,
was a tv comedy pioneer. While he was still “the host.” Ernie did characters
which were closer to the Pythons in outrageousness, and occasionally pushed the
envelope in doing so. His gay poet, Percy Dovetonsils, was hilarious, but
sexuality was never mentioned (standards and practices censors). His Nairobi
Trio (three guys in ape suits) was also innovative. Kovacs did sketch comedy on
the edge much of the time and was instrumental in beginning to change some of
what was allowable and wasn’t.
That aside,
America had never seen anything quite like the Pythons. First off, none of them
ever appeared in the show as themselves, and the characters they did appear as
in the show, which was completely sketch based, were often caricatures of
British “types”. While it took some American viewers some time to adjust to
“local jokes” which were only local if you lived in the UK, there were plenty
of sketches so brilliant that it didn’t matter what or where the settings or
premises were.
Only the
Pythons could craft a sketch based entirely on Spam. (“We have spam, spam,
spam, spam, eggs and spam”) American audiences were treated to mugger grandmothers
in drag, blustering Army officers, philosophers playing soccer, dead parrots,
cheese shops with no cheese, and a government bureau devoted to the development
of silly walks. Although the Flying Circus as a TV show only lasted for four seasons,
it remains in eternal syndication. What followed were a series of three equally
brilliant movies and, thanks to Python Eric Idle, an equally entertaining
Broadway musical as well. While each remaining Python is still active to some
degree, Terry Jones and Graham Chapman are gone.
That however is all preface to a question
which arose (for no related reason) while I was cleaning cat litter pans
shortly after reading Mr. Cleese’s poem. I found myself wondering how much, if
any, influence the Pythons, which aired in the US until 1973, had on a young
Lorne Michaels, when he pitched Saturday Night Live to NBC management. As I think
about it, I believe that there must have been some significant influence.
Prior to the
SNL there were American shows which did sketch comedy, but not only sketch
comedy. More significantly, SNL, while
showing all players in the opening credits, always had (has) them in character
throughout the show. We never saw Dan Ackroyd performing as himself, but he
cracked us up as Julia Child, Beldar Conehead, a Festrunk brother, or the
Bass-O-Matic pitchman.
Perhaps the only time real names were used was
the “news” sketches, where real names were used, but still in character. Even
the continuing inside jokes (Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead” and
the entire “Buckwheat saga” have a Pythonesque tone. Of course, once SNL showed
that off the wall comedy works and the networks figured it out, we soon saw In
Living Color, Second City TV and others. However, Graham Chapman, Terry Jones,
John Cleese, Michael Palin, Eric Idle and Terry Gilliam showed the way. And
remember, always, “No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!”
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