The Goodies (TV series)

For information about the formation of The Goodies group and the origins and development of the series, see The Goodies.
The Goodies

The Goodies Titles
Created by Tim Brooke-Taylor
Graeme Garden
Bill Oddie
Starring Tim Brooke-Taylor
Graeme Garden
Bill Oddie
Country of origin United Kingdom
No. of series 9
No. of episodes 76 (list of episodes)
Production
Running time 30 50 minutes
Release
Original network BBC 2
LWT (for series 9)
Original release 8 November 1970 (1970-11-08) – 13 February 1982 (1982-02-13)

The Goodies is a British television comedy series shown in the 1970s and early 1980s. The series, which combines surreal sketches and situation comedy, was broadcast by BBC 2[1] from 1970 until 1980 and was then broadcast by the ITV company LWT for a year, between 1981 and 1982.

The show was co-written by and starred Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie (together known as "The Goodies"). Bill Oddie also wrote the music and songs for the series while "The Goodies Theme" was co-written by Bill Oddie and Michael Gibbs. The directors/producers of the series were John Howard Davies, Jim Franklin and Bob Spiers.

An early title which was considered for the series was Narrow Your Mind (following on from Broaden Your Mind) and prior to that the working title was Super Chaps Three.[2]

Basic structure of the series

The series' basic structure revolved around the trio, always short of money, offering themselves for hire with the tagline "We Do Anything, Anytime, Anywhere" to perform all sorts of ridiculous but generally benevolent tasks. Under this loose pretext, the show explored all sorts of off-the-wall scenarios for comedic potential. Many episodes parodied current events, such as an episode where the entire black population of South Africa emigrates to Great Britain to escape apartheid. As this means that the white South Africans no longer have anyone to exploit and oppress, they introduce a new system called "apart-height", where short people (Bill and a number of jockeys) are discriminated against.

Other story lines were more abstractly philosophical, such as an episode in which the trio spend Christmas Eve together waiting for the Earth to be blown up by prior arrangement of the world's governments. The "Christmas Eve" episode titled "Earthanasia" was one of the two episodes which took place entirely in one room. The other, "The End", occurred when Graeme accidentally had their office encased in an enormous block of concrete. These episodes were made when the entire location budget for the series had been spent, forcing the trio to come up with a script shot entirely on the set that relied entirely on character interaction - a format known in the industry as a bottle episode.

Missing episode

"Kitten Kong" (episode seven from series two) is the only episode of The Goodies that is officially missing from BBC archives, the original video tape having been wiped for reuse by the BBC in the 1970s. An expanded, more elaborate imagining of the original transmitted episode called ‘Kitten Kong: Montreux '72 Edition’, especially made for 1972 Montreux festival, does exist, and is said to have only minor differences with its 1971 prototype.

Several other episodes that were originally screened in colour are also missing, but exist as black and white telerecordings made for overseas sales.

Awards and nominations

A special episode, which was based on the original 1971 Goodies' "Kitten Kong" episode, was called "Kitten Kong: Montreux '72 Edition", and was first broadcast in 1972. The Goodies won the Silver Rose in 1972 for this special episode at the Festival Rose d'Or, held in Montreux, Switzerland. In the first episode of the next series, "The New Office", Tim Brooke-Taylor can be seen painting the trophy gold.

The Goodies also won the Silver Rose in 1975 at the Festival Rose d'Or for their episode "The Movies".

The Goodies were twice nominated for Best Light Entertainment Programme at the BAFTA Awards in 1972 and 1976.[3][4]

Characters and production techniques

The show featured extensive use of slapstick, often performed using sped-up photography and clever, though low-budget, visual effects, such as when they built a railway station together and awoke the next morning to discover that some construction equipment outside (steam shovel, bulldozer, backhoe) had come to life and were lumbering, growling, and battling like dinosaurs.

Other episodes featured parodies of contemporary pop music composed by Oddie, some of which went on to substantial commercial success in the British charts, among them the hit single "Funky Gibbon" as well as character-based comedy. Some early episodes were interrupted by spoofs of contemporary TV commercials.

The group also acknowledges their debt to the usage of music in silent movies. In "The Movies" episode, they buy an old movie studio, and attempt to make their own epic film, Macbeth Meets Truffaut The Wonder Dog. After several 'takes', they argue and each begins to make his own movie in a different style (Tim makes an epic movie, Graeme makes a western and Bill makes a black-and-white silent movie). The episode finished with an extended silent movie segment, in which each movie comically interferes with the others.

The characters are based on the personae of the three characters: Garden, a bright but bizarre "mad scientist"; Brooke-Taylor as a conservative, vain, sexually-repressed deniable, upper-class royalist coward; and Oddie as a scruffy, occasionally violent, left-leaning rebel from Lancashire. The characters played up to their stereotypes, debunking them[5] but were not necessarily based on the actor playing the character, even though the actors played characters with their own names, and had some minor characteristics in common. In reality, Garden is a medical doctor, Brooke-Taylor is a lawyer who is not at all conservative ("But I had the double-barrelled name so I was always going to play the Tory"[6]) and Oddie is a pacifist, ornithologist and active environmentalist.

The Goodies episodes

The Goodies made 76 episodes (including specials).

Dual Goodies roles

Episodes in which the Goodies appeared as other roles, including appearing as doubles of themselves — while also appearing in their usual roles of Tim, Bill and Graeme — included the following:

Alternative Goodies roles

Tim's uncles

Tim's uncles are featured in the following episodes:

Tim's drag queen act

Tim gets to be cross-dressed in the following episodes

Monty Python spoofs and imitations

The Goodies was a consistently very popular show in the UK. Because it seemed to appeal particularly to younger viewers, some critics dismissed it as juvenile in comparison to the other contemporary UK "alternative" comedy hit, Monty Python's Flying Circus. Whilst this comparison irritated them, Oddie, Garden and Brooke-Taylor were old university friends of the Monty Python cast. They had worked together on several projects, including the Cambridge University's Footlights Club revues, the radio show I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again, and television shows such as Broaden Your Mind, Twice a Fortnight, and a number of the Amnesty International benefit shows.

At Last the 1948 Show was another show with multiple connections to the Pythons; it included the "Four Yorkshiremen" sketch, co-written and performed by Brooke-Taylor with John Cleese, Graham Chapman and Marty Feldman. Footage of Tim Brooke-Taylor and John Cleese, from At Last the 1948 Show, was shown on the documentary special Monty Python: Almost the Truth (The Lawyers' Cut). Brooke-Taylor also co-wrote and appeared in How to Irritate People (with John Cleese, Graham Chapman and Michael Palin, among others). Brooke-Taylor also appeared in the Amnesty International benefit show The Secret Policeman's Other Ball, where he appeared with John Cleese and Graham Chapman in the skit "Cha, Cha, Cha", and also in John Cleese's skit "Top of the Form".

Tim Brooke-Taylor and Bill Oddie were also the people responsible for introducing Eric Idle to the Footlights Club.[7]

Goodies episodes, in which Monty Python's Flying Circus was either parodied or alluded to, included the following:

See also

References

  1. "The Penguin TV Companion" (2nd Edition) Jeff Evans, Penguin Books Ltd., London, 2003
  2. Low, Lenny Ann (23 February 2005). "Why fame seems funny to manic trio". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 February 2008.
  3. Light Entertainment Production - information given by official BAFTA website
  4. Light Entertainment Programme - information given by official BAFTA website
  5. Megson, Chris (2014). Modern British Playwriting: The 1970s: Voices, Documents, New Interpretations. A&C Black. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-408-17789-1.
  6. "Laughs to the power of three - Arts". www.smh.com.au. 14 December 2004. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  7. The Life of Python, George Perry, Pavilion Books Ltd, 1994

Further reading

External links

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