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Michael Palin

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Beschreibung

Drawn from his published diaries, this is Michael Palin's account of the making of the Monty Python TV and stage shows, films, books and albums.Monty Python at Work opens on 8th July 1969 with Michael Palin's diary entry for the first day of filming on the very first episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. The diary entries that follow - up until the opening of their final feature film, The Meaning of Life, in 1983 - chart the tumultuous story of how the now famous shows and films were conceived and brought to life.Palin records the evolution of Monty Python's comic style, the moments of creative inspiration as well as discord, the persistent self-doubt, and the happy accidents that shaped what are now classic comedy moments.He captures too the group's many anarchic exploits (John Cleese in a bikini; driving a Budget Rent-a-Van up Glencoe in full chainmail; filming 'Scott of the Sahara' on the beach at Torquay'), as well as their battles with BBC suits, budget-conscious film producers and self-appointed censors.Thanks to Palin's as-it-happened accounts, we are taken behind the scenes to watch with unrivalled intimacy the creative processes that led to the finished work, seeing how it was actually put together. By distilling everything about the Pythons at work, this edition of Palin's diaries serves as an intimate guide to the legendary shows, films, books and albums. It will delight Python fans everywhere, and be a source of instruction and inspiration to those who seek to follow in their footsteps.'No writer-performer has combined professional hilarity and personal sanity more successfully than Michael Palin. Anyone interested in how comedy happens should hang on his every word.' David Mitchell'Michael Palin's rollercoaster account of Python's glory years' The Stage'Palin is a natural diarist and this amusing and barmy collection of day-by-day extracts gives a peek into the creative process of the comedy troupe' Daily Mail

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Michael Palin

MONTY PYTHON AT WORK

A behind-the-scenes account of the making of the TV and stage shows, films, books and albums

Selected and edited from the text of Michael Palin’s published diaries by Geoffrey Strachan

NICK HERN BOOKS

Londonwww.nickhernbooks.co.uk

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONTENTS

Title Page

Preface

Introduction

Editorial Note

Chapter One

The first BBC television series: Monty Python’s Flying Circus (July–December 1969)

Chapter Two

The second BBC television series; the first film: And Now for Something Completely Different; the first record album (January–December 1970)

Chapter Three

Live stage show at Coventry; the second record album: Another Monty Python Record; Monty Python’s Big Red Book; Bavaria Television Show in Munich; the third BBC television series; Lincoln Pop Festival (January 1971–August 1972)

Chapter Four

The third record album: Monty Python’s Previous Record; the second Munich show (September 1972–January 1973)

Chapter Five

The first live road tour; writing the second film: Monty Python and the Holy Grail; live stage tour of Canada; publicity on US television (January–June 1973)

Chapter Six

Plans for a fourth television series; the second book: The Brand New Monty Python Bok; writing Monty Python and the Holy Grail; the fourth record album: The Monty Python Matching Tie and Handkerchief; live stage show at Drury Lane (August 1973–April 1974)

Chapter Seven

Filming Monty Python and the Holy Grail (April–May 1974)

Chapter Eight

Editing Monty Python and the Holy Grail; launch of the fifth record album: Monty Python Live at Drury Lane; work on the fourth television series (June–November 1974)

Chapter Nine

A further television series considered; the television series launched in the US; Monty Python and the Holy Grail opens in the UK; the Holy Grail record album (November 1974–April 1975)

Chapter Ten

Monty Python and the Holy Grail opens in New York; plans for a live stage show in New York; legal challenge to ABC Television goes to court (April–December 1975)

Chapter Eleven

Live stage show in New York; early discussions of the third film: Life of Brian; Live at City Center record album (January–September 1976)

Chapter Twelve

Writing the third film: Life of Brian; publication of Monty Python and the Holy Grail (Book) (November 1976–September 1977)

Chapter Thirteen

Compilation record album: The Monty Python Instant Record Collection; more work writing and casting Life of Brian (September 1977–January 1978)

Chapter Fourteen

Further work on writing, financing and casting Life of Brian (January–September 1978)

Chapter Fifteen

Filming Life of Brian in Tunisia (September–November 1978)

Chapter Sixteen

Editing and publicising Life of Brian; a marketing trip to the US; record album based on the film soundtrack; book of the film: Monty Python’s Life of Brian/Monty python scrap book (November 1978–August 1979)

Chapter Seventeen

Life of Brian opens in the US, then in the UK; reactions (August–November 1979)

Chapter Eighteen

Writing the new film: The Meaning of Life; new record album: Monty Python’s Contractual Obligation Album (November 1979–July 1980)

Chapter Nineteen

Monty Python at the Hollywood Bowl: live show, record album and short film; work continues on writing The Meaning of Life (July 1980–July 1981)

Chapter Twenty

The final twelve months of work on writing The Meaning of Life, in between work on other projects involving the Pythons as individuals (July 1981–July 1982)

Chapter Twenty-one

Filming The Meaning of Life (July–September 1982)

Chapter Twenty-two

Editing and opening of The Meaning of Life; a ‘family’ wedding and the first Python group meeting for over a year (December 1982–December 1983)

Epilogue

A Basic Chronology

About the Author

Copyright Information

 

 

 

 

 

 

PREFACE

Michael Palin

Since the publication of my diaries I’ve received reactions from many people in many different areas of life. Some respond to the family material, particularly those entries dealing with illness and loss. Others find particular interest in locations and shared neighbourhoods, others in political asides, still others in my involvement in transport, and trains in particular. In many ways the most surprising and gratifying response has come from writer-performers, often much younger than myself, who see in my descriptions of the agony and ecstasy of creative work, reassuring parallels in their own experience.

As diaries are about work in progress, rather than achievement explained or reputation gained, they have a directness unvarnished by time. The creation of Monty Python, through the pages of a daily diary, is a nagging reminder of the unglamorous process rather than the glamorous result. I can understand why people in the same line of work might find this helpful. I was often lifted from the gloom of elusive inspiration by reading, in her diaries, that Virginia Woolf had bad days too. Similarly, I’ve been told by aspiring young comedy writers and performers how encouraged they are by the travails of Python.

When my friend and scrupulous editor, Geoffrey Strachan, asked me if he could extract my Monty Python experiences from the diary into a single compact volume he made much of the fact that this could almost be an educational tool. I wasn’t so sure about that. There’s little point in a Do-It-Yourself Python. Monty Python is what it is and can never be recreated by following steps one, two and three. And Python is a product of its time. The way we did things will never be possible again. But the important thing is that the will to do them and the spirit that created Python is timeless. If this account of the hoops we went through to turn that spirit into reality is instructive and inspirational today then I think it will indeed have proved itself to be some sort of educational tool, albeit in a very silly syllabus.

London, January 2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

INTRODUCTION

Michael Palin

I have kept a diary, more or less continuously, since April 1969. I was twenty-five years old then, married for three years and with a six-month-old son. I had been writing comedy with Terry Jones since leaving university in 1965, and, in addition to contributing material to The Frost Report, Marty Feldman, The Two Ronnies and anyone else who’d take us, we had written and performed two series of Do Not Adjust Your Set (with Eric Idle, David Jason and Denise Coffey), and six episodes of The Complete and Utter History of Britain. After the last one went out in early 1969, John Cleese rang me.

‘Well, you won’t be doing any more of those,’ he predicted, accurately as it turned out, ‘so why don’t we think of something new.’

So it was that, quite coincidentally, Monty Python came into my life, only a month or so after the diary…

The motivation for keeping the diaries remains the same as it always was, to keep a record of how I fill the days. The perfect, well-crafted, impeccably balanced entry persistently eludes me. Prejudices bob to the surface, anger crackles, judgements fall over each other, huffing and puffing. Opinions and interpretations are impulsive, inconsistent and frequently contradictory… After all, that’s where a daily diary differs from autobiography or memoir. It is an antidote to hindsight.

In the course of these diaries I grow up, my family grows up and Monty Python grows up. It was a great time to be alive.

London, January 2006

 

 

 

 

 

 

EDITORIAL NOTE

Geoffrey Strachan

During the second half of 1969, Michael Palin and Terry Jones joined forces with John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle and Terry Gilliam to create and perform the BBC television comedy series Monty Python’s Flying Circus. Palin and Jones had written and performed together in student revue and cabaret at Oxford University, before going on to work professionally in television comedy. Cleese, Chapman and Idle had all three had parallel experience, first in Footlights revues at Cambridge University, then with the BBC; and Terry Gilliam, an American-born artist, had done animated cartoons for London Weekend Television. Over the course of the next fourteen years, collaborating as Monty Python, they created three more television series, four cinema films, and various live stage shows in the UK, Canada and the USA, as well as five books and nine record albums. Throughout these years Michael Palin kept a diary, recording many aspects of his working, private and family life. The first two volumes of his diaries, edited by himself for publication, appeared in 2006 and 2009. Together they cover the years 1969 to 1988.

In preparing this selection from those published diaries, my intention has been to focus simply on the accounts of the working methods of the Monty Python sextet by distilling from them the passages that record scenes from the Monty Python side of Michael Palin’s working life, and that of his fellow Pythons.

Readers of the complete Diaries will be aware that, between 1969 and 1983, Michael Palin was also involved, as writer and actor, with a great range of other television, film and book projects, notably the Ripping Yarns TV series and books, co-written with Terry Jones, and the film, The Missionary, which he also wrote and starred in. The other Pythons were similarly active. Among other things, John Cleese, with Connie Booth, wrote and starred in the TV series, Fawlty Towers. Terry Gilliam co-wrote and directed two films, Jabberwocky and Time Bandits (which involved Michael Palin as co-writer and actor). Eric Idle wrote Rutland Weekend Television (in which he starred) as well as The Rutland Dirty Weekend Book and a filmed Beatles spoof, All You Need is Cash. Graham Chapman cowrote and starred in two films, Yellowbeard and The Odd Job, as well as writing A Liar’s Autobiography, in which he gave his angle on Python. Terry Jones wrote several TV plays with Michael Palin, as well as their spoof children’s book, Bert Fegg’s Nasty Book for Boys and Girls, and his literary historical study, Chaucer’s Knight.

The fact that, at irregular intervals throughout the period of their collaboration, all six of the Pythons took leave of absence from Monty Python to work on projects of their own was doubtless crucial in enabling them to come together again, as Monty Python, with renewed energy and inventiveness. The diaries show this pattern clearly. From time to time Michael Palin records that he (and the other Pythons) thought the Monty Python partnership had ground to a halt – sometimes amicably, sometimes less so. Then some inner drive, or outside circumstance, provided a trigger for work on a new project. This ‘log’ of the first fourteen years of their voyage together provides a record of how some of these moments looked, at the time, to one of the six members of this extraordinary group of writer-performers and writer-directors. His diary entries give day-by-day accounts of his own involvement, and theirs, in the planning, writing, rehearsing, financing, filming, performing, editing, and – on occasion – the defence of the works of Monty Python.

In the published editions of Michael Palin’s Diaries, he occasionally bridges a gap in continuity, or introduces a new phase in the story, with an explanatory paragraph, set in italic type. He also supplies the occasional footnote to explain a new name, as it occurs in the text. These explanatory notes and footnotes have been retained in this selection from his published Diaries where they occur. On the rare occasions where I have added a further explanatory note of my own, sometimes called for by a reference to a person or matter mentioned in a diary passage not here included, this has been placed between square brackets. I have also divided the book into twenty-two chapters, to assist readers in following the various, often overlapping, stages of the Pythons’ progress.

I am grateful to Michael Palin and his publishers for allowing this compilation from his published Diaries to be presented in this form.

London, December 2013

 

 

 

 

 

1

The first BBC television series: Monty Python’s Flying Circus (July–December 1969)

 

 

 

 

1969

I’ve opened the diary on the first day of Python filming. All the entries were written at my house in Oak Village, North London, except where otherwise noted.

Tuesday, July 8th

Today Bunn Wackett Buzzard Stubble and Boot1 came into being, with about five minutes of film being shot around Ham House. We were filming Queen Victoria’s slapstick film with Gladstone, and the beautifully kept lawn and flower beds at the back of the house provided just the right kind of formality to play off against.

In the afternoon the changes in light from sudden brightness to dullness caused us to slow down a little, but by 6.00 we had quite a chunk of ‘Queen Victoria and Her Gardener’ and ‘Bicycle Repairman’ done, and it had been a very good and encouraging first day’s shooting.

Wednesday, July 9th

Arrived at TV Centre by 10.00, and was driven in a BBC car, together with John (Cleese), Graham (Chapman) and Terry (Jones), out beyond Windsor and Eton to a tiny church at Boveney. Dressed to the hilt as a young Scottish nobleman of the Walter Scott era, I was able to cash a cheque at a bank in the Uxbridge Road, without the cashier batting an eyelid.

Thursday, July 10th, Bournemouth

At Bournemouth we were met by a minivan and driven to the Durley Dean Hotel, where we were to stay that night. What with the grey weather, the lack of much to do (it was mainly Terry’s ‘Changing on the Beach’ film) and the gradual realisation that all Bournemouth was as drab and colourless as the Durley Dean, I felt very low all morning.

After lunch we filmed on, collecting crowds of people watching Terry take his trousers down.

Friday, July 11th, Bournemouth

In the afternoon filmed some very bizarre pieces, including the death of Genghis Khan, and two men carrying a donkey past a Butlins redcoat, who later gets hit on the head with a raw chicken by a man from the previous sketch, who borrowed the chicken from a man in a suit of armour. All this we filmed in the 80° sunshine, with a small crowd of holidaymakers watching.

John, Graham, Terry and myself took a first-class compartment and talked about Shows 4 and 5 and decided that we really had an excellent week filming. Ian Mac2 is marvellous – the best director to work for and, with a fellow Scots cameraman, Jimmy Balfour, he really gets on with it.

Wednesday, July 16th

Filming today in Barnes. The weather continues to be excellent – if anything a little too hot – 80°+ all day.

Ended up the afternoon prancing about in mouse-skins for a documentary about people who like to dress up as mice. That really made the sweat pour down the chest.

Thursday, July 24th

Met with Ian and the two Terrys at the BBC. We listened to some possible title music – finally selected Sousa’s march ‘The Liberty Bell’ from a Grenadier Guards LP. It’s very difficult to associate brass-band music with any class of people. Most enthusiasts perhaps come from north of the Trent working class, but then of course it has high patrician status and support from its part in ceremonial. So in the end it is a brass-band march which we’ve chosen – because it creates such immediate atmosphere and rapport, without it being calculated or satirical or ‘fashionable’.

Friday, August 1st

We have four shows completed, but apart from the two weeks’ filming in July, there has been no feeling yet of concerted effort on behalf of the show (now, incidentally, renamed Monty Python’s Flying Circus). However, it seems that the next two weeks will be much harder work. August 30th is our first recording date, and we have another week’s filming starting on the 18th. Time is getting shorter. [Filming would be done on location, to provide scenes for insertion when the show was recorded with an audience in the studio.]

Sunday, August 3rd

John C rang up in the morning to ask if I felt like working in the afternoon, so I ended up in Knightsbridge about 3.00. It’s funny, but when one has written in partnership almost exclusively for the last three years, as Terry and I have done, and I suppose John and Graham as well, it requires quite an adjustment to write with somebody different. Terry and I know each other’s way of working so well now – exactly what each one does best, what each one thinks, what makes each of us laugh – that when I sat down to write with John there was a moment’s awkwardness, slight embarrassment, but it soon loosened up as we embarked on a saga about Hitler (Hilter), Von Ribbentrop (RonVibbentrop) and Himmler (Bimmler) being found in a seaside guest house. We do tend to laugh at the same things – and working with John is not difficult – but there are still differences in our respective ways of thinking, not about comedy necessarily, which mean perhaps that the interchange of ideas was a little more cautious than it is with Terry. However, by the time I left, at 7.15, we had almost four minutes’ worth of sketch written.

Tuesday, August 5th

Another workday at Eric’s.3 A good morning, but then a rather winey lunch. That is the trouble with working at John or Eric’s – both are surrounded by a very good selection of restaurants, temptingly easy to go to.

Wednesday, August 6th

Terry and I are determined to make this a really productive day. We work on till 8.00, finishing our big ‘Them’ saga. An 85% success day. Very satisfying – and we really worked well together.

Monday, August 18th

Started off for the TV Centre in some trepidation, for this was the first day’s filming (and, in fact, the first day’s working) with John Howard Davies, our producer for the first three shows. [They had already done some filming on location with Ian MacNaughton.] John has an unfortunate manner at first – rather severe and school-prefectish – but he really means very well. He consulted us all the way along the line and took our suggestions and used nearly all of them. He also worked fast and by the end of the day we had done the entire ‘Confuse-a-Cat’ film, a very complicated item, and we had also finished the ‘Superman’ film. All this was helped by an excellent location – a back garden in a neat, tidy, completely and utterly ‘tamed’ piece of the Surrey countryside – Edenfield Gardens, Worcester Park.

Thursday, August 21st, Southwold

Out to Covehithe, where we filmed for most of the day. The cliffs are steep and crumbling there and the constant movement of BBC personnel up and down probably speeded coastal erosion by a good few years.

Mother and Father turned up during the morning and appeared as crowd in one of the shots.

In the afternoon heavy dark clouds came up and made filming a little slower. We ended up pushing a dummy newsreader off the harbour wall, and I had to swim out and rescue this drifting newsreader, so it could be used for another shot.

Saturday, August 23rd

In the afternoon I went over to the TV Centre for a dubbing session. Everyone was there, including Terry Gilliam, who has animated some great titles – really encouraging and just right – and Ian MacNaughton, short-haired and violent. He seems now to have dropped all diplomatic approval of John HD, and is privately cursing him to the skies for not shooting all the film he was supposed to. I think this sounds a little harsh, as the weather was twice as bad with John as with Ian.

Thursday, August 28th

This morning rehearsed [in the studio] in front of the technical boys. Not an encouraging experience. I particularly felt rather too tense whilst going through it.

Watched the final edited film for the first show. A most depressing viewing. The ‘QueenVictoria’ music was completely wrong, and the Lochinvar film4 was wrong in almost every respect – editing and shooting most of all.

Terry and I both felt extremely low, but John Howard Davies, relishing, I think, the role of saviour, promised to do all he could to change the music on ‘Victoria’.

Saturday, August 30th

The first recording day. Fortunately Friday’s fears did not show themselves, so acutely. From the start of the first run [i.e. a rehearsal on the sets] the crew were laughing heartily – the first really good reaction we’ve had all week. The sets were good, John kept us moving through at a brisk pace and our fears of Thursday night proved unfounded when ‘Lochinvar’ got a very loud laugh from the crew. In the afternoon we had two full-dress runthroughs, and still had half an hour left of studio time [before recording the show with an audience].

Barry Took5 won the audience over with his warm-up and, at 8.10, Monty Python’s Flying Circus was first launched on a small slice of the British public in Studio 6 at the Television Centre. The reception from the start was very good indeed, and everybody rose to it – the performances being the best ever. The stream-of-consciousness links worked well, and when, at the end, John and I had to redo a small section of two Frenchmen talking rubbish, it went even better.

The diary almost buckles under the weight of writing, filming and recording. My resolve weakens and the 1960s slip away without another entry. How could I miss the creation of the Spanish Inquisition and ‘Silly Walks’? To be honest, because at the time neither I, nor any of us, I think, saw Python as a living legend, pushing back the barriers of comedy. We were lightly paid writer-performers trying to make a living in a world where Morecambe and Wise, Steptoe and Son and Till Death Us Do Part were the comedy giants. Monty Python’s Flying Circus was a fringe show, shouting from the sidelines.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. The name of a fictional forward line from a John Cleese soccer monologue, and the current name for what was later to become Monty Python’s Flying Circus. Among other titles we tried unsuccessfully to get past the BBC were ‘Whither Canada’, ‘Ow! It’s Colin Plint’, ‘A Horse, a Spoon and a Bucket’, ‘The Toad Elevating Moment’, ‘The Algy Banging Hour’ and ‘Owl Stretching Time’. Increasingly irritated, the BBC suggested the Flying Circus bit and we eventually compromised by adding the name Monty Python.

2. Ian MacNaughton produced and directed all the Python TV shows, apart from the first three studio recordings and a few days of film, which were directed by John Howard Davies.

3. Eric Idle.

4. John C dressed as Rob Roy is seen galloping urgently towards a church where a beautiful girl is about to be married. Cleese arrives in the nick of time – ignores the girl and carries off the bridegroom.

5. Co-writer of many shows including Round the Horne, father figure of Python. He pushed our series forward, and lent it an air of respectability at the BBC.

 

 

 

 

 

2

The second BBC television series; the first film: And Now for Something Completely Different; the first record album (January–December 1970)

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