James buckley eric idle biography
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And usually they're the ones whose mothers aren't around." Idle read English at Cambridge; elected president of Footlights, he appeared in the television showcase Footlights '64 (ITV, 1964).
Idle wrote for various television comedy shows, including The Frost Report (BBC, 1966-67), where he was united with what would become the Python writing team: Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Michael Palin and Terry Jones.
Christmas Comedy
'Tis the season to be jolly! After touring with her in the annual Footlights Revue My Girl Herbert (1965) which ran for a brief time at The Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, he spent a season in Leicester Rep before moving to London, appearing in two BBC TV Movies: Jonathan Millers Alice in Wonderland, and Ken Russell’s Isadora, and then starting to write professionally for BBC Radio’s I’m Sorry I’ll Read That Again and BBC Television’s The Frost Report, which won The Golden Rose of Montreux.
In 1968 he began writing and acting in two series of a children’s TV hit, Do Not Adjust Your Set, with Michael Palin Terry Jones and Terry Gilliam, which won The Priz Jeunnesse, Munich for Best Children’s Television.
Their musical Spamalot, directed by Mike Nichols, opened in Chicago in December 2004 and then Broadway on March 17th 2005 at The Shubert Theater, where it ran until January 2009, breaking all house records, garnering $175 million at The Box Office, winning three Tonys (including Best Musical 2005) a Grammy for Best Broadway Album and a Writers Desk Award for Best Lyrics.
Nuns on the Run (d.
The Class Collection
A very British collection, celebrating some of the funniest moments inspired by the class system. So, if your heart stirs at the sight of Tim and Dawn finally getting together in The Office or you go weak at the knees at the thought of Alan Partridge and a chocolate mousse, then sigh no more.
The success of this show led to four series of Monty Python’s Flying Circus for the BBC from July 1969 through 1973, with the addition of John Cleese and Graham Chapman. In 2001 he made a sequel called “Can’t Buy Me Lunch” which looked back on the Rutles and their influence on people’s lives.
In 1975 he published Hello Sailor his first novel.
1973). Though beset by tiny budgets, tight scripts and a strong supporting cast were complemented by strange musical interludes courtesy of the Bonzo Dog Band's Neil Innes.
An Innes-written Beatles pastiche, shot in a Richard Lester style, first seen on Rutland Weekend Television, was well received on an Idle-hosted edition of the US comedy Saturday Night Live (1975-).
Great Irish Comedians
In honour of St Patrick's Day, we've put together this collection of some of the best loved Irish performers for you to enjoy. Other Pythons were sceptical, but Jones, Palin and Gilliam eventually joined Idle on stage in 2009 for a special performance of the follow up, Not the Messiah (He's a Very Naughty Boy) (2007), a comic oratorio based on Life of Brian.
Vic Pratt
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As a young child he lived in Manchester, attended his first school St.George’s, Wallasey (Liverpool) and in 1950 was sent to The Royal School Wolverhampton where his education was paid for by the RAF Benevolent Fund. Idle appeared in all performances singing “Baritonish.” In October 2009 as part of the celebration of forty years of Monty Python it was performed and filmed at The Royal Albert Hall, London, with guest stars fellow Pythons Michael Palin, Terry Jones, and Terry Gilliam, plus Carol Cleveland and Neil Innes.
His Life.
Based on actual events.
Eric Idle was born on March 29th 1943 in Harton Hospital, South Shields, County Durham, U.K. His mother was a nurse and his father was a Sergeant in the RAF who was killed hitch-hiking home on compassionate leave and died in Darlington Hospital on Christmas Eve 1945.
Idle developed the idea into an acclaimed spoof-documentary TV special based around the career of a band very similar to the Beatles - the Rutles - entitled All You Need is Cash (d.
We'll be adding new collections all the time, as well as inviting the best names in British Comedy to share their favourites with you.
"Comedians are formed early. He starred as a ghost in the ill-fated Nearly Departed (1989-90) and later was a regular in the Brooke Shields vehicle Suddenly Susan (1996-00), but confessed to approaching such jobs with little enthusiasm.
Valentine's Comedy Collection
All you need is love.
According to Eric, the roots of his comedy lay in his lonely, difficult years at an austere war-orphans' boarding school in Wolverhampton. In 1986 he appeared as Koko in Jonathan Miller’s production of Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Mikado at The English National Opera, a role he repeated at The Houston Grand Opera in 1989.