Cast: Spike Milligan, John Bluthal, Neil Shand, Alan Clare, Charlie Young, Richard Ingrams, Michael Malnick, Peter Jones, Chris Langham, Stella Tanner, Julia Breck, David Lodge, Sheila Steafel, Bob Todd, David Rappaport Show full cast and credits
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Spike Milligan became a household name with the radio show The Goons (BBC),
which habitually bent and often abandoned the rules of traditional sketch comedy
- narrative structure and even punch lines were regularly sidelined in a
seemingly perverse pursuit of the absurd. In partnership with fellow Goons Harry
Secombe and Peter Sellers, Milligan helped create a new vocabulary for comedy that is still in use today.
The Goons' success meant that Milligan's transfer to TV was only a matter of
time. However, the BBC wasn't the first to try and harness his brand of surreal
comedy for the small screen. In 1956 Associated Rediffusion produced five
episodes of The Idiot Weekly, Price 2d, which also featured Peter Sellers, and
later that year A Show Called Fred and Son of Fred, again with Sellers in tow.
Producer for all three shows was Dick Lester. Yet it was Milligan's return to
the BBC that saw him achieve his best and sometimes most confusing TV work, the
various incarnations of Q.
Starting with Q5 (1969) Milligan and writing partner Neil Shand created a show where routines were dropped midway through, seemingly out of a bizarre
antagonism towards the viewers, while heed of the fourth wall - the
tacitly-observed divide between the world within the TV and that of the audience
- was often totally abandoned; during sketches Milligan would regularly look
down the camera at the viewers at home, convulsed with laughter or seemingly
confused.
With its incomplete sets, deliberately amateurish makeup and sense of chaos,
Q was not to everyone's liking. However, the BBC maintained an intermittent
faith in Milligan, who returned with Q6 (1975) and so on up to Q9 (1980). Q10 was renamed There's A Lot Of It About (1982), apparently at the insistence of
his employers who felt that the Q moniker had run its course.
Q's hit and miss nature is partly responsible for its lack of a popular
legacy. Milligan's questionable use of racially-based humour hasn't helped its
cause either, nor his use of the amply-endowed, and often semi-naked, Julia
Breck as a stereotypical female sexual predator. However, for all of its flaws,
the series broke new comic ground, and was an undoubted influence on Monty
Python and, in turn, on generations of comedy writers and
performers.
Anthony Clark
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