Showing posts with label comedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comedy. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 February 2010

The Cheeser's Choice: Victoria Wood - As Seen on TV

She's been around for years, and some would consider her to be past it or "old hat" in terms of her humour, but you still can't knock Victoria Wood.

I recently treated myself to her "As Seen On TV" DVD (bargain for a tenner - the entire, unedited, two series of the show!) originally broadcast by the BBC back in the mid 1980s, and it's been great watching all these episodes again, as well as a reminder of how funny and observational Ms Wood really is. The essence of Victoria's humour is a preoccupation with the stuff of everyday life, with references to social class and all things domestic (often related to the Northern of England, from whence she originates). There's also a kind of surrealism to some of the comedy that makes the show even more entertaining. "As Seen on TV" is a series of sketches featuring many well-observed characters, played by regular supporting cast Julie Walters, Celia Imrie, Duncan Preston and Susie Blake. Two of the funniest comic creations to feature were the characters of Marjorie and Joan, two hoity-toity and bitchy TV presenters, dishing out useful / pointless consumer advice to TV viewers. Gotta love Viccie's hair in these scenes, a definite piss-take of Judith Chalmers??





Wood and Walters make an excellent comic duo and spark off each other incredibly well (they had their own show prior to "As Seen On TV", so it's no wonder) and this Italian restaurant scene is one of my favourites with some hilarious lines. The oversexed waiter is also priceless (if even more of a comic stereotype by today's standards):



Funny eh? I just love the lines, like "She likes the majesty and grandeur of the landscape, but she's not too keen on the bacon" and "They got onto politics and I ended up watching "Take The High Road" take the biscuit ... not to mention "Just a black coffee, thank you"!

And what about the Mayflower Hotel, Nottingham? An experience which will be painfully familiar to many of us:



Another hallmark of "As Seen On TV" was a weekly musical number, normally performed by Ms Wood on the piano with accompanying lyrics. I must confess some of these numbers now sound very twee and dated with their tales of love affairs gone wrong and suchlike. However one number worthy of inclusion is "Keep On Shopping" which still has a lot of resonance today and features some amazing female vocal performances (a great skit of blues/"belter" type singers):



And who can forget the deliciously catty continuity announcer played by the brilliant Susie Blake?





She also had a choice line (which I couldn't find on the net) in one scene: "We'd like to apologise to our viewers in the North. It must be awful for you".

And last but not least, what about Acorn Antiques??



For those of you who've obviously been living in the Outback since 1985, the "show" was a spoof of low budget soap opera and its poor production values - shoddy sets, wobbling walls, poor camera angles and cr*p acting - the most obvious target being the equally low budget and much derided "Crossroads". The performances in Acorn Antiques are legendary (for all the wrong reasons) - Celia Imrie's posh Miss Babs, Duncan Preston's pompous Mr Clifford and best of all, Julie Walters' brummie tea/charlady Mrs Overall, who forever missed her cues and fluffs her lines ("Coffeeeee, Miss Babs?") There were some great send-ups of soap opera-type plotlines, including terrorists infiltrating the shop and later on, its transformation into a health club ("Just leave your antiques in the cubicle, they'll be perfectly safe!"):



In the final episode of Acorn Antiques we hear that the characters of Mrs Overall and Mr Kenneth have been axed, leading to some hilarious pre-show footage (Julie W is skitting actress Noele Gordon, who played matriarch Meg Richardon/Mortimer in Crossroads and who was similarly sacked from the programme):



A bit of an icon then, our Victoria. As a matter of fact she was back on our screens recently in a (now rare) Christmas special. While retaining quite a lot of the Wood humour I didn't find it as memorable as her shows of yore, though, one reason being the absence of her regular supporting cast (although Julie Walters was still present, playing the actress who portrayed Mrs Overall, Bo Beaumont, to good comic effect). But if you want to see the reason why Vix is such a celebrated comedienne, look no further than "As Seen On TV"!

Friday, 6 November 2009

And just because... (again)



Who knew the Daleks did Benny Hill?? Davros' Angels??!

All the world's a stage

...And all the men and women merely players...

As Shakespeare once wrote.

Do you not agree, my lovelies?

Talking of which, the other night I went to ... the theatre!! For the first in what seemed like a very long time. Well I did take my A level students to the Globe a few weeks ago which was fun, but that was more educational and we didn't actually see a performance ...

Anyway the play in question was The Comedians by Trevor Griffiths. on at the Lyric in Hammersmith. Great theatre with an alternative style, decently-priced tickets, lovely food in the caff, but awful trying to negotiate a car round Hammersmith (I ended up on the way to Heathrow thanks to the nightmare one-way system). Anyway, that's besides the point. The play, as it turned out was pretty good, starring none other than Matthew Kelly, who certainly proved his acting credentials in this, being miles away from his zany "Game For a Laff" persona of yonder: Reece Sheersmith from "The League of Gentlemen" and former "Comic Strip Presents" star Keith Allen, who I haven't seen in anything for yonks and is now looking considerably older. The plot concerns six trainee stand-up comics due to take to the stage for the first time - assembling in a school classroom after hours and presided over by "coach" Matthew K; in the following act they then all do their "stint" on stage; then there's a post-performance reunion back in the school with the best comedians being offered contracts. It was very well-observed and performed - but contrary to expectations probably brought on by the title, not all about comedy. There's one particular bit I won't say too much about, but which involves the chap in the picture above - his "comic act" is the total reverse, being deeply (and I mean deeply) disturbing, uncomfortable, yet somehow rivetting, viewing. But as the friend who accompanied me to the play commented so accurately, the story shows the price you have to pay if you choose to live by your own standards rather than by those of society - that is to say, it's the two comedians who both perform to the lowest denominator who end up the 'winners' and the other, less "conventional" comics achieve nothing. Sod's law eh?

Anyway I won't say any more, but it's one worth seeing. And I really should be like fellow bloggers Nora and Alan and go the theatre more often. Or maybe just get out more, full stop!