Kenneth Williams Talking Comedy


Kenneth Williams

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Kenneth Williams was a great British one-off -

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actor, comedian, diarist, Carry On star,

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and surely one of the most mesmerising raconteurs

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to ever grace our screens.

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He was also one of the best loved,

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delighting audiences on radio, television and cinema

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for over 40 years.

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Here he is in one of his earliest TV appearances,

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displaying his mastery of voices on the Tonight Programme in 1961.

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Listen to this voice.

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-FLIRTATIOUSLY:

-No, don't be like that.

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Oh, stop messing about!

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And this one.

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-DODDERY:

-35 years I've been coming here.

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35 years, I've been coming to these studios.

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You may recognise them from the two radio shows,

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Hancock's Half Hour and Beyond Our Ken.

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And they are just two of the many voices that belong to one man.

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The man is Kenneth Williams,

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and tonight he opens in a new revue, One Over The Eight,

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at the Duke of York's Theatre in London.

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And judging by the enormous number of voices and characters

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that you play,

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you seem to collect voices like other people collect stamps.

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Do you, in fact, borrow them from people that you've met?

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Or do you just pluck them from the air?

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Oh, yes. They are taken

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from people I've known, you know.

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Pinched, I suppose.

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The snide voice,

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that stop messing about one,

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I met this boy,

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who was working the Mint.

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And he was describing how you were searched when you left Mint,

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in case, well, if they suspected that you were taking out anything

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that you shouldn't be.

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And in describing it, he had a perpetual smile on his face

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and said, you know, "Oh, you have to be very, very careful,

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"cos otherwise, you see, they make you take your clothes off."

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And so I thought there was a very good idea there.

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What about the other one? The old 35 years?

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Well, that was a producer, actually, that directed me in a play,

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and he was giving a lecture to the cast on...

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on the interpretation of the play.

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And he salivated, a lot of saliva and bits, you see.

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And he was telling them off

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about something that was going wrong in the play.

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-DODDERY:

-And he was talking, you see, very much like that, you see.

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All the time.

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And the cigarette, the glue, was all coming undone, you see,

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and it all fell over him, you see.

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Indeed, I was impersonating this when he came in and saw me doing it,

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but I fantastically did a little more than him...

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-DODDERY:

-Made it a bit more, you know, senile.

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And arrived at a voice which is very good for radio,

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you know, cos it's old and...

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You've just, of course, been out on tour with this revue, haven't you?

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Do you find that being out of London a great deal

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provides you with good opportunity for collecting more voices?

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Yes, you do meet some extraordinary people,

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you know, that come backstage.

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We have...

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One of the sketches in this are based on the colour bar,

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the idea of the colour bar, setting it up, satirising the idea.

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And we met, on this tour, a woman from South Africa,

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who had very different views on it, you see.

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And she was telling us that if we lived there ourselves,

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we'd all have different views on it too.

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-SOUTH AFRICAN ACCENT:

-And she talked, you see,

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in this very South African way.

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This very pinched... You know.

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This way of talking. "If you knew. If only you knew.

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"If only you could be out there yourself

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"and see how we have to cope with this problem," you see.

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That voice, I got from her.

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Hmm.

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What about these long tours, particularly away from London,

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do you find that revue audiences, for instance, vary, differ very much

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from audiences for straight plays?

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-Undoubtedly, yes.

-In what sort of ways?

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Well, I mean, I think a straight play on tour has

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a certain universality of appeal,

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whereas revue is, so often, only for, designed for, the cosmopolitan,

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and consequently you get some extraordinary things said to you

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in the provinces.

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One man accosted me outside the theatre and said, uh...

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"Do you have a revue school?"

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Quite fantastic.

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And somebody else said to me, uh...

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"Ee, well, it were all right. Yes. It were all right, the show,

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"but there were no plot."

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-You see.

-Yes.

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So goodness knows what she thought she'd been watching.

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Also, somebody else tackled me and said,

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"You don't mind me saying this,

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"because, you know, you never want to resent criticism from the public.

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"You never..." I said, "No, indeed.

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"We welcome it, you know, with open arms."

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"Yes," he said, "Well, you want to remember.

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"You want to remember that your diction impedes characterisation.

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"You see, now, you want to watch that.

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"Your diction is impeded by your character..."

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I said, "Indeed. Yes, well, you're quite right."

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You know, and flew into the night with this terrible cry after me,

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"Diction impedes characterisation."

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I didn't really know what it meant at all.

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Williams was a natural storyteller.

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And when he had a tale to tell, he threw himself into it.

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Everything became a performance,

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and with the voice, gestures and facial expressions

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going into overdrive, it was something to behold.

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Here's one such occasion.

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Appearing on the Parkinson programme alongside Windsor Davies

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of the Army entertainment comedy It Ain't Half Hot, Mum.

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You know the reality of the army entertainment unit

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because, in fact, you were with one?

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What's the difference between the reality and the fiction?

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Well, I suppose, you know, the fictional one shares with us

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the problem, a fundamental paradox,

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which was that in the Army you were supposed to be soldiers,

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and yet, of course, at night we were supposed to put make-up on

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and come on in various costumes and all the rest of it.

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And in our unit, which was Singapore,

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the commanding officer was at great pains to say,

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"Though you're artists, I accept that you're artists,

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"either a pianist or instrumentalist or whatever,

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"and some of you are doing the sketches as women,

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"dressed up as women.

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"Nevertheless you will go around this parade ground in Nee Soon

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"like soldiers.

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"I will have men on this parade,

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"you're all smart, now get your hair cut and look like men.

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"I want a unit full of men."

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And from the back row you heard, "Oh, get the Madame!"

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LAUGHTER

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And this man, Woodings, was furious.

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"None of that. I heard that.

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"I'm not having any of that. I was Ivor Novello's stage director,

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"so I know all about the pro-talk.

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"I don't want any of that. You will behave like soldiers."

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And, of course, that was the problem,

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because fundamentally they weren't military people, you understand,

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and they did tend to flounce about

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and walk not in a manner that was, you know, military.

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-No.

-And that all...was a problem.

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And that was the reason why there was a terrible shake-up in the unit.

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And he said, "I'm going to get someone here

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"to shake some discipline to this unit.

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"And it's a man from the DLIs. The DLI."

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And filled us with apprehension, we thought,

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"Oh, Durham Light Infantry," because they did march, didn't they?

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-Yeah.

-They really marched.

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And he'd got this man in, you see.

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This man was a Sergeant Major, formidable.

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I mean, just as he portrays, a formidable man.

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And we were all frightened to death, you see.

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But luckily, I got on tour with a show so I missed it, really.

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And I went to Hong Kong with a revue

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and when I came back, I said to Stanley Baxter,

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"What happened to all that discipline stuff

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with that Sergeant Major?"

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He said, "Yes, you might well ask.

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"Hmm, well..."

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Apparently he was caught with his fingers in the till.

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They used to have the costumes done by Chinese tailors,

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and apparently he was saying, "Well, put down 500

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"and we split the difference," you see,

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and keeping the lolly, you see.

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And so there was an enquiry, and a court martial,

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and rather than face this court martial,

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-he took prussic acid and so they...

-LAUGHTER

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Yes! You see.

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So they got him to the military hospital,

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but he died before the arrival.

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And so the OC, Major Williams,

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lined them up on the parade ground and said, "Now, look here,

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"Sergeant Major's killed himself.

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"The man's more bloody trouble dead than he was alive...

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-LAUGHTER

-"..now we've got to bury him.

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"So, all over 6-foot stand forward for pallbearing."

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And everyone in the rank all, sort of, went down a bit...

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LAUGHTER

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..cos no-one wanted to carry this coffin, you know,

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which is quite understandable, really.

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They were artists, you see.

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-And so he went down the line,

-LAUGHTER

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and as he came to Stanley Baxter,

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Stanley was shrinking visibly, you see,

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and he said, "All right, you can go, you can be a pallbearer."

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And Baxter said, "Oh, Church of Scotland."

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LAUGHTER

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And the old man said, "Oh, I see. Well, sorry.

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"Yes, of course, I understand."

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And went on down the line and then the penny dropped

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and he turned back and said, "Just a minute!

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"What are you talking about? You bury people, don't you?

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"Come on, out."

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He was caught.

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And they caught about half a dozen others, you see.

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And they had to go with this coffin on their shoulders,

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and of course, it was that particular period

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when the monsoon simply fell down and it was pouring.

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And they got to the cemetery or whatever it was, military place,

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you see, and there was a padre with his cassock flapping,

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the rain just simply pouring down, you see,

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and he was standing there with all this...

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"Man is born of woman and his life is brief and full of misery.

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-"We come with..."

-MUMBLES RAPIDLY

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And then he saw this flag,

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cos they put a Union Jack on the coffin.

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He said, "Get the flag off!

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"Get that flag off!

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"It's an ignominious death,

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"you don't give battle honours with ignominious,"

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because if you kill yourself, it's ignominious, you see.

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So they said, "Oh, dear." And they all took it...

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LAUGHTER

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Tried to get down and get the flag off, you see.

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They were all standing there, very limp, you know.

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"Oh, well, I don't know."

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And then there was supposed to be

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someone saying, "Right fire, right turn,

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"left fire," you see, to march off,

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but there was no-one to say right fire, left turn,

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-because he was in this box, you see.

-LAUGHTER

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And the whole thing fell about in the most appalling confusion.

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This terrible confusion with this vicar saying, "Just go, just go!"

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And Woodings, our commanding officer, was standing there,

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"Wonderfully moving, very moving. Very moving," you see.

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He's standing there saluting, and the Packard arrived -

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an enormous Packard

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with a Chinese chauffeur holding an umbrella - and a lady got out,

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and stood by the graveside with all of us.

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We're all looking and thinking, "What's she doing?" You know.

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-HE SOBS AMERICAN ACCENT:

-"Is he there?

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"Is he in that box? Oh, my God, it's so terrible."

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And Woodings said, "Oh, Madame, who are you?"

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And she said, "I'm married to him. I was mar... I'm his wife."

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And he'd secretly married in Singapore,

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and she was deposited in this hotel in Singapore.

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And Woodings said, "Well, my dear, you must be very distressed."

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She said, "I am very distressed.

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"I had no idea this was going to happen."

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He said, "Well, I see, you dismiss your chauffeur,

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"and come with me in my jeep and I will look after you.

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"Don't you worry about a thing."

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And she was ensconced in his room, you see.

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And I had to go in to get orders, you know,

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for where you were supposed to go.

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And she was sitting there in the kimono with a coffee.

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And I thought, "Well, it didn't take her long to get over it, did it?"

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LAUGHTER

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Unbelievable.

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I think that's the longest reply to any question I've ever asked.

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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But vastly entertaining.

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Of course, talking at length was second nature to Kenneth,

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especially on the BBC radio programme Just A Minute.

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He managed to speak for 60 seconds

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without hesitation, deviation or repetition more times

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than any other contestant.

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And here's one of his triumphs.

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Kenneth, we're back with you.

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Would you take the subject of emperors,

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and tell us something about that in just a minute? Starting now.

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Many names spring to mind,

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I would mention Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius.

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Perhaps Elagabalus is an interesting example.

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He arrived in Rome, you know, on a dray

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and had a lot of make-up on.

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The senators are reputed to have made representations,

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and indignant noises about this.

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But he held full sway

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and filled every post far and wide -

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Gaul, Britain, Menorca, Majorca,

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all with posts with his favourite in charge.

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And I don't blame him, cos, I mean, after all,

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if you've got a bit of authority, you might as well splash it about

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and say, "Woo!" And have a good time.

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Only here for a short while,

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might as well enjoy it while we can.

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And I think, when I look back on my own life,

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ah, yes, Acton's dictum - "All power corrupts."

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-That is true.

-WHISTLE BLOWS

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APPLAUSE

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Unsurprisingly, over the years television hosts and audiences

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would increasingly come to think of Kenneth as chat show gold.

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He could be indiscreet, he could be shocking,

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but he was always hugely entertaining.

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Here are just the few more examples of him in full flow,

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doing what he did best.

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And a woman said, "Oh, it's you.

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"Oh, yeah, just, oh, I think you're marvellous.

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"I admire you. I really admire..."

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I said, "Thank you very much. I must run."

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"Oh, wait a minute, give me your autograph,

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"just give me your autograph." And it was raining.

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And I said, "If I do it right now, it will all run.

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"The ink will run. I'll be illegible.

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"I'll be illegible."

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She said, "No, you're eligible to me, you're eligible."

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So I said, "No, go away."

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And she said, "Oh, you dirty rotten snob!"

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You understudied Richard Burton, didn't you?

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Oh, that was frightening.

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Absolutely frightening. I was his understudy in The Seagull.

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Richard Burton was playing Konstantin.

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I came to the theatre one day, and the stage door people said,

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"Get up there, get his clothes on, get his clothes on. He's off."

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I said, "What are you talking about, off?"

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"He's an enormous bloke.

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"He can't be off, there's nothing wrong with him."

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And they said, "Yes, he's had... He's eaten ptomaine.

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"Ptomaine poisoning."

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He'd eaten tinned fish which is infected.

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So I shot up there.

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I was petrified.

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And he was lying there, and he was ashen.

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And I said, "You're not really ill, are you?

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"Stop messing about, you know...

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"It's all a game." And he said, "I'm ill. I'm very ill.

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"I've eaten this stuff out of a tin, and I'm sure I've got

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"ptomaine poisoning, they've sent for the doctor."

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I said, "But I can't go on, I don't know it!"

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I'd never learned it!

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I'd never learned it, you see.

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And it's a vast role.

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Enormous part.

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And he said, "You're joking?

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"You really... Are you serious?

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"You don't...know...the role that you're understudying?"

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I said, "No, I never learned it. You looked so fit."

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He played rugby and everything, you know?

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And I said, "I can't go on."

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And he said, "Well, I'll tell you what we'll do.

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"You go next door."

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And you weren't allowed... It was a Welsh theatre,

0:14:340:14:36

we weren't allowed to have drink.

0:14:360:14:38

He said, "You go next door and smuggle in bitter,

0:14:380:14:41

"get their draft special bitter,

0:14:410:14:43

"and that might do the trick."

0:14:430:14:45

And I was going backwards and forwards, you see,

0:14:450:14:47

from the stage door.

0:14:470:14:48

With all this stuff under my raincoat, bringing it in,

0:14:480:14:50

and he went on, and he drank all this stuff, and he went on.

0:14:500:14:52

And there were terrible burps.

0:14:520:14:54

-Bleurgh!

-LAUGHTER

0:14:540:14:57

The whole thing went like a bomb.

0:14:570:14:59

And he came off, got a tremendous ovation,

0:14:590:15:01

I mean a really marvellous exiting round of applause.

0:15:010:15:04

And he came into the wings,

0:15:040:15:06

where I was standing with another load of this bitter, you see.

0:15:060:15:09

And he put his arms round me, and he shouted...

0:15:090:15:11

He used to do this trick, Richard, you know.

0:15:110:15:13

He had favourite songs, and instead of singing them,

0:15:130:15:16

he'd recite them.

0:15:160:15:17

You know, "Foggy day in London town, had me up, had me down."

0:15:170:15:20

All this sort of thing.

0:15:200:15:21

And he suddenly flung his arms around me and said,

0:15:210:15:23

"If you're ever in a jam,

0:15:230:15:26

"I'M YOUR MAN!"

0:15:260:15:27

And I was loving it. I was laughing, you see.

0:15:290:15:32

And the stage manager said, "Shut up! Keep your voice down.

0:15:320:15:34

"Your voice can be heard."

0:15:340:15:36

Cos this play was still going on, you see.

0:15:360:15:37

And that was the sort of thing we used to get up to.

0:15:380:15:40

But I did like him. I liked him enormously.

0:15:400:15:43

He was great fun, tremendous humour.

0:15:430:15:44

When the Carry Ons were in their infancy,

0:15:440:15:47

the Americans were going to do Carry Ons.

0:15:470:15:49

And I was interviewed by a famous director they sent over to London

0:15:490:15:53

to recruit talent for these Carry Ons.

0:15:530:15:55

And this man was Hal Roach,

0:15:550:15:56

who had directed the famous twosome, Laurel and Hardy.

0:15:560:16:00

-Laurel and Hardy, that's right.

-Laurel and Hardy, yeah.

0:16:000:16:02

And he had got a marvellous idea, as he said, for slapstick.

0:16:020:16:04

And I was interviewed by him in his flat in London, and he said to me...

0:16:040:16:09

-AMERICAN ACCENT:

-.."I've got a wonderful idea!

0:16:090:16:11

"Now, what do we have here? See this little script,

0:16:110:16:14

"I've got a little script with you sitting on this lavatory pan

0:16:140:16:17

"and it's just been painted. It's freshly painted.

0:16:170:16:20

"And we have a long shot where you jump up

0:16:200:16:22

"cos there's an explosion, and then a long shot of you

0:16:220:16:26

"with a lavatory seat STUCK TO YOUR BEHIND!"

0:16:260:16:30

And I said, "Oh, yes(?)"

0:16:320:16:33

And it went on like this, with these slapstick situations

0:16:350:16:37

about a lavatory seat stuck to your behind.

0:16:370:16:40

No wonder you didn't work abroad, if that's the best offer you had.

0:16:400:16:43

That was the best one, yes.

0:16:430:16:45

The talk of lavatory seats is appropriate,

0:16:470:16:50

because Kenneth revelled in toilet humour.

0:16:500:16:52

He was neurotic when it came to personal hygiene,

0:16:520:16:55

but knew that discussing private parts and bodily functions

0:16:550:16:58

could have audiences in stitches.

0:16:580:17:01

And so he would regularly trot such stories out.

0:17:010:17:05

The first in the selection involves a dressing room encounter

0:17:050:17:07

with the legendary Noel Coward.

0:17:070:17:09

I was sitting on this chamber pot.

0:17:120:17:15

Because I had this warm water

0:17:150:17:17

with which I was cleaning myself, you see.

0:17:170:17:20

And he looked at me and he...

0:17:200:17:22

Very polite, most of them sit on the wash basin.

0:17:220:17:25

-Yeah, well, I...

-LAUGHTER DROWNS SPEECH

0:17:250:17:27

-No, I was washing something.

-Oh.

0:17:270:17:29

And I shot up, and in shooting up when I saw him, I upset the po,

0:17:290:17:33

and the water went all over the place.

0:17:330:17:36

And he said, "What on earth are you doing?"

0:17:360:17:39

And I said, "Well, I was washing myself,

0:17:390:17:41

"because I was told by the surgeon after my operation

0:17:410:17:44

"that I should never use toilet paper ever,

0:17:440:17:46

"but always wash it, completely wash it, you see."

0:17:460:17:49

And he said, "Oh, my dear, I do understand,

0:17:490:17:52

"have you read my book Present Indicative?

0:17:520:17:53

"I discuss that very operation myself.

0:17:530:17:56

"It's a dreadful operation, piles."

0:17:560:17:57

And I said, "No, no, no.

0:17:570:18:00

"I didn't have that. I didn't have that."

0:18:000:18:03

I said, "No, my operation was for popili."

0:18:030:18:05

"I had popili, you see."

0:18:050:18:08

And he said, "Popili?

0:18:080:18:10

"My dear, it's an island in the South Seas."

0:18:100:18:12

And as a matter of fact, it is.

0:18:140:18:15

I'd got it all wrong.

0:18:150:18:16

Because I had the operation, you see.

0:18:160:18:18

And well, I had three, actually.

0:18:180:18:20

Three, and they are all...

0:18:200:18:21

Painful?

0:18:210:18:22

..terrible.

0:18:220:18:23

Well, yes, when you're operated on in the nether regions.

0:18:230:18:25

And they...

0:18:250:18:27

And they shave you.

0:18:280:18:29

They shave everything.

0:18:290:18:31

Dreadful. And you feel, afterwards, you know,

0:18:310:18:34

as though a porcupine's down there.

0:18:340:18:36

Quite ghastly. I can't tell you the agony you go through.

0:18:370:18:41

You are reduced in hospitals,

0:18:410:18:43

the ignominy reduces you to a lump of meat on a trolley,

0:18:430:18:46

and you're shoved in, you know...

0:18:460:18:48

Given the injection... Aargh!

0:18:480:18:50

And you go out for the count, you see.

0:18:500:18:52

-Bed pans.

-That's right.

0:18:520:18:54

Although you hear some marvellous things, cos a nurse said to me,

0:18:540:18:57

"Down in the geriatric ward," she said, "there's an old girl,

0:18:570:19:00

"and she pees the bed regularly, you know."

0:19:000:19:02

I said, "Does she, Sister Xavier? Are you kidding?"

0:19:020:19:04

She said, "I'm not kidding. It's the truth."

0:19:040:19:06

She said, "Now, do you know, she doesn't recognise it.

0:19:060:19:09

"And when I say to her, 'What have you been doing in this bed?'

0:19:090:19:12

"she says, 'Oh, it's the roof leaking.

0:19:120:19:14

"'It is the roof.'"

0:19:140:19:16

And that refusal to acknowledge the humility,

0:19:160:19:19

the ignominy, I mean, of it, is marvellous, isn't it, really?

0:19:190:19:22

I was put in this hotel.

0:19:220:19:24

Do you remember that hotel?

0:19:240:19:25

And I sat on this loo, and the seat,

0:19:250:19:28

the seat came forward and cut my spine.

0:19:280:19:31

And I went to the manager, and I said,

0:19:310:19:34

"This is dreadful, this hotel. I sat on the loo,

0:19:340:19:36

"the seat fell forward on my spine and actually cut it."

0:19:360:19:40

And he said, "You're supposed to sit on the seat."

0:19:400:19:42

I said, "On the contrary. I've never sat on lavatory seats.

0:19:430:19:46

"I mean, unless it's my own. I wouldn't sit on anybody else's.

0:19:460:19:49

"Because of germs. You know, I'm a blood donor.

0:19:490:19:51

-"I can't catch anything."

-All right.

0:19:510:19:53

"Hence I ALWAYS...

0:19:530:19:55

"I always sit on the porcelain, you see."

0:19:550:19:58

And he said,

0:19:590:20:01

"Well, I'm surprised you're the only one that's ever complained.

0:20:010:20:04

"We've had no complaints."

0:20:040:20:05

He said, "In fact, you are occupying a suite."

0:20:050:20:07

And I said, "Your suite's left me feeling rather sour."

0:20:070:20:10

-I've got that in the book.

-Of course you have.

0:20:120:20:14

Why do you keep a diary?

0:20:140:20:16

I started because I wanted a record of rehearsal periods,

0:20:160:20:19

how much they owed me, how much I'd actually done, you know.

0:20:190:20:22

The work I'd actually done. And then Stanley Baxter said to me,

0:20:220:20:24

"Well, don't just put down what you've worked. Put what people said.

0:20:240:20:27

"What the director said to you.

0:20:270:20:28

"It'll all be grist to the mill when you come to another play.

0:20:280:20:32

"And put down any amusing bits," you see.

0:20:320:20:35

"So working with Edith Evans,

0:20:350:20:37

"put down something that she's said to you."

0:20:370:20:39

What she as grand as she seemed to be, privately?

0:20:390:20:42

Edith? No, not at all, really.

0:20:420:20:44

Cos she said to me once, I always remember,

0:20:440:20:46

she said, "They're always in your room, chatting.

0:20:460:20:49

"I can hear you halfway up the corridor."

0:20:490:20:52

And you could, of course. She always said I had a voice like a foghorn.

0:20:520:20:55

And she said, "Why don't they come to my room?"

0:20:550:20:58

And I said, "Because they view you as something of a myth, you see.

0:20:580:21:02

"You're a great figure, and they're a little awed."

0:21:020:21:05

And she said, "But I'm very ordinary.

0:21:050:21:07

"I sit at home with my white apron

0:21:070:21:09

"and a little stool by the oven, basting,

0:21:090:21:12

"my wooden spoon for basting, and I do a lovely Yorkshire pudding."

0:21:120:21:16

And I thought, "Oh, dear. Oh, dear. That's not ordinary to me."

0:21:160:21:20

Very ordinary. Now then, why didn't they have actors or actresses

0:21:200:21:23

of the stature of Edith Evans in the Carry On films?

0:21:230:21:26

Why did they have only ordinary people?

0:21:260:21:28

Mm, well, I mean, I think that's a bit much, you know.

0:21:280:21:32

There were some very fine actors. Cecil Parker,

0:21:320:21:34

Cecil Parker was in the Jack one.

0:21:340:21:35

He was the Admiral. There were some very fine people.

0:21:350:21:38

Dickie Wattis. Oh, yes, there were some very fine...

0:21:380:21:40

But there weren't any Lords, were there?

0:21:400:21:41

-No sort of knights?

-No, no.

0:21:410:21:43

There was rather a funny account of that, actually.

0:21:430:21:45

Because Charlie Hawtrey was making his way to Pinewood Studios

0:21:450:21:47

to do a Carry On, very early in the morning.

0:21:470:21:49

And he was there, coming along the Pinewood Road

0:21:490:21:51

in a rather tatty old raincoat with two carrier bags.

0:21:510:21:54

He carried all his make-up,

0:21:540:21:55

his R White's lemonade, and his 50 Woodbines.

0:21:550:21:57

LAUGHTER

0:21:570:21:58

And he was struggling along the road,

0:21:580:22:00

and Laurence Olivier's car came by.

0:22:000:22:03

The window was lowered electrically, you see.

0:22:030:22:05

And he said, "Isn't it Charlie?"

0:22:050:22:06

And he said, "Oh, Sir Lawrence, yes, it is. It's Charlie."

0:22:060:22:09

He says, "Oh, get in. I'll give you a lift."

0:22:090:22:11

He said, "Oh, thank you."

0:22:110:22:12

And he told us all, you know, he was very impressed by it.

0:22:120:22:15

"I was given a lift by Laurence Olivier."

0:22:150:22:17

And Larry came over when we were in the restaurant and said, you know,

0:22:170:22:20

"Don't they give you any money on these films?

0:22:200:22:23

"Do you have to trudge along the road in the early morning

0:22:230:22:25

"to make a Carry On?

0:22:250:22:26

"Surely they can afford to buy, you know, some transport for you?"

0:22:260:22:29

And Joanie Sims said, "No, we're paid tuppence ha'penny,

0:22:290:22:31

"they won't give us no transport.

0:22:310:22:33

"We have to struggle along the road, Larry.

0:22:330:22:35

"Oh, you wouldn't believe the adversity we go through.

0:22:350:22:37

"We're even out there in that orchard,

0:22:370:22:39

"and they're spraying these dead trees green to pretend it's summer."

0:22:390:22:42

And Barbara Windsor said, "Yes, and I'm supposed to be in this PT thing

0:22:440:22:47

"and my tits are covered in goose pimples!"

0:22:470:22:49

She said, "It's not summer at all. It's the middle of winter."

0:22:490:22:52

And Larry said, "Well, I think it's a disgrace.

0:22:520:22:55

"I think they should treat you a lot better than that."

0:22:550:22:57

And when he left the table, I said, "Well, he'd never do a Carry On.

0:22:570:23:00

"He'd never work in conditions like this."

0:23:000:23:01

And Joanie Sims said, "Oh, I wondered why they'd never cast him!"

0:23:010:23:05

Williams always had a love-hate relationship

0:23:080:23:11

with the Carry On films, resenting the fact they didn't pay well,

0:23:110:23:14

but enjoying the strange level of international fame they brought.

0:23:140:23:19

The surprise for me was that the Carry On films

0:23:190:23:23

were successful in the States,

0:23:230:23:25

because I would have thought that they are so much

0:23:250:23:27

British, seaside picture postcard, McGill kind of humour,

0:23:270:23:30

wouldn't have got on in America.

0:23:300:23:32

I think they must be, you know,

0:23:320:23:34

living proof of the fact

0:23:340:23:35

that there is a sort of staple commodity in humour.

0:23:350:23:38

You know, there are three sort of basic jokes.

0:23:380:23:39

They say, the linguistic, semantic joke,

0:23:390:23:42

the joke which is situation,

0:23:420:23:43

and the joke which is relationship, mother-in-law, whatever it is.

0:23:430:23:46

A relationship joke.

0:23:460:23:47

And they say, always, you can trace most jokes to these three.

0:23:470:23:50

I think Carry Ons must, in some fashion or another,

0:23:500:23:53

have found a basic ingredient.

0:23:530:23:55

Because I remember, you know, in Morocco,

0:23:550:23:57

"You Carry On man, I know."

0:23:570:23:59

This sort of thing on the front.

0:23:590:24:00

And I got to Eastern Crete, Sitia.

0:24:000:24:03

We were going to the monastery,

0:24:030:24:05

and I was only going to see

0:24:050:24:07

these rather marvellous murals on the wall,

0:24:070:24:09

beautiful murals they were, and this man, a priest, said,

0:24:090:24:13

"Oh, I have seen, of course, the Carry On."

0:24:130:24:16

I thought, "What are you doing watching Carry Ons?

0:24:160:24:18

"I should have thought you'd be deep in theology."

0:24:180:24:20

Absolutely. Well, I presume...

0:24:200:24:22

..having made so many of the Carry On films,

0:24:230:24:25

you're now all immensely rich?

0:24:250:24:27

This extraordinary repertory team of Barbara Windsor,

0:24:270:24:29

Bernard Bresslaw, the late Sid James,

0:24:290:24:31

Charles Hawtrey, yourself.

0:24:310:24:32

-You're all millionaires?

-Oh, no.

0:24:320:24:35

They got us all for tuppence ha'penny.

0:24:350:24:36

You've got to remember,

0:24:360:24:38

nobody was any kind of name when they were all starting.

0:24:380:24:41

I mean, you know, in celebrity status, yes, of course.

0:24:410:24:43

But they weren't names in terms of commanding vast salaries,

0:24:430:24:47

in the sense of Clint Eastwood and all these great names in cinema.

0:24:470:24:50

Great... What do you call it?

0:24:500:24:52

..international stars, those sort of names.

0:24:520:24:53

They can command vast salaries, but not us.

0:24:530:24:56

I remember the first one I did,

0:24:560:24:58

I got £800 quid out of the whole thing.

0:24:580:25:00

And I was on it for quite a few weeks, you know.

0:25:000:25:02

And there's a lot of periods

0:25:020:25:03

where you're sitting, availability waiting, you know.

0:25:030:25:05

They say, "We're not going to shoot on you this week,

0:25:050:25:07

"but you must be ready for appearing another week."

0:25:070:25:09

It's about three months of your time.

0:25:090:25:11

And it doesn't come out as being that...

0:25:110:25:15

Well, they're enormously enjoyable.

0:25:150:25:17

Kenneth Williams, thank you very much.

0:25:170:25:19

"Stop messing about" was one of Kenneth's most famous phrases.

0:25:210:25:25

But, of course, messing about was something he couldn't stop.

0:25:250:25:28

Especially when the cameras were on him.

0:25:280:25:30

Our final example of this is a musical number.

0:25:300:25:34

Here's Kenneth singing the nonsense song Crepe Suzette

0:25:340:25:37

working his audience like a master,

0:25:370:25:39

and once again working that incredible voice to full effect.

0:25:390:25:44

# Fiancee

0:25:470:25:48

# Ensemble

0:25:480:25:50

# Lorgnette

0:25:500:25:53

# Lingerie

0:25:530:25:55

# Eau de toilette

0:25:550:26:00

# A Gauloise cigarette

0:26:000:26:07

# Entourage

0:26:070:26:08

# Ma crepe suzette

0:26:080:26:12

# Citron

0:26:120:26:14

# Mirage

0:26:140:26:15

# Caravelle

0:26:150:26:18

# Hors d'oeuvre

0:26:180:26:19

# Brut

0:26:190:26:20

# Et Chanel

0:26:200:26:23

# Chaise longue

0:26:230:26:25

# Sacha Distel

0:26:250:26:29

# Fuselage

0:26:290:26:32

# Ma crepe suzette

0:26:320:26:35

# Pince-nez

0:26:350:26:37

# Bidet

0:26:370:26:40

# Commissionaire

0:26:400:26:44

# Mon repos

0:26:440:26:46

# Brigitte Bardot

0:26:460:26:49

# Jeux Sans Frontieres. #

0:26:490:26:54

It's a knockout, isn't it?

0:26:540:26:55

The French, I mean, not the song.

0:26:570:26:59

# Faux pas

0:27:000:27:02

# Grand Prix

0:27:020:27:03

# Espionage

0:27:030:27:06

# Brie et Camembert

0:27:060:27:09

# Fromage

0:27:090:27:12

# Mayonnaise

0:27:120:27:13

# All night garage

0:27:130:27:18

# RSVP

0:27:180:27:21

# Ma crepe suzette. #

0:27:210:27:28

APPLAUSE

0:27:280:27:30

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