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C&G 162 May 2009
May 2009 - Print Email PDF 
Posted by bretta 12/05/2009

Index

» May 2009

       **********************************************
       *   THE GOODIES FAN CLUB CLARION AND GLOBE   *
       **********************************************
 
 
    * THE OFFICIAL NEWSLETTER OF 'THE GOODIES RULE - OK!' *
             (http://www.goodiesruleok.com )
 
 
Issue No. 162                   12th May 2009
 
 
THE LADS AND LASSES OF THE C&G
******************************
 
EDITOR
- Brett Allender <clarion@goodiesruleok.com>
 
ACE REPORTER:
- Lisa Manekofsky
 
C&G CONTRIBUTORS:
- John Williams, Graeme Garden, Wackywales, Andrew Pixley, David Balston, Jenny_Gibbon
 
CONTENTS
********
 
1. QUIZ & QUOTE - Goodies brainteasers for you and you and you
2. BOFFO IDEAS - The latest club news and happenings
3. SPOTTED!!! - The latest Goodies sightings.
4. 2001 AND A BIT - Tim, Graeme and Bill sightings post-Goodies.
5. A COLLECTION OF GOODIES THEMES #11 – Tim In Drag
6. GOODIES CROSSWORD PUZZLE SOLUTION from C&G 161
7. QUIZ & QUOTE ANSWERS
 
 
1. QUIZ & QUOTE
***************
(by "Magnus Magnesium")
 
QUOTE: "Get off! You female chauvinist sow! I'm not your little bit of fluff, you know!"
 
(a) Which Goody says this quote?
(b) Who is he speaking to?
(c) Which episode is this quote from?
 
QUIZ: This month's questions are from the episode "Alternative Roots"
(d) Which village do Graeme's ancestors hail from?
(e) What is Graeme's ancestor totally immersed in as part of his initiation ceremony?
(f) Which Goody descended from the "Oo Ar" tribe?
(g) What is the name of Tim's ancestor?
(h) Which song do the three Goodies ancestors sing together on the tour bus?
 
The answers are listed at the end of this newsletter.
 
 
2. BOFFO IDEAS
**************
 
You can make it happen here. Liven up the club with a boffo idea for bob-a-job week. E-mail <enquiries@goodiesruleok.com> with your comments, ideas or suggestions - meanwhile these are the boffo ideas which our club has been working on this month:
 
FAN PAINTING FOR CHARITY
(Lisa Manekofsky – 2nd May)
 
Fan club member Jenny_Gibbon has produced a Goody painting that will be auctioned on eBay to benefit Comic Relief. The auction beings on Monday, 4th May at 20.00. The eBay listing, once active, will be at http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=300311932925
You can also view the painting on Jenny_Gibbon's website at http://www.freewebs.com/artworkbyjenny/comicrelief.htm  
 
 
WEBSITE POLLS
 
Last month's poll examined our choices for the creation of the best Goodies episodes and in the end it was a landslide victory for the Goodies creating their own adventures, with enough voters having no preference to thankfully relegate the Rolf option to a distant third place.
 
Do you prefer the episodes in which the Goodies are hired for a job by a guest star or the episodes in which the trio create their own loony adventures?
- Hired by a guest star                      9 votes
- The Goodies create their own adventures   56 votes
- No preference                             20 votes
- Either, as long as it involves Rolf H.    12 votes
Total                                       97 votes
 
After yet another general election, it's time for a holiday and this month's poll is loaded with interesting Goodies-themed "get away from it all" ideas. From outer space to spacehoppers and eisteddfods to islands, Goodies Hols has something to suit your kink, er speciality. You may well think this must be the work of a "raving nutter" and indeed you'll find us enjoying the delights of the Eurovision Raving Loony Contest (where else?!) if you choose to visit. Just make sure you cast a postal vote before you leave home though as it's awfully difficult to fill in a ballot paper while wearing a straightjacket! We should know it makes sense!
 
Which Goodies-themed holiday adventure would you most enjoy?
- Loch Ness Monster spotting
- visiting the Lost Island of Munga
- going to the moon to visit Big Bunny
- attending the Llan dlubber eisteddfod
- attending Ecky Thump training camp
- join a dance contest at Disco Bilius
- a London to Brighton spacehopper bounce
- join the Eurovision Raving Loony Contest
- other
- help to breed Rolf Harrises
 
 
3. SPOTTED!!!
*************
 
More exciting than getting your wig-spotters badge! If you've seen the Goodies recently, e-mail <clarion@goodiesruleok.com> with the details. Here's where we've Spotted!!! the Goodies this month:
 
GOODIES REPEATS IN NZ
(Lisa Manekofsky – 2nd May)
 
Several articles reported that New Zealand's Comedy Central has licensed repeats of five series of "The Goodies". The following excerpt with more specifics comes from http://www.ebroadcast.com.au/enews/television/BBC-Worldwide-a-roaring-success-at-Cannes-300409.html:
 
BBC Worldwide a roaring success at Cannes
 
BBC Worldwide Australia has concluded a number of significant deals with Australian and New Zealand networks following this year's MIPTV market. Programs include the documentary film Christian the Lion, and Moonshot, a dramatisation of the 1969 moon landing, along with a host of factual, lifestyle and comedy titles.
In further deals, BBC Worldwide Australia has licensed over 40 hours of comedy classics to New Zealand's Comedy Central. The deal includes evergreen titles such as The Goodies (series 1, 3-4, 6, 8 & specials), The Young Ones (series 1-2), Harry Enfield Presents., Harry Enfield & Chums (series 1-2 & specials) and new comedy series Katy Brand's Big Ass Show (series 1-2).
 
 
4. 2001 AND A BIT
*****************
 
If you've sighted Tim, Bill or Graeme in a post-Goodies role, e-mail <clarion@goodiesruleok.com> so that we can tell everyone where to spot a Goodie nowadays. Those of you seeking radio and tv alerts between issues of the C&G should consider signing up for the Goodies-l mailing list (more details available on the club website), as our crack (cracked?!) team of reporters attempt to post alerts as the information becomes available.
 
** (All items in this section contributed by Lisa Manekofsky, except where otherwise credited) **
 
 
BILL, GRAEME & TIM SPOTTINGS
 
* Thanks to Graeme Garden for helping us confirm that Bill Oddie does not use Twitter. The people using his name on that service are impersonators.
(2nd May)
 
 
* Today's episode of "The Unbelievable Truth" (with panelists Jeremy Hardy, Fred MacAulay, Jack Dee and Will Self) will be available from Listen Again at http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b00jm32n  . 
If that link isn't working (as is the case at the moment) the show can be heard from the iplayer website at http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00jm32n/The_Unbelievable_Truth_Series_3_Episode_4/
(13th Apr)
 
* Graeme's appearance in "What the Dickens?" is being repeated on Sky Arts 1 on Weds, 22nd April at 00:15 and 13:15
(17th Apr)
 
 
* Thanks to wackywales for this news: On Radio7 on 25th April Simon Brett is the guest on 'I Did It My Way' and one of his selections is Hoax! which is hosted by Tim.
(17th Apr)
 
 
* On Saturday, 25 April on BBC4 at 22:30 is Cilla with Tim & Graeme. Here's a listing - an "Edition of Cilla Black's 1960s TV series. Cilla sings Step Inside Love and Pass Me By, and performs duets with Georgie Fame on For Once in My Life and Dusty Springfield on If You're Ever (Friendship). Dusty and Georgie also take the mic for solo numbers. Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graham Chapman and Graeme Garden do a Top of the Form take-off and a ritual Japanese wrestling act, while comedian Tom Ward does a drunk act."
Thanks to Andrew Pixley for posting the following info in the www.goodiesruleok.com forums:
"In addition to "Cilla" on BBC4's "Queens of British Pop" supporting bill, the edition of "Lulu's Back in Town" at 11.45pm that night may also be of interest due to the inclusion of Bill's material (including one of his best songs)."
(17th Apr)
 
 
* Here are the iplayer links for the Cilla & Lulu shows - please note these will only work within the UK. I have also provided the Listen Again link for the latest episode of "The Unbelievable Truth", which should work worldwide.
Cilla:
Queen's of British Pop:
The Unbelievable Truth series 3 episode 6:
(28th Apr)
 
 
* It looks like Lulu's programme is not available on the i-player and no repeats are scheduled. :-( 
Ironically Cilla's show which we knew about in advance is available, it is quite rare for archive shows to make it to the i-player.
(30th Apr)
 
 
* My name is John Williams & I am a researcher with ABC TV (Australia).
Just to let you know, I managed to trace several formerly missing clips from 'At Last The 1948 Show', both featuring Tim Brooke-Taylor!
In 2006, I was researching for a number of ABC TV progs for the 50th anniversary of ABC TV.
Whilst searching for some 1977 related ABC promotional material, I stumbled upon a number of b&w clips from 1960s shows and there in front of me was a sketch from 'At Last The 1948 Show' that I had never seen before (I owned a copy of the commercially released DVD of what remained of '1948 Show'). The clips were probably held for use by on-air promotions for promos made for the shows extant on this film reel.
I enquired with Steve Bryant at the BFI who confirmed that this clip from 'At Last The 1948 Show' was missing...
This confirmed that 'Discussion About Pornography' was indeed a missing clip from the show. Being a huge 'Goodies' & 'Monty Python' fan, I was very excited about the discovery.
This segment featured TBT (in drag) & Graham Chapman (as a character that could be considered a prototype to the military officer characters he played in 'Flying Circus') and John Cleese as a host for a fictional program where the subject of "pornography" is discussed. This was from 'At Last The 1948 Show', series 2, episode 4 tx 17/10/1967
In 2007 I was in contact with a staff member who had a number of goof tapes to donate to the archives ('goof tapes' were made by ABC as Xmas tapes) and one tape was labelled '1948 Show'. I asked if I could check the tape, lo & behold, it was another missing 'At last The 1948 Show' clip featuring Tim Brooke-Taylor & John Cleese re: "sex appeal", John Cleese's character appears to have it, & TBT's doesn't. This segment is from 'At last The 1948 Show' episode 6 (series 2) tx 31/10/1967
Anyway, I have donated the missing clips to the BFI & the ABC retains the original clips in the archives. The BFI screened them in London for the BFI's 'Missing Believed Wiped' event in 2007.
'At Last The 1948 Show' was broadcast on the ABC in 1968.
I hope this is of interest to you,
Cheers,
John Williams
ABC TV
(10th May)
 
 
I'M SORRY I HAVEN'T A CLUE (ISIHAC) and
I'M SORRY I'LL READ THAT AGAIN (ISIRTA)
 
* Thanks to wackywales for posting the following in the www.goodiesruleok.com forums:
There's a nice article about Barry Cryer in the Independent and it has some Clue news in it...
"Stephen Fry is to host the first episode, with Jack Dee and Rob Brydon taking turns as well. Dee has also just signed up for the Clue tour in the autumn, Cryer reveals."
Hooray - a new tour, here's hoping they visit mid-Wales!
The full article is available at:
(20th Apr)
 
 
* The current release date for "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue - Volume 11", according to http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1405688378 , is July 2nd. This will be released as a 2-CD Audiobook and will also be available for digital download.
Here's the description from Amazon: "This eleventh collection of the antidote to panel games finds the late Humphrey Lyttelton giving regular panelists Tim Brooke-Taylor, Barry Cryer and Graeme Garden silly things to do to - along with special guests Stephen Fry, Jack Dee, Rob Brydon & Jeremy Hardy. Highlights include "One Song to the Tune of Another", "84 Chicken Cross Road", "Sound Charades", Notes & Queries, Uxbridge English Dictionary, Tennis Chat-up Lines, Swanee Kazoo and, of course, the brilliantly baffling, fiendishly funny Mornington Crescent. So get ready to laugh out loud as Humph and the gang indulge in more wonderful wordplay, accompanied by Colin Sell on the piano and the lovely Samantha, who likes to sit on Humph's left hand"
(11th May)
 
 
* Scheduled for an October 8th release is "The Clue Bible: The Fully Authorised History of "I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue", from Footlights to Mornington Crescent" by Jem Roberts. The book cover currently being shown on Amazon (http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1848091303/ ) says it has a "Forward by Graeme Garden, Afterward by Tim Brook-Taylor, and Something by Barry Cryer"
Here's the product description from Amazon: "'It's a great missing piece of the jigsaw - people go on endlessly about Python and Peter Cook, which is all well and good but there's basically this great corpus of work stretching for decades - and consistently good. I mean very very few traditions...I can't think of one! I mean, Christ, it's forty-five years! A major piece of work, and universally loved' So says John Lloyd, brains behind "Blackadder", "QI", "Spitting Image", and so much besides - all shows with a massive debt to "I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again" and "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue". Together they form a body of work stretching across five decades, from Cambridge in 1960 to today's world-beating Antidote to Panel Games, a laughter-bringer which has inspired unparalleled adoration in millions over fifty series. "The 'I'm Sorry' Bible" tells the whole story, from Footlights to Broadway to the ferret-filled madness of Radio Prune - comedy's answer to the rock & roll revolution of the sixties. Offering an exhaustive guide to the comedy world that brought us Mornington Crescent, besides episode guides, glossaries and rare facsimiles, the Bible will take the story right up to the present day, celebrating the lives of Willie Rushton, Sir David Hatch and of course, the irreplaceable Humphrey Lyttelton. With exclusive input from the Teams, plus Bill Oddie, Stephen Fry, Bill Bailey, Neil Innes and many more, this is the long overdue authoritative, entertaining and above all, very silly lasting celebration of an unsung comic legacy that both shows so richly deserve."
(11th May)
 
 
NEW CLUE RECORDING REPORT
(by Lisa Manekofsky)
 
As fans of Tim & Graeme's BBC Radio 4 show "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue" know, the show has been on hiatus for a year due to chair Humphrey Lyttelton's death last spring. On April 26th the show resumed production, with the first recording of the show's 51st series in London. 
 
I was very fortunate to have been able to attend the show so that I could supply the following report to the fan club. Please note that this contains some spoilers.
 
The recording went very well. The guest host for the evening, Stephen Fry, did an excellent job. The audience were very warm and enthusiastic, with much laughter and applause throughout.
 
Producer Jon Naismith came out at the beginning of the evening to explain about the difficult decision to continue without the dearly missed Humphrey Lyttelton, who'd passed away almost exactly a year before. As has been mentioned previously, Jon explained they decided the show would return thanks to the strong show of support from the fans. He said they were dedicating this evening's performance to Humph (which drew a large round of applause from the audience).
 
As he usually does, Jon then told a few jokes to warm up the crowd. For those of you who have attended previous recordings or the ISIHAC tour, I'll mention that Jon had a new (well, new to me at least) joke which he explained was a particular favorite of Humph's. This was followed by a joke Jon used during the ISIHAC tour warm-up (it wouldn't be a Naismith warm-up without an old joke! ;) Next Jon began introducing the teams, starting with Graeme & Barry. When they came out & took their seats Barry told another of Humph's favorite jokes.
 
When the cast were introduced Stephen appeared in black tie (including a sparkling waistcoat). While I initially thought he'd really dressed up for his first time chairing ISIHAC it turns out he'd been nominated for several BAFTA Television awards - the award ceremony was being held that same evening. While Stephen wasn't able to attend the awards he was going to dash off to a BAFTA dinner immediately after the ISIHAC recording. Sadly he didn't win any BAFTA's that night, but hopefully that made him happy he'd done the recording instead (where he certainly had a good time).
 
The guest panelist for the evening was Victoria Wood. Jon mentioned he'd been trying to get her to appear on Clue for some time and had finally booked her to appear in the series which was cancelled last spring. 
 
After the cast had been announced Jon explained that he had invited the man who had been reading the Clue credits for many years to appear in person this evening, rather than pre-recording his part. I'm afraid I only caught his first name, which is Andy. As the ISIHAC theme tune began to play Jon cued Andy to read his part - it was fun to finally see the face behind the voice.
 
The first show recorded featured the scoring talents of Samantha; as she was unavailable for the second show we were treated to an appearance by her stand-in, Sven.
 
Guest chair Stephen Fry is known to be an enthusiastic user of Twitter. Therefore there were several jokes about the service during the show. At one point Barry abruptly asked, "Stephen, are you Twittering?"; Stephen quickly held up his empty hands to show he was innocent of the accusation. I'd wondered if Stephen might send a tweet during the show, but he was very professional and focused on the recording - indeed, he seemed to be having a marvelous time, laughing (off microphone) to the panelists' jokes. In addition to the Twitter references Stephen was also teased about Mac computers; he jokingly rose to their defense.
 
Among the rounds for the evening was Sound Charades. They actually did sets of this - I suspect only one set will be used in the broadcast (for reasons of time). During one set we were treated to a lesson in "cheaters never prosper". Victoria saw part of the other team's title on the "laser display board" (to which she did admit). As Graeme & Barry were performing their charade Victoria jotted down what she'd seen & passed the note to Tim. Ultimately this didn't help them as their guesses, based upon Victoria having seen the first three letters of the title, actually made them go astray; they would have done better if they'd paid more attention to Graeme & Barry's performance. Admittedly it was funnier this way, (to everyone's amusement).
 
I won't go into details about the other rounds other than to say yes, they did include Mornington Crescent (during which Stephen did a good job in overseeing his first professional round of the great game).
 
As is typical, two episodes of ISIHAC were recorded this evening. After the conclusion of the first one the producer comes out to do any necessary retakes of the chair's lines and typically there is a short interval before the recording of the second episode. Before the break, Stephen asked if the audience would help him record an "audience boo" for a service called AudioBoo (and audio blogging application which provides links on Twitter to recorded clips). The audience happily obliged (the other panelists looked a bit puzzled about what AudioBoo is; eventually someone from the audience asked for a explanation, which Stephen happily supplied). The audienceboo recording can be heard at http://audioboo.fm/boos/10977-audienceboo .
 
Besides the two episodes they also recorded 2 trails (promos) that evening; presumably they'll appear on Radio 4 close to the start of the new series (June 15th).
 
Overall the format of the show was virtually unchanged from past series. Perhaps the only "major" difference was that Stephen blew a whistle to end rounds rather than honking a horn (perhaps they retired Humph's antique horn?) All the elements Clue fans know and love were there. Both shows recorded that evening were brimming with popular rounds. 
 
While I'm certainly biased, I'd say they were both very strong shows – the audience were certainly having a good time. I doubt the fans will be disappointed. Tune in to BBC Radio 4 (www.bbc.co.uk/radio4) on Mondays starting June 15th to hear for yourself!
 
 
5. A COLLECTION OF GOODIES THEMES #11
*************************************
(by Brett Allender)
 
TIM IN DRAG
 
In the 2005 BBC special "Return Of The Goodies", many of the sequences of Goodies footage are introduced by current-day comedians who count The Goodies as one of the strongest comedy influences of their childhood. For one such sequence Australian comedian Adam Hills rather cheekily comments "What is it with Tim in drag?! Really!" Accompanied by footage of Tim Brooke-Taylor rather glamourously dolled up as Lady Macbeth in "The Movies" and then as Mrs Cricklewood in "Chubby Chumps", Hills continues: "Did anyone else ever look at Tim when he was dressed in drag and kinda think 'Ooooh!'?", before pausing and uttering "Just me.", answering his own question in a mock sheepish tone. Fear not Adam, you've got plenty of company among fellow Goodies fans as Tim's many gender bender roles during the show are very convincing and a really amusing highlight of the show. Tim's own point of view, from a past Goodies Clarion & Globe interview, is " I have to say I liked playing female parts but hated the actual clothes. My sympathies go out to women who have to wear formal clothes."
 
Most Goodies fans would consider Tim's Nanny character in "Cecily" to be his first occasion to pop on a frock in the show, but in fact his initial drag role comes in the seldom-screened "Playgirl Club" episode earlier in Series One. The Goodies are asked by the Minister for Trade and Domestic Affairs (Mollie Sugden of "Are You Being Served" fame) to retrieve some rather compromising photos of her from the Playgirl Club, but as it is an exclusive sexy club for women only, they need to find a way of infiltrating it. Bill has the bright idea of sending Tim in there dressed as a woman seeing as he can already "do the voice", to which a horrified Tim initially protests, but then relents and dresses in a crinoline and a large hat with a wig of long curly hair to complete the transformation.
 
"The voice" is actually the same one which Tim uses for Cecily's Nanny and many of his other female roles and it originates from his Lady Constance de Coverlet character in the earlier radio comedy series "I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again". In a further quote from his C&G interviews, Tim explains how this voice came about: "As a student in our Footlights revue we did a send up of Oscar Wilde. I played the Lady Bracknell part and instead of 'a handbag', I had 'A Gooseberry bush'. In the classic film of 'The Importance Of Being Earnest' the Lady Bracknell part was played by Dame Edith Evans and it was her voice that I copied. At the first night in London Dame Edith was invited to attend – it appears that she was the only person in the theatre who didn’t know who I was impersonating. I got the nicest review possible from the English critic Harold Hobson who said that my impression of Edith Evans was 'blasphemous'."
 
Tim's first female character is quite interesting because he is still very much a red-blooded male who is rather reluctant to dress up as a woman and has to keep slapping his own wrist to stop himself from touching and ogling at the bevy of scantily-clad ladies around him, culminating in his need to take a cold shower after getting an eyeful of the naked women in the shower room alongside him. After a while,Graeme and Bill start to worry about his disappearance at the Playgirl Club. G: He's been gone a long time, hasn't he?!" B: "Three weeks." G: "What do you think he's doing?" B: "C'mon, what would you be doing if you were in a place like that, hey?!" G (shocked): "No he can't do *that*! Not when he's dragged up like Queen Victoria!" In fact Tim has got himself a role as Mitzi, the assistant to Miss Heifer who is the Playgirl Club Wolf Mother, which enables him to reclaim the Minister's photos, but Miss Heifer's suspicions about him eventually leads him to firmly declare "Alright, I admit it. I'm a man!", necessitating the Goodies to make a hasty exit from the Playgirl Club after a bit more ogling on the way out through the shower room.
 
In "Cecily", the Goodies are asked to fulfil a job for mother's help and caretaking, with a female Nanny being essential, therefore launching Tim into his better-known drag role from the first series. Again he is quite reluctant and rather vehemently opposes the idea either side of a rather flirty Lady Constance-like phone call ("I look forward to the pleasure … but I doubt I'll get it!") to Cecily's elderly uncle, but because he getting paid for it and only has to be a Nanny for one day, he eventually agrees to the idea. Understandably Tim's Nanny character is considerably more frumpily dressed than Mitzi at the Playgirl Club but he still gets his share of action and danger trying to protect Cecily (and himself) from the evil forces that are trying to scare her to death and have done away with a dozen other nannies already. Perhaps the most memorable piece of imagery from this episode is Nanny running with a kite only to take a spectacular headlong plunge into the river ("Urk, Nanny swallowed a fish!") which frequently features in the opening credits of most future Goodies episodes.
 
"Come Dancing" features all three Goodies dragged up as ballerinas to compete as Peaches Stiletto's "girls" against Delia Capone's "boys" in a dance-off after the initial dancing contest between the two troupes of male dancers and their partners ends in a draw thanks to Delia's bribing of the judges and the Goodies' radio controlled dancing suits ensuring that everyone receives maximum points. However the next episode featuring Tim dolling up solo is "Free To Live", where he is forced by Barbara, the Women's Lib inspector, to work at her male chauvinist father Charlie's country estate as Timbellina the housemaid as his punishment for being a sexist pig along with Graeme, who gets a much easier deal as Charlie's butler. 
 
Tim is worked into the ground as a maid and eventually sees things from a woman's point of view, resigning in order to devote his time to "the cause". His refusal to change out of his maid's uniform back at the Goodies office has Graeme worried: "You're a man, not a woman. Go and have a look! You … you haven't done anything silly, have you?!", and even Graeme's regaling of the past exploits of "Tomcat Tim" with "Big Fat Nellie from Cock Fosters" and others isn't enough to snap Tim out of his feminine fancy. T: "I might even marry if Mr Right comes along." G (horrified): "Mr Wright, the greengrocer! You can't marry him!" T (indignantly): "I can marry anyone I choose!"
 
Ultimately though, it's Tim who seems likely to miss out on married life after the double wedding ceremony commences for the two happy couples – Bill and Barbara, and Graeme and his computer! However Tim takes on a second female role for the episode, this time as a much more hiply-dressed Women's Lib protester who makes a rousing soapbox speech about the drudgery of married life for women who end up "slaving over a hot nappy, washing meals and cooking babies!" This headstrong speech successfully deters Bill and Graeme from tying the knot, but greatly impresses Charlie, who grabs Tim in a tight embrace and thunderously declares "I love you, you gorgeous red-blooded she-beast! We've got the church, we've got the vicar and now, By God, we're going to have a wedding!", causing Tim and the other Goodies to make a speedy getaway on the trandem.
 
At the end of Series 2, the Goodies did a series of segments for inclusion in the various episodes of "Engelbert And The Young Generation". As Tim explains in another of his C&G interviews: "They were five minute pieces on film. Some were parodies. e.g. WE were Pan's Grannies'. The regular, all girl, 'coo er' dancers on Top of the Pops were called Pan's People and we did a Granny version. We did a collection of these items which I cobbled together as a one-off called A Collection Of Goodies". This special has been rarely screened, but Pan's Grannies make a much more well-known reappearance in "The Goodies Almost Live", providing the ultra-funky moves for a series of way-out dances like the Slimy Toad, Loony Moth and Belligerent Bee in their dowdy old coats and dresses, flowing shawls and gigantic applecatcher knickers!
 
Tim actually plays a similar-looking character to a Pan's Granny in "The New Office", where he dresses as an old woman to help to deliver the Goodie's sob story of being a poor downtrodden family who have nowhere to live when they go to visit the heartless real estate agency of Gazump Grasper Meanie & Snatch. He also plays old "pepperpot"-type characters in several of the mock ads in the first four series including Goodlop Tyres and the Dodo Sensation, with the most notable ones being the Razz 2 for 1 Swap (G:"You'd turn down the Crown Jewels for your packet of Razz washing powder?!" … "She just won't swap, and that's what we normally find. Most Razz users are too stupid to know a good thing when they see it!") and as Rolf Harris's Granny (T: "As a top entertainer, Rolf works really hard, singing those boring songs and telling those stupid jokes and being generally irritating!") in the ad for Bristo Gravy Mix where she gets to poison Rolf ("It's just what you deserve!"). In another ad he also plays a much younger housewife who opens up her refrigerator only to be swamped by a torrent of Soft Golden Dairy Margarine which supposedly "spreads straight from the fridge".
.
In "That Old Black Magic" Tim and Bill venture to a rather creepy Clapham Common in a bid to prevent a possessed Graeme from practicing his corny "black magic" and selling his soul to the Sunday papers. After reading a gloomy sign titled "Abandon All Hope Ye Who Enter Here", Tim and Bill spot a smaller "Virgins Required" sign and after a quick detour, they re-emerge in long blonde wigs and white robes. Tim is worried about the state of his hair, causing Bill to snap "For heaven's sake, at this very moment Graeme's probably selling his soul to the devil, we're the only two people that can help him and all you're worried about is your blasted hair!" T: "I'm sorry." B: "I should think so too. (changes his tune) Have you got a comb?!" After considering them as "A bit ropey, but you'll have to do.", Graeme plans to offer Tim and Bill as a small sacrifice to appease the Devil upon summoning him (G: "Prepare to tremble!" T & B (petrified): "We are trembling!". However Witch Hazel arrives to not only spoil Graeme's satanic worship session but also to defeat him and unintentionally possess him with the soul of a gibbon, setting off a lengthy chase scene with Tim and Bill still dressed as virgins pursuing gibbon Graeme all over the countryside. 
 
"The Movies" episode at the start of Series 5 firstly has Tim dressing as a suitably medieval-looking Lady Macbeth after Bill has already snaffled the role of Macbeth for himself, however Tim's first chance to really glam up as a female in The Goodies comes at the special stars-only preview of "Macbeth Meets Truffaut The Wonder Dog". Graeme is setting up the projector for the screening and is somewhat surprised when a Mae West-lookalike sashays into the room in a shimmering black dress, enormous feather-adorned hat and bright red lipstick, then totally stunned when he realises who 'she' is, gasping: "Tim?!!" T: "This is my new screen image. This is how my public sees me." G (shocked): "If they see you like that, they'll have you arrested! You like it, don't you, that's what it is. You're peculiar, you like it!" T (dramatically): "It's not what I like, it's what *they* like. To them out there, I'm no longer Tim Brooke-Taylor, I *am* Lady Macbeth!" G (in an exaggerated manner): "You *are* peculiar!", only to then reveal his own equally peculiar new sequinned suit as the bright lights of potential movie stardom have gone to his head as well!
 
In "Chubby Chumps" Tim starts off as a house hubby who gets rather obese from lazing around the office listening to his trusty transistor radio while the others are away and gorging himself on lard-laden recipes such as Jim's suet dumplings. Tim is not only conned into losing his excess weight courtesy of Terry's "Fight Against Flab" campaign, but ends up with a whole new makeover altogether. Graeme and Bill have been looking at a framed photo of Tim on the wall quite some time after he has left them (B: "You know, I reckon I'll miss him." G: "Not if you aim carefully!" with B then hurling a cricket ball at the photo, smashing the glass panel for a 'bullseye'!) and a little while later Tim re-enters the office all tarted up in a pink dress, teased-up hair and enhanced bustline. The others initially don't even notice any change before they finally drop a stack of dishes in shock. T: "Haven't you noticed anything else? … I'm beautiful!" B (impressed): Y'know he is a bit of a cracker, isn't he?!" 
 
When Graeme takes over BBC Radio and impersonates Terry to compromise the Housewife Of The Year Contest by ordering the lovely housewives to go out and get tubby and frumpy by stuffing themselves with food, it's up to Bill to prevent Timbellina (later Mrs Cricklewood) from joining the feeding frenzy. B (desperately trying to hold T back and stop him from leaving the office): "No he doesn't mean you … Look, you're slim and you're pretty, right? You don't want to get fat, you don't want to get flabby, you don't want to spoil yourself. Timbellina, don't ruin your lovely, beautiful … (stares at T in wonder) … Oh God, you're lovely!" T (flattered): "Yes I am a bit, aren't I?!" Bill's success in keeping Mrs Cricklewood slim and beautiful ultimately helps 'her' to win the contest as voted on by an expert panel of milkmen, but then leads to weighty problems dealing with the other fatties who are rather jealous and angry as a result of Tim's victory.
 
After the Goodies have rid the land of the plague of Rolf Harrisses in "Scatty Safari", the grateful anonymous Queen fulfils her earlier promise that whomsoever can achieve this mighty service for their country shall receive the hand of her eldest son in marriage and 1000 OBEs. We are then treated to the sight of a radiant Tim dressed in bridal gear appearing to lovingly cuddle up to Prince Charles, who was apparently keen to actually play this role himself until he was talked out of it by Palace staff, with Bill and Graeme decorated from top to toe in their 1000 gleaming OBE medallions weeping tears of joy in the background.
 
In "Daylight Robbery On The Orient Express", Tim's role is to rapidly change into sexy costumes as a beautiful maiden representing the particular country that the Orient Express is supposedly travelling through at the time. Among Tim's various drag performances on the train, there's a quick flash of the frillies in France, a "sunkissed Latin maiden" in Italy, a brief appearance as Rachel Roberts in traditional Welsh costume madly bellowing "Yaach-y-daa boyos!", a wailing belly dancer while in Egypt, in a fancy fur coat and hat while travelling through Lapland and finally the full geisha treatment in Japan which ultimately finishes in tears when an increasingly bored and obnoxious Graeme shouts "Ole!" and forcefully shoves two knitting needles into Tim's tea-cosy style Japanese wig. Tim's grumble of "Why don't you do it (drag up)?" is met with Graeme's blunt response of "I haven't got the legs for it, that's why!" and shortly afterwards Tim gets all upset when Graeme hits him and Tim starts pining for Bill (who has been left behind along the track) because "he wouldn't hit a frail little lady"!
 
After many years of his Goodies character adoring the Queen, Tim finally gets the chance to play her in "Royal Command" after 'The Amazing Tumbling Royals' equestrian thrills on ice results in the members of the Royal Family breaking every bone in their bodies and being laid up in hospital swathed in plaster and bandages. The Royals need stand-ins to perform their duties seeing as they will be out of action for a while, so with Graeme undecided whether to be 'him' (in Prince Philip's jacket) or 'her' (also in Princess Anne's dress and doing appropriately silly walks for both characters) before finally settling on being 'her', and Bill initially dressing as a corgi in his 'Cuddly Scamp' suit before he has to be 'young him' (resplendent in a crown with gigantic ears flapping on it!), the duty of becoming Queen falls to Tim, with a wooden dummy eventually sufficing as Prince Philip. Tim makes a rather elegant and bossy Queen in a powder blue dress and matching sensible hat (even though he just couldn't get the "My husband and I" voice right!), and though the real Queen is supposedly happy for there to be a rerun of the coronation ceremony (as she missed watching it the first time!) the realisation that they will no longer be in power after the coronation is enough to drag the injured Royal Family members from their sickbeds to defend their heritage. T: "Are they (the Royal Family) really cross, Bill?" B: "Well put it this way. One is not amused. ... Two are bloody furious, and the other just wants Harry Secombe's autograph!"
 
The "Politics" episode features two memorable drag roles from Tim; the first being a scarily accurate take-off of then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Tim enters ad-man Graeme's office dressed as Maggie, and Graeme is fooled into thinking that the real Maggie has returned from her early tax-dodging retirement to the Bahamas. G: "You're back, thank heavens! Don't tell me, you want to get back in, right? Yes well this time, why stop at Prime Minister?! (roughly ushers T into a seat) How about Empress of Europe, of America, of the world?! Here we are, try this on! (sticks a Hitler-style moustache onto a stunned silent Tim) There. No, doesn't suit you, mind you, what did, hey? My God, how did I ever sell you?! Still, I can do it again, I'm so pleased to see you back. I thought I was going to have to go back to flogging washing powders (scoffs), mind you, there's not much difference, hey! (chuckles) I'm sorry, I'm sorry, no offence, no offence. Always remember, rule number one - never offend the client. Rule number two - never forget they're idiots. And rule number three - never let them know that you know. Know what I mean? No, of course you don't, you're an idiot!"
 
After Tim (as Maggie) and Bill (in one of his rare drag roles as Vanessa Redgrave) have given their stupendously boring campaign speeches, Bill quits politics in disgust at the "cynical manipulation of marketing" involved, only to return to Graeme's office half an hour later as the lefty revolutionary leader Che. His full name can be any one of a number of punny options such as "Che Kitallabout" or "Che SeMeCharlie" (or even Graeme's comment of "Che No More!" for that matter) and Bill is determined to do "anything to stop that posh Brooke-Taylor from queening his way to the top." As the background music from Evita steadily rises to a crescendo, Bill demands of Graeme: "Tell me something mate, what image could he possibly come up with that would be better than mine, hey, hey?" only to be upstaged by the entry of the glamourous Timita in a flowing white ballgown and fancy jewellery. B: "Ooh I don't believe it, it isn't … it is! … Miss Piggy!" (earning a 'hi-yah' from Tim's handbag for his trouble!) T: "Yes it's me Evita, or rather Timita. (sings) High flying adore …" B (stares at T's body and scoffs): "More like a jumbo jet!" (bursts into laughter) T (annoyed): "That's quite enough out of you, Fido Castrol GTX!" B (turns to G): Hey … you ever heard of the Iron Maiden? (looks back at T) ... "The Tin Transvestite!" 
 
The coalition government of Che and Timita doesn't exactly go swimmingly, culminating in a European war via "It's A Knockout" hosted by Graeme as Eddie Waring, but at least Timita's political campaign does offer up one all-time classic Goodies quote. Two common factory workers, Tina and Marge, are pictured working away while chatting about Timita's chances in the upcoming election. They are so worried that Timita won't get the win that she so richly deserves that they begin to weep, but are soon consoled by Timita making another rousing entry with the memorable line: "Don't cry for me Marge and Tina!"
 
Tim's last drag appearance in the BBC episodes is a considerably more understated and less glamourous one than his previous few roles. The trombone-playing aliens are about to take over the Earth and Graeme makes the following suggestion: "We must send up an ambassador of peace. Somebody not even the aliens could harm. Somebody who represents gentleness and truth. Somebody who stands for the holy way of life. But above all, somebody who can fly like the clappers!" Graeme then stares directly at a surprised Tim and Super Nun comes into being. Super Nun's mission of gentleness and holiness only lasts for as long as it takes for Graeme's loony scientist bent to kick in, as he gets Bill to fit 'her' with a nuclear warhead to blast the aliens out of the skies. A horrified Bill realises this just after helping to launch Super Nun into orbit and angrily confronts Graeme about it: "Come on, own up.  That nun was loaded!" G: "Well yes, a bit." B (demandingly): "How much of a bit?!" G (being a smart alec): "Quite a big bit. That there is a five megaton nun, son!" Of course the loaded nun makes quite an impact when she finally hits her target, wiping out all remaining life on Earth just as Bill is in the middle of a grand speech after merrily communicating with the aliens via trombone.
 
The change over to LWT for the last series of The Goodies brings three more opportunities for Tim to drag up, although the first two aren't particularly unusual. In the pantomime-style "Snow White 2", Tim plays the Fairy Godmother who speaks in rhyme in a very Lady Constance-style voice and tries to stop the boys from storming the castle that the girls have control of, but much is made of the unmanly roles that most of the other men have to put up with in pantomimes in any case. In "Football Crazy", Tim is part of the Cricklewood " team of dancers who have to play in the"Juliet" strip in the big match against the "Romeo"-clad Aston Villa at Covent Garden, but he also has Graeme and Bill as teammates in tutus for company.
 
The very last Goodies episode titled "Animals" gives Tim one last chance to frock up, this time as the somewhat batty dog trainer Barbara Woodhouse. After he has bought her Dog Training Kit from Graeme's pet shop, he walks into the men's toilet and emerges from the adjacent women's loo complete with white hair, black glasses and eminently sensible top and skirt. His commands, in a very strange high-pitched authoritative voice, for his dog to do various tricks fall on deaf doggy ears, but Bill and several other men in the park all obey Tim's commands to the letter, much to the interest of Graeme, watching from the doorway of his shop. Tim returns to the shop and complains (in Barbara's nutty voice) that he does not like this "dawg" that Graeme has given him, so Graeme casually stuffs it in a rubbish bin and shows Tim his new line of pets - a bunch of people dressed as dogs in a cage. Tim chooses Bill ("the runt of the litter!") and takes him for walkies, but soon tires of him and ultimately tries to dump him in the river while taking him on "the longest walkies of all". Tim has to revert to Barbara again later in the episode to round up a renegade Graeme who has fled after working on a fiendish scheme to send his herd of human bullocks to the knackery (G: "Oh you fools! This plan could have made us all rich! In some cases dead ... but rich!") and Tim uses Barbara's shrill tones to set the human bullocks, bloodhounds, ducks and sheep onto Graeme. The chase ensues until Graeme is finally cornered in a sheep dip trough and goes under for seemingly the last time.
 
As a final quote from "Return Of The Goodies", Tim has just viewed footage of himself as the "Beanz Boy" being roughed up by Graeme some 30 years earlier in the mock commercials, and rather indignantly grumbles "Wait a minute, wait a minute! Why did I always play the parts of women and little boys who were hurt?!" (He glares at Graeme and Bill) "I suppose because you were so hairy, you couldn't play those parts." Graeme's rather matter-of-fact reply, with an accompanying smirk from Bill, is "No. Because we wrote it!" Fair enough too! It was also noted in "The Goodies Still Alive On Stage" tour shows that The Goodies took a lot of pride in creating strong character roles for women right throughout the show; it's just that Tim ended up playing most of them in the latter series. For the sake of Adam Hills and the rest of us Goodies fans, we're more than happy that he did!
 
Website article & photo gallery:
 
 
6. GOODIES CROSSWORD PUZZLE – SOLUTION FROM C&G 161
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(by Brett Allender)
 

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7. QUIZ & QUOTE ANSWERS
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(a) Tim
(b) Mildred Makepeace
(c) Cunning Stunts
(d) Dunghill
(e) Porridge
(f) Bill
(g) County Cutie
(h) We Shall Overcome
 
YOUR SCORE:
8    Mastermind Of The Year
7    Goodies fan supreme
5-6 Clever clogs
3-4 Reasonably Goodie
1-2 Thick as old boots
0    Rolf Harris!
 
 
NEXT C&G EDITION:
- #163:    12th June 2009.
 
Upcoming Articles:
- Jun/Jul: Goodies Music Review – Elephant Joke Song
- Jul/Aug: A Collection Of Goodies Themes – Goodies Targets – David Frost
 
C&G BACK ISSUES CONTENTS INDEX: http://www.goodiesruleok.com/articles.php?id=45
 
*******************************************************************************
The Goodies Fan Club Clarion and Globe is copyright The Goodies Rule - OK! 2009. All rights reserved.
Permission to reproduce this work or any section of it, in any form must first be obtained from the copyright holders.
 
For further information regarding this publication please e-mail <clarion@goodiesruleok.com>.
For other general enquiries about the 'Goodies Rule - OK' fan club or 'The Goodies' itself, please e-mail enquiries@goodiesruleok.com
 
TO OBTAIN THIS NEWSLETTER IN WORD DOCUMENT FORM:
E-mail <clarion@goodiesruleok.com> requesting transfer to the Word mailing list.
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