The Goon Show series 6: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "The Goon Show, series six was a series of 30 shows (including three specials) aired between {{Date|1955-09-20}} and {{Date|1956-08-29}}. Spike Milligan wrote the majority of the shows on his own, then Eric Sykes came in to help with five of them, and Larry Stephens with one. Eric Sykes wrote the Christmas special, ''The Missing Christmas Parcel'' on his own. Peter Eton produced the first 21 (he co-produced ''The Missing Christmas Parcel'' with John Lane)...") |
(→Music) |
||
(13 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The Goon Show, series six was a series of 30 shows (including three specials) aired between {{Date|1955-09-20}} and {{Date|1956-08-29}}. [[Spike Milligan]] wrote the majority of the shows on his own, then Eric Sykes came in to help with five of them, and Larry Stephens with one. [[Eric Sykes]] wrote the Christmas special, ''[[The Missing Christmas Parcel]]'' on his own. [[Peter Eton]] produced the first 21 (he co-produced ''The Missing Christmas Parcel'' with John Lane) shows in the series, with [[Pat Dixon]] producing the remaining five, with the exception of the special, ''[[China Story (s06eSp)|China Story]]'' which was produced by [[Dennis Main Wilson]]. All the shows were recorded on a Sunday and transmitted on the following Tuesday evenings, with the exception of shows [[The Pevensey Bay Disaster|10]], [[The Mighty Wurlitzer|15]] and the [[The Missing Christmas Parcel|Christmas special]]. | ''The Goon Show'', '''series six''' was a series of 30 shows (including three specials) aired between {{Date|1955-09-20}} and {{Date|1956-08-29}}. [[Spike Milligan]] wrote the majority of the shows on his own, then Eric Sykes came in to help with five of them, and Larry Stephens with one. [[Eric Sykes]] wrote the Christmas special, ''[[The Missing Christmas Parcel]]'' on his own. [[Peter Eton]] produced the first 21 (he co-produced ''The Missing Christmas Parcel'' with John Lane) shows in the series, with [[Pat Dixon]] producing the remaining five, with the exception of the special, ''[[China Story (s06eSp)|China Story]]'' which was produced by [[Dennis Main Wilson]]. All the shows were recorded on a Sunday and transmitted on the following Tuesday evenings, with the exception of shows [[The Pevensey Bay Disaster|10]], [[The Mighty Wurlitzer|15]] and the [[The Missing Christmas Parcel|Christmas special]]. | ||
==Please accept our apologies== | ==Please accept our apologies== | ||
‘This is the BBC Home Service. Please accept our apologies… We present the extraordinary talking-type wireless Goon Show.’ | |||
An established and popular hit for BBC Radio, ''[[The Goon Show]]'' enjoyed selected repeats from its [[The Goon Show series 5|fifth season]] at 7.30pm on the [[ | An established and popular hit for [[BBC Radio|BBC Radio]], ''[[The Goon Show]]'' enjoyed selected repeats from its [[The Goon Show series 5|fifth season]] at 7.30pm on the [[BBC Light Programme|Light Programme]] from late April 1955 through to the end of June, with around four million listeners tuning in - a larger audience than for the original broadcast on the less popular [[BBC Home Service|Home Service]]. In the meantime, the show's three stars - [[Harry Secombe]], [[Peter Sellers]] and Spike Milligan - had gone their separate ways during the summer break. Spike, who wrote most of the series' scripts, had been too ill to record a special edition of ''The Goon Show'' at the end of May, and the broadcast was shelved. | ||
While Spike's career faltered, Peter Sellers had been shooting the movie [[The Ladykillers (1955 film)|The Ladykillers]] at [[ | While Spike's career faltered, Peter Sellers had been shooting the movie [[The Ladykillers (1955 film)|The Ladykillers]] at [[Ealing Studios|Ealing Studios]] since April, and following its completion in June he made radio appearances such as ''Star Struck'' and ''Variety Playhouse''. Harry Secombe also featured in radio shows like ''Star Bill'' and ''Star Struck'', and television spectaculars Including ''Variety Parade'', with the BBC keen to exploit him on TV with further editions of ''Secombe Here!'' Unfortunately, the new commercial ITV organisation were not slow to book the star for a series of his own that autumn. | ||
The trio were re-contracted for The Goon Show on Monday | The trio were re-contracted for ''The Goon Show'' on Monday {{Date|1955-06-06}}, with a deal covering thirteen shows to be recorded at 9pm on Sundays from 18 September to 11 December, and broadcast two days later at 8.30pm on Tuesdays; there was also an option for thirteen more shows to be taken up by Friday 11 November. | ||
Friday 11 November | |||
==A pay rise== | |||
Spike's business manager, [[Beryl Vertue]], wrote to Patrick Newman, the BBC's Variety Booking Manager, on Tuesday 14 June to ask for a rise to 20 [[Guinea (coin)|guineas]] per show for her client, commenting, ‘He realises this is slightly more than the railwaymen are asking for, and hopes that a [[General strike|General Strike]] will not ensue as a result of his request!' Newman good-naturedly agreed, and the contract was reissued on Tuesday 21 June. In the meantime, a recovering Spike took part in shows such as Man About Town. In mid-June, it was agreed that the General Overseas Service would take The Goon Show upon its return, but the station requested that the pace of the show be reduced to make it easier for listeners to follow on short wave. | |||
Spike | |||
will | |||
As there was no demand for the earlier shows, producer [[Peter Eton]] was told that all editions of ''The Goon Show'' made prior to September 1954 could be destroyed. There was also the long-outstanding matter of a live show to tie-in with turning on the [[Illuminations (festival)#Morecambe Illuminations|Morecambe illuminations]] on Friday 19 August; by Monday 4 July Eton advised that he could only recommend against the project, noting that since initial talks ‘''a lot of water - some of it rather muddy- has flowed under Milligan's bridge.''’ Furthermore, Peter's film schedule made the event impractical, although possibly something could be worked out for August 1956. | |||
Eton | |||
' | |||
==A chained melody== | |||
Meanwhile, Spike and Peter took the Goons into the commercial recording arena by making a [[Phonograph record#78 rpm disc developments|78rpm]] record for [[Parlophone|Parlophone]] - without Harry, whose recording contract was with [[Philips Records|Philips]]. Playing [[Eccles]] and [[Bluebottle]], the duo recorded a comical cover version of [[Jimmy Young (broadcaster)|Jimmy Young]]'s chart-topping hit ''[[Unchained Melody|Unchained Melody]]''. On the flipside, listeners would hear [[Henry Crun and Minnie Bannister|Minnie Bannister and Henry Crun]] warbling [[The Wallflower (Dance with Me, Henry)|Dance with Me, Henry]]. Recording took place at [[Abbey Road Studios|EMI Studios]] on [[Abbey Road, London|Abbey Road]], London on Wednesday 29 June, but the owners of ''Unchained Melody'' objected to the send-up. ‘''The Goon record has been chained up for the time''’; noted the [[Daily Mirror|Daily Mirror]] on Thursday 15 September, ‘''It will be released when the publishers give the word.''’ | |||
From Monday 1 August, Harry, Spike and the show's [[Harmonica|harmonica]] player [[Max Geldray]] performed on a number of week-long variety bills on the [[Moss Empires|Moss Empire]] circuit, with venues including the [[Brighton Hippodrome|Brighton Hippodrome]] and the [[Southend-on-Sea#History|Southend Odeon]]. Peter was also in variety again at locations such as [[Chiswick Empire|Chiswick Empire]]. | |||
the | |||
The looming arrival of [[ITV (TV network)|ITV]] caused concern across the [[BBC|BBC]]. and on Friday 2 September, Peter Eton ruminated on the future of ''The Goon Show''. 'Both Harry Secombe and Spike Milligan are now heavily embroiled in rather sordid Commercial Television negotiations which, if successful - and I sincerely hope they're not - may well mean the end of 'The Goons' after next April,' he wrote. Harry starred in another edition of ''Secombe Here!'' on Saturday 3, this time accompanied by Peter Sellers as his guest, while in the next show, ''Arenascope Presents OB Parade'' from [[Earls Court Exhibition Centre|Earls Court]], Harry made an unexpected appearance with Spike Milligan and [[Eric Sykes]] on the live variety broadcast. Followmg this, Harry, Spike, Peter and Max united for a week in variety at the [[Bristol Hippodrome|Bristol Hippodrome]] from Monday 5 September. | |||
==North America takes an interest== | |||
Before recording began, it was confirmed that the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|CBC]] in Canada was to start running ''The Goon Show'' from Thursday 29 September, while in the USA, [[NBC|NBC]] would take it at 8.30pm from Thursday 3 November. Spike was deeply appreciative of these sales, writing to the BBC's Head of Variety Pat Hillyard on Monday 10 October to say ‘''I believe you put yourself out and went above certain authorities to do so. For this I would like to thank you very much.''’ Hillyard replied, ‘''The important thing about all this is, I think, that we should be able to share a common sense of humour, and congratulations to you, Spike, for blazing the trail!''’ | |||
Over the summer, Spike's co-writer, Eric Sykes, had been writing ''[[The Howerd Crowd]]'' and TV shows for [[Max Bygraves]], and would only contribute to the first couple of programmes in the new run of ''The Goon Show''. However, the structure Eric had brought to the series over the previous year stood Spike in good stead to deliver increasingly tight and polished scripts; Count Fred Moriarty and Grytpype-Thynne continued to hatch all manner of plots to ensnare the luckless Ned Seagoon. Nevertheless, the writing was still a strain for Spike. ‘''It was all fun for Peter and me,''’ recalled Harry, ‘''Spike had the worst of it. He had to stay bock and get on with the work half the time. He had the responsibility.''’ | |||
Meanwhile on the music front, since the previous series Judd Proctor had replaced guitarist Don Fraser in the line-up of the Ray Ellington Quartet. The first show, [[The Man Who Won the War]], was a parody of the recent vogue for war-time best-sellers, such as 1954's ''Reach for the Sky'' about air ace [[Douglas Bader|Douglas Bader]], or ''[[The Colditz Story|The Colditz Story]]'' written by POW [[Pat Reid|Pat Reid]]. | |||
==A new character== | |||
A new decrepit character to join Minnie and Henry was created for Harry to play: the toothless Uncle Oscar who made infrequent appearances in later series. The popular Eccles and Bluebottle begin to appear together more often, and following on from the previous year's nonsense phrase of ‘''ying-tong iddle-i-po''’, Ned Seagoon's new gibberish was 'needle nardle noo'. In terms of performance, Peter also now played Crun with a marginally deeper voice. ''The Man Who Won the War'' kicked off recordings on Sunday 18 September, and the [[Radio Times|Radio Times]] heavily promoted the return of the series the following Tuesday. ‘''Danger! Goons at Play''’ was an article by Richard Bennett in which Peter Eton discussed the show, explaining The new series is, of course, dedicated, like the others, to the destruction of humanity. The Goons are steadily and relentlessly decivilising the nation. 'The show claimed to have seven million addicts across the country hanging on catchphrases like Eccles' ‘''It's good to be alive''’ and Grytpype-Thynne's ‘''You silly twisted boy''’, while Spike cited his influences as [[Lewis Carroll|Lewis Carroll]], [[Edward Lear|Edward Lear]], [[Stephen Leacock|Stephen Leacock]] and [[François Rabelais|Rabelais]]. With a cartoon of the Goons as balloons, the billing page announced ‘''Anarchy returns to the air in the form of Harry Secombe, Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan who let | |||
loose on the army at 8.30 this evening.''’ The Radio Times even retained a billing which included the show title and the increasingly fanciful synopsis from the front of the recording scripts. | |||
==Rigoletto on Bond Street== | |||
The debut show was warmly received in the [[Daily Sketch|Daily Sketch]] where John Balfour proclaimed, ‘''The Goon Show'' is pure radio.’ Asked if he would try to take the series to television, Spike replied ‘''Not a chance… This will always be radio…, Our listeners are fanatics. They stick with us. Because movies come in, oil-painting didn't go out, did it?''’. Listening figures remained strong at around three million on the Home Service. However, Spike was less happy with plans to reschedule the recording planned for Sunday 30 October. A prior claim on the [[KOKO (music venue)|Camden Theatre]] by the music department meant the Goons would have to relocate to the [[Garrick Theatre (Leman St)|Garrick]] and share the venue with the comedy show [[Take It from Here|Take It From Here]]. A recording time of 3.45pm was suggested. An incensed Spike wrote to Patrick Newman to complain on Thursday 22 September, fuming ‘''Anybody who comes to hear a show at 3.45 on a Sunday afternoon must be: (a) without a home (b) Gormless. Psychologically it is a bad time to perform a comedy show. It is like doing [[Rigoletto|Rigoletto]] in the middle of Bond Street, but apparently my opinion does not matter any more. Go ahead, grind it out. Perhaps you would care to tell Milligan that this early recording is at his (and Seller's and Secombe's) request!!!''’ was a handwritten note on this missive. Patrick Newman resolved the confusion in the coming weeks, asking Spike if he had ‘''a lack of confidence in yourself''’. ‘''You Win''’ declared Spike via Beryl on Thursday 29 September. | |||
==Playout changes== | |||
of the | On Thursday 22 September, Harry featured on [[Associated-Rediffusion]]'s ITV launch programme ''Channel Nine'', and the new commercial network then carried ATV's ''The Harry Secombe Show'' on Saturdays from 24 September to 29 October, with scripts by Eric Sykes. Thus the second edition of ‘''the extraordinary talking-type wireless Goon Show''’ referred to Harry's work for ATV. the fact that Ray Ellington had announced his plans to marry actress Ann West (later known as [[Anita West]]) and saw a jubilant [[Major Bloodnok]] start to comment ‘''I'm in condition tonight!''’ The 7.30pm [[BBC Light Programme|Light Programme]] repeat of ''The Goon Show'' kicked off on Saturday 1 October, having been precluded the previous week by an omnibus of [[The Archers]]; these generally attracted a couple of million listeners. Next day, the team recorded [[The Lost Emperor]] at the [[Aeolian Hall (London)|Aeolian Hall]] rather than the [[KOKO (music venue)|Camden]]. This show dropped the traditional play-out of ''[[Crazy Rhythm]]'' composed by [[Irving Caesar]], [[Joseph Meyer (songwriter)|Joseph Meyer]] and [[Roger Wolfe Kahn|Roger Kahn]] in favour of [[Ira Gershwin|Ira]] and [[George Gershwin]]'s ''[[Oh, Lady Be Good!]]'', and over the next two weeks the orchestra would sign-off with ''[[A Gal in Calico]]'' by [[Arthur Schwartz|Arthur Schwartz]] and then [[Jimmy McHugh]]'s (and [[Dorothy Fields]]) tune ''[[On the Sunny Side of the Street]]'' before ''Crazy Rhythm'' was again adopted. Following recording of [[The Lost Emperor]], Peter and Max teamed up for a week's variety at the Hippodrome, Ipswich. | ||
==Eccles Sings== | |||
the | [[File:Rockall - geograph.org.uk - 1048791.jpg|thumb|right|[[Rockall|Rockall]] in all its glory]] | ||
The sudden changes of script which had plagued the end of the previous series returned. For the fourth show, Spike pulled his planned script, ''[[The Sale of Manhattan]]'', and instead substituted a tale entitled ''[[Napoleon's Piano]]'' to be recorded on 9 October; the replacement script introduced Eccles singing popular songs such as [[Alan Jay Lerner|Alan Lerner]] and [[Frederick Loewe]]'s ''[[Lerner and Loewe#Paint Your Wagon|I Talk to the Trees]]'' (plus the novelty songs ''Close the Door'' and [[Twenty Tiny Fingers]] in coming weeks), phrases such as ‘''Have a gorilla''’ and even a mention of [[HMS Boxer (F121)|HMS Boxer]], the ship which took Spike to [[Salerno]] in Italy in 1943. More topically, it referred to the UK's [[Annexation|annexing]] of [[Rockall]] on 18 September, and the associated brass plaque ceremony. However, by now, the [[Radio Times]] has already been published with the wrong details. ''[[Napoleon's Piano]]'' was not taken by the Midlands, where coverage of the [[Norfolk and Norwich Festival|Norfolk and Norwich Triennial Musical Festival]] pre-empted it. | |||
The [[BBC World Service|General Overseas Service]] kicked off their broadcasts on Thursday 13 October when ''[[The Man Who Won the War]]'' was broadcast at 10.30am, 10.1S pm and 5.30pm the following day. With the next show, [[The Case of the Missing CD Plates]], gags about [[Jimmy Young (broadcaster)|Jimmy Young]]'s current chart hit ''The Man from Laramie'' started to feature. Meanwhile, there was further rescheduling of planned shows. Although the Radio Times informed listeners that the following Tuesday they could hear [[The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu]], the script delivered by Spike for recording on Sunday 23 October was [[Rommel's Treasure]]… as remarked upon by announcer [[Wallace Greenslade]] in the show itself. This replacement drew upon the [[Western Desert campaign|1942 Desert Campaign]] between the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] and [[Axis powers|German-Italian forces]] of which Spike had been a part. | |||
In the last week of October, Peter and Spike embarked upon a Goonish television venture, a filmed half-hour pilot episode spoofing British crime support films entitled [[The Case of the Mukkinese Battle-Horn]]. The script was mainly written by [[Larry Stephens]] (Spike's former writing partner on ''The Goon Show'') while [[Dick Emery]], who had deputised for Spike on the series in 1952/3, stood in for Harry. Characters such as Eccles, Henry and Minnie featured in this offering from [[Merton Park Studios]], the home of [[Scotland Yard]] and other such references which Peter and Spike were sending up in an attempt to attract the British and American markets. | |||
==Goon trio sent to Coventry== | |||
‘''Goon Trio Will Head Birthday Show Comedy Team''’ announced the Coventry Standard on Friday 28 October, revealing that Spike, Harry and Peter would be together on stage for the city's birthday show for several weeks. After recording ''[[Foiled by President Fred]]'' – a story inspired by the deposing of President [[Juan Perón|Juan Peron]] of [[Argentina|Argentina]] following a revolution during September – on Sunday 30, the Goons travelled to the Midlands city where they appeared in the variety ''Birthday Show'' for the [[Coventry Theatre|Coventry Hippodrome]] written by themselves along with [[Eric Sykes]], [[Jimmy Grafton]] (the Goons' original editor and Harry's agent) and [[Larry Stephens]]. ‘''This is a Birthday Treat to remember''’ declared the reviews. Meanwhile, Harry released his first record from [[Philips Records|Philips]]: [[Vesti la giubba|On with the Motley (Vesti la giubba)]]. | |||
==The Radio Times is upset== | |||
After having printed a synopsis for [[Foiled by President Fred]] which bore no resemblance at all to the finished programme, the Radio Times decided that advance information was simply too unreliable, and from the show broadcast on Tuesday 8 November - [[Shangri-La Again|Shangri-La Again!]], a pastiche of the 1937 movie [[Lost Horizon (1937 film)|Lost Horizon]] based on [[James Hilton (novelist)|James Hilton]]'s [[Lost Horizon|novel]] - declined to print any further episode titles or synopses. Meanwhile, on Friday 4 November, the options to make thirteen further editions of ''The Goon Show'' were taken up by the BBC, with the shows to record from Sunday 18 December, with the formal contracts issued on Tuesday 15; with no recording on Christmas Day, the shows would continue taping from 1 January to 11 March at the [[KOKO (music venue)|Camden]]. Meanwhile, on Monday 14, the trio were contracted to record a special insert entitled [[The Missing Christmas Parcel|Post Early for Christmas]] for [[Children's Hour|Children's Hour]], this was to be written by [[Eric Sykes]]. | |||
==Peter is a naughty boy!== | |||
[[File:Milton rail crash.jpg|thumb|right|The Milton/Didcot train crash]] | |||
Peter Eton was less than happy with Peter Sellers' behaviour when recording [[The International Christmas Pudding]] on Sunday 13 November: ‘''He did something which put Harry off. In the Max Geldray number I'' […] ''told him to stick to the script. We went back'' […] ''and he started fooling about again, and I said, "If you do that again, I'll fire you." He thought I wouldn't dare, so he did it again, so I hod to fire him. Later he come back and apologised.''’ Apologising to Pat Hillyard on Monday 14 November, Peter explained that the 'bother' was due to the ‘''Extreme mental stress of the previous week''’ and was ‘''surprised and shocked at Peter Eton's attitude''’ although admitting that he was in the wrong. Hillyard replied on Friday 18 that he took ‘''the gravest view of your refusal to re-record the opening spot''’ and wanted ‘''an assurance that this sort of thing will not happen again.''’ On Sunday 20 November, Peter responded to the BBC executive, saying that he had listened to the show in Coventry and felt that the show was unharmed by his behaviour, adding ‘''A very well known Actor Producer who is on ardent Goon fan'' […] ''happened to mention that he thought it was the best show of the present series.''’ Backing down from his suggestion of sabotage on Monday 21, Hillyard informed Peter, ‘''So, for as I am concerned, the incident is forgotten, and I hope that you too will forget it.''’ | |||
Peter, Harry and Spike were interviewed at the Hippodrome for the Midlands Home Service magazine programme ''What Goes On'', broadcast to the local listeners early on the evening of Friday 18 November. That Sunday, the trio were back in London taping ''[[The Pevensey Bay Disaster]]''. Unfortunately, the same day there was a serious [[Derailment|derailment]] of a [[Milton rail crash|passenger train at Milton]] in which 11 people were killed. Suddenly a comedy show about a railway became decidedly less funny. In place of the recorded show, ''[[China Story (s05e17)|China Story]]'' - a popular edition from the previous series and one of Spike's favourites - was put out in its place on Tuesday, while the Light Programme replaced that week's Sunday repeat with ''Family Favourites'' on 'financial grounds.' | |||
==Peter Eton departs== | |||
Rather than sell [[The Case of the Mukkinese Battle-Horn]] to television, it was decided instead to screen it theatrically as a support film in the New Year. Meanwhile the deferred script ''[[The Sale of Manhattan]]'' was finally recorded on Sunday 27 November, after ''[[The Missing Christmas Parcel]]'' (Eric's insert for [[Children's Hour|Children's Hour]]) taped at lunchtime; in this, the Goons emphasised that gifts and letters for Christmas needed to be sent before 19 and 21 December respectively. Then, during the following week, Peter Eton - the producer who had made ''The Goon Show'' a success since taking the helm in 1952 – announced that in early 1956 he would be leaving [[BBC Radio|BBC Radio]] to become a producer at [[ITV Granada|Granada Television]]. | |||
Another postponed script, ''[[The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu]]'', was taped on Sunday 4 December, and again contained gags directed at commercial television. A few days later on Thursday 8 December, ''[[The Missing Christmas Parcel]]'' kicked off the first quarter hour of ''[[Children's Hour|Children's Hour]]'', and even contained a brief contribution from senior BBC announcer [[John Snagge]], a fan of the show who had contributed to [[Nineteen-Eighty-Five (2)|Nineteen Eighty-Five]] the previous year. | |||
Planning ahead for Christmas on Friday 9 December.Assistant Head of Variety Jim Davidson indicated that two programmes would have to be recorded on Sunday 18 December, and noted that one of these could be a fresh version of the unbroadcast ''[[The Pevensey Bay Disaster]]'', but with all references to a train crash deleted. By now, the Coventry stage show was drawing to a close, with Spike rather dejected by some of the reception from local audiences whom he felt had not understood the finer aspects of his routine. Pinned to his dressing room door were notes which he had written reading, ‘''Mr S Milligan died at 8.10 again - Dr Sproles Thirk''’ and ‘''For sale: Ten-minute act with recorded applause - then ghastly silence - Apply within.''’ The show closed on Saturday IO December, and acidic asides to Coventry would feature in his forthcoming scripts. | |||
''[[The Lost Year]]'' was recorded at the [[Garrick Theatre (Leman St)|Garrick]] on Sunday 11, and saw Harry's chart success with [[Vesti la giubba|On with the Motley]] (which peaked at number 16) becoming a running gag for the team, while the script also made reference to BBC announcers - such as [[Leslie Mitchell (broadcaster)|Leslie Mitchell]] – having defected to ITV stations. Peter too was about to hit the big time with acclaim for his role in [[The Ladykillers (1955 film)|The Ladykillers]] which premiered just before Christmas. With the stage show over, Spike appeared on BBC TV in ''[[Great Scott - It's Maynard!|Great Scott, It's Maynard]] while Peter and Max were in the variety bill ''Stars from the Goon Show'' at the Northampton New. Spike made minimal changes to ''[[The Pevensey Bay Disaster]]'' and, now entitled ''[[The Hastings Flyer — Robbed]]'', it was recorded on Sunday 18 December before ''[[The Greenslade Story]]''. This new script thrust [[Wallace Greenslade]] centre stage with a story built around him, and saw [[John Snagge]] drop in at the [[KOKO (music venue)|Camden Theatre]] to take part in the recording with gags about Harry's chart hit. In this show, Peter's semi-regular Lew character was specifically ATV impresario [[Lew Grade]] - partner to [[Val Parnell]]. | |||
While Harry began rehearsals as Buttons in Cinderella at [[Palace Theatre, Manchester|Manchester's Palace Theatre]], Peter and Spike united for a [[BBC Light Programme|BBC Light Programme]] show, ''The Listening Room'', in which Peter Sellers would spoof ''The Critics'' and select as one of his records a new song by Spike. This was the nonsense piece entitled ''[[I'm Walking Backwards for Christmas]]'', written by Spike on his way home one night on the tube because he was unimpressed with the festive pop music on offer. The song was taped at [[Broadcasting House|Portland Place]] on the afternoon of Wednesday 28 December and included – along with Parlophone's unreleased [[The Wallflower (Dance with Me, Henry)|Dance with Me, Henry]] – in Peter's live broadcast later that evening. On Friday 23 December Jim Davidson informed producer Pat Dixon – one of the original champions of the Goons at the BBC – that from Sunday 15 January 1956, he would be shadowing Peter as the new ringmaster attempting to keep order on ''The Goon Show''. That evening, Peter Sellers was massively impressed with the zany quality of ''[[The Dick Lester Show]]'' from [[Associated-Rediffusion|Associated-Rediffusion]], and phoned the writer/director, suspecting that he and Spike had found the creative force to bring the Goons to television in 1956… | |||
'''Programme notes, episode notes and cast biographies researched and written by Andrew Pixley''' | |||
==Episodes== | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-right: 0;" | |||
|- | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 65px;" | Episode # | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 285px;" | Title | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 135px;" | Original airdate | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 100px;" | Producer | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 250px;" | Scriptwriter(s) | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 275px;" | Notes | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 75px;" | Comp.<br>Vol | |||
! scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 75px;" | CD<br>Vol | |||
|- | |||
!1 | |||
| ''[[The Man Who Won the War]]<br>{{Small|({{aka}} Seagoon MCC)}}'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|20 September 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Eric Sykes]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol31|31]] | |||
|- | |||
!2 | |||
| ''[[The Secret Escritoire]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|27 September 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Eric Sykes]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol24|24]] | |||
|- | |||
!3 | |||
| ''[[The Lost Emperor]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|4 October 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol12|12]] | |||
|- | |||
!4 | |||
| ''[[Napoleon's Piano]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|11 October 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol2|2]] | |||
|- | |||
!5 | |||
| ''[[The Case of the Missing CD Plates]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|18 October 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol4|4]] | |||
|- | |||
!6 | |||
| ''[[Rommel's Treasure]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|25 October 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol6|6]] | |||
|- | |||
!7 | |||
| ''[[Foiled by President Fred]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|1 November 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol12|12]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol33|33]] | |||
|- | |||
!8 | |||
| ''[[Shangri-La Again]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|8 November 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol19|19]] | |||
|- | |||
!9 | |||
| ''[[The International Christmas Pudding]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|15 November 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol2|2]] | |||
|- | |||
!10 | |||
| ''[[The Pevensey Bay Disaster]]'' | |||
|align="right"| ({{date|22 November 1955}}) | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| {{efn|Recorded 20 November 1955}}; postponed because of [[Milton rail crash|train derailment at Milton]]; "China Story" repeated instead<ref name=CD9781408410448>{{cite AV media notes |title=The Goon Show Compendium Volume Three (Series 6 – Part 1) |year=2009 |first1=Andrew |last1=Pixley |first2=Ted |last2=Kendall |at=booklet 1, p. 9; booklet 2, pp. 8, 11, 14 |type=CD |publisher=BBC Audiobooks |isbn=978-1-4084-1044-8 }}</ref>}} | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol19|19]] | |||
|- | |||
!11 | |||
| ''[[The Sale of Manhattan]]'' {{Small|({{aka}} ''The Lost Colony'')}} | |||
|align="right"| {{date|29 November 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol22|22]] | |||
|- | |||
!12 | |||
| ''[[The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|6 December 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol25|25]] | |||
|- | |||
!Sp. | |||
| ''[[The Missing Christmas Parcel]] – Post Early for Christmas'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|8 December 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]], [[John Lane (producer)|John Lane]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Eric Sykes]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums|—]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs|—]] | |||
|- | |||
!13 | |||
| ''[[The Lost Year]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|13 December 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol26|26]] | |||
|- | |||
!14 | |||
| ''[[The Greenslade Story]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|20 December 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
|| with [[John Snagge]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|3]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol3|3]] | |||
|- | |||
!15 | |||
| ''[[The Hastings Flyer — Robbed]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|27 December 1955}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol30|30]] | |||
|- | |||
!16 | |||
| [[The Mighty Wurlitzer]] | |||
|align="right"| {{date|3 January 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol15|15]] | |||
|- | |||
!17 | |||
| ''[[The Raid of the International Christmas Pudding]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|10 January 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs|—]] | |||
|- | |||
!18 | |||
| ''[[Tales of Montmartre]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|17 January 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Eric Sykes]] | |||
| with [[Charlotte Mitchell]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol10|10]] | |||
|- | |||
!19 | |||
| ''[[The Jet-Propelled Guided Naafi|The Jet-Propelled Guided NAAFI]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|24 January 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol1|1]] | |||
|- | |||
!20 | |||
| ''[[The House of Teeth]]'' | |||
|align="right"|31 January 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| with [[Valentine Dyall]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol23|23]] | |||
|- | |||
!21 | |||
| ''[[Tales of Old Dartmoor]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|7 February 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol12|12]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol34|34]] | |||
|- | |||
!22 | |||
| ''[[The Choking Horror]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|14 February 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Pat Dixon]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Larry Stephens]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol22|22]] | |||
|- | |||
!23 | |||
| ''[[The Great Tuscan Salami Scandal]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|21 February 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Pat Dixon]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| with [[John Snagge]] (pre-recorded) | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol7|7]] | |||
|- | |||
!24 | |||
| ''[[The Treasure of Loch Lomond|The Treasure in the Lake]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|28 February 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Pat Dixon]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol3|3]] | |||
|- | |||
! Sp. | |||
| ''[[The Goons Hit Wales]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|1 March 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| Unknown | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs|—]] | |||
|- | |||
!25 | |||
| ''[[The Fear of Wages]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|6 March 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Pat Dixon]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Larry Stephens]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol20|20]] | |||
|- | |||
!26 | |||
| [[Scradje]] | |||
|align="right"| {{date|13 March 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Pat Dixon]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Larry Stephens]] | |||
| with [[John Snagge]] (pre-recorded) | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol7|7]] | |||
|- | |||
!27 | |||
| ''[[The Man Who Never Was]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|20 March 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Pat Dixon]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Larry Stephens]] | |||
| | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol4|4]] | |||
|- | |||
!10 | |||
| ''[[The Pevensey Bay Disaster]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|3 April 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Peter Eton]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]] | |||
| {{efn|Postponed from 22 November 1955}}<ref name=CD9781408410448 />}} | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol19|19]] | |||
|- | |||
! Sp. | |||
| ''[[China Story (s06eSp)|China Story]]'' | |||
|align="right"| {{date|29 August 1956}} | |||
|align="center"| [[Dennis Main Wilson]] | |||
|align="center"| [[Spike Milligan]], [[Eric Sykes]] | |||
| Remake | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol4|4]] | |||
|align="center"|[[The Goon Show CDs#Vol30|30]] | |||
|} | |||
==Music== | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-right: 0;" | |||
|+ Series: 6 | |||
|- | |||
!scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 55px;" | Episode # | |||
!scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 200px;" | Show | |||
!scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 200px;" | Artist | |||
!scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 200px;" | Song(s) | |||
!scope="col" style="vertical-align: top; width: 250px;" | Writer(s) | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2| 1 | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Man Who Won the War]]''<br>{{Small|({{aka}} ''Seagoon MCC'')}} | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
|''[[You Go to My Head|You Go to My Head]]'' | |||
| [[John Frederick Coots|J Fred Coots]]<br>[[Haven Gillespie]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Razzle Dazzle'' | |||
| [[Jesse Stone|Charles Calhoun]] | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2| 2 | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Secret Escritoire]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Someone to Watch Over Me (song)|Someone to Watch Over Me]]'' | |||
| [[George Gershwin]]<br>[[Ira Gershwin]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Play It, Boy'' | |||
| Matt Dubey<br>Harold Karr | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2| 3 | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Lost Emperor]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[The Peanut Vendor|The Peanut Vendor]]'' | |||
| arr: [[Moisés Simons|Moisés Simons]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''[[Lover Come Back to Me|Lover Come Back to Me]]'' | |||
| [[Sigmund Romberg]]<br>[[Oscar Hammerstein II]] | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2| 4 | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[Napoleon's Piano]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Ain't Misbehavin' (song)|Ain't Misbehavin']]'' | |||
| [[Harry Brooks (composer)|Harry Brooks]]<br>[[Fats Waller]] / [[Andy Razaf]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''[[Bloodshot Eyes (song)|Bloodshot Eyes]]'' | |||
| [[Hank Penny|Hank Penny]]<br>Ruth Hall | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2| 5 | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Case of the Missing CD Plates]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[The Lady Is a Tramp]]'' | |||
| [[Richard Rodgers]]<br>[[Lorenz Hart]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Cloudburst'' | |||
| [[Leroy Kirkland|Claude Cloud]]<br>arr. [[Bill McGuffie]] | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2|6 | |||
|rowspan=2|[[Rommel's Treasure]] | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Charmaine (song)|Charmaine]]'' | |||
| [[Erno Rapee]]<br>[[Lew Pollack]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Love Me or Leave Me'' | |||
| [[Walter Donaldson]] (music)<br>[[Gus Kahn]] (lyrics) | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2|7 | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[Foiled by President Fred]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Have You Ever Been Lonely?|Have You Ever Been Lonely (Have You Ever Been Blue)?]]'' | |||
| [[Peter De Rose]]<br>[[Billy Hill (songwriter)|William J. Hill]] (as George Brown) | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''[[The Birth of the Blues|The Birth of the Blues]]'' | |||
| [[Ray Henderson]]<br>[[Buddy DeSylva|Buddy G. DeSylva]]<br>[[Lew Brown]] | |||
|- | |||
!rowspan=2|8 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[Shangri-La Again]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Pete Kelly's Blues (song)|Pete Kelly's Blues]]'' | |||
| [[Ray Heindorf]]<br>[[Sammy Cahn]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Rap Your Troubles in Drums'' | |||
| [[George Shearing]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|9 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The International Christmas Pudding]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[For Me and My Gal (song)|Me and My Gal]]'' | |||
| [[George W. Meyer]]<br>[[Edgar Leslie]]<br>[[E. Ray Goetz]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''The Crocodile Crawl'' | |||
| [[Sam Coslow]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|10 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Pevensey Bay Disaster]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''One, Two, Button Your Shoe'' | |||
| [[Johnny Burke (lyricist)|Johnny Burke]] (lyrics)<br>[[Arthur Johnston (composer)|Arthur Johnston]] (music) | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''[[I Want You to Be My Baby|I Want You To Be My Baby]]'' | |||
| [[Jon Hendricks]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|11 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Sale of Manhattan]]'' {{Small|({{aka}} ''The Lost Colony'')}} | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''Baia'' | |||
| [[Ary Barroso]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''I Love to Ride'' | |||
| Campbell | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|12 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|[[The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu]] | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Exactly Like You|Exactly Like You]]'' | |||
| [[Dorothy Fields]]<br>[[Jimmy McHugh]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''We'll All Go Riding On a Rainbow'' | |||
| [[Harry M. Woods]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|Special <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Missing Christmas Parcel]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|13 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Lost Year]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Blue Star]]'' | |||
| [[Victor Young]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| {{ordered list | style=margin-left: -2em | |||
| ''Believe it Beloved'' | |||
| ''Got a Bran' New Suit'' }} | |||
| {{ordered list | style=margin-left: -2em | |||
| W. George Whiting<br>Nat Schwartz | |||
| [[Arthur Schwartz]]<br>[[Howard Dietz]]}} | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|14 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Greenslade Story]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''One, Two, Button Your Shoe'' | |||
| [[Arthur Johnston (composer)|Arthur Johnston]] (music)<br>[[Johnny Burke]] (lyrics) | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''[[Jingle Bells]]''<br>{{Small|({{aka}} ''One Horse Open Sleigh)}}''{{efn|group=jb|Because of the seasonal nature of the Quartet number, on the Transcription Reissue this was replaced by ABC Boogie (Max Spickol/Al Russell) taken from [[The Whistling Spy Enigma]] or [[The Mystery of the Marie Celeste (solved)]].<ref>{{Cite AV media notes |title=[[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|The Goon Show Compendium Vol 3]] |first=Ted |last=Kendall | author-link=Ted Kendall |date=2009 |page=10|type=Booklet 2 |publisher=BBC Worldwide|ISBN=978-1-4084-1044-8}}</ref>}} | |||
| [[James Lord Pierpont|James Lord Pierpont]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|15 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Hastings Flyer — Robbed]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|16 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Mighty Wurlitzer]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[I'm in the Mood for Love]]'' | |||
| [[Dorothy Fields]]<br>[[Jimmy McHugh]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Late Night Final'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|17 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Raid of the International Christmas Pudding]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| — | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|18 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[Tales of Montmartre]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|19 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Jet-Propelled Guided Naafi|The Jet-Propelled Guided NAAFI]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[I'm Just Wild About Harry]]'' | |||
| [[Noble Sissle]] {{Small|(lyrics)}}<br />[[Eubie Blake]] {{Small|(music)}} | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Three-Handed Woman'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|20 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The House of Teeth]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Saint Louis Blues (song)|St. Louis Blues]]'' | |||
| [[W. C. Handy|WC Handy]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Who's Got the Money?'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|21 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[Tales of Old Dartmoor]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|22 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Choking Horror]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[['S Wonderful]]'' | |||
| [[George Gershwin]]<br>[[Ira Gershwin]] | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Cloudburst'' | |||
| [[Leroy Kirkland|Claude Cloud]]<br>arr. [[Bill McGuffie]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|23 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Great Tuscan Salami Scandal]]'' | |||
| '''Musicians' Strike''' | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| Spike Milligan | |||
| ''[[I'm Walking Backwards for Christmas]]'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|24 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Treasure of Loch Lomond|The Treasure in the Lake]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[I'm Beginning to See the Light]]'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| {{ordered list | style=margin-left: -2em | |||
| ''I've Changed My Mind a Thousand Times | |||
|[[Who's Sorry Now?]]''}} | |||
| {{ordered list | style=margin-left: -2em | |||
| [[Pat Ballard]] | |||
| [[Ted Snyder]] {{Small|(music)}}<br>[[Bert Kalmar]] {{Small|(lyrics)}}}} | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|Special <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Goons Hit Wales]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|25 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Fear of Wages]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Side by Side (1927 song)|Side by Side]]'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| {{ordered list | style=margin-left: -2em | |||
| ''[[Pink Champagne (Joe Liggins song)|Pink Champagne]]'' | |||
|[[Love Me or Leave Me (Donaldson and Kahn song)|Love Me or Leave Me]]<br />{{Small|(in [[BBC Transcription Services|TS]] version)}}}} | |||
| {{ordered list | style=margin-left: -2em | |||
| [[George Forrest (author)|George Forrest]]<br />[[Robert Wright (musical writer)|Robert Wright]] | |||
| [[Walter Donaldson]] {{Small|(music)}}<br />[[Gus Kahn]] {{Small|(lyrics)}}}} | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|26 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[Scradje]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Sweet Lorraine]]'' | |||
| [[Cliff Burwell]] {{Small|(music)}}<br />[[Mitchell Parish]] {{Small|(lyrics)}} | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Hold Him Tight'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|27 <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[The Man Who Never Was]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''[[Makin' Whoopee]]'' | |||
| [[Walter Donaldson]] {{Small|(music)}}<br />[[Gus Kahn]] {{Small|(lyrics)}} | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''Will You Still Be Mine?'' | |||
| [[Tom Adair]]<br />[[Matt Dennis]] | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
!rowspan=2|Special <!-- Row Start --> | |||
|rowspan=2|''[[China Story (s06eSp)|China Story]]'' | |||
| Max Geldray | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| The Ray Ellington Quartet | |||
| ''—'' | |||
| — | |||
|-<!-- Row End --> | |||
|} | |||
===Playouts=== | |||
The usual playout for series six is ''[[Crazy Rhythm|Crazy Rhythm in C]]'', whereas in the fifth series it was played in F. Enterprise attacks the band for a few weeks in this series; the playout of [[The Lost Emperor|6/3]] is ''[[Oh, Lady Be Good!|Oh, Lady Be Good!]]'' that of [[Napoleon's Piano|6/4]] is ''[[A Gal in Calico|A Gal in Calico]]'' from the 1946 film ''[[The Time, the Place and the Girl (1946 film)|The Time, The Place and The Girl]]'' and in [[The Case of the Missing CD Plates|6/5]], the playout is ''[[On the Sunny Side of the Street|On The Sunny Side Of The Street]]''. Where the original playout exists it was been used (in [[The Goon Show Compendiums#Vol3|Compendium 3]]). Where it does not, is in poor quality, incomplete or obscured by TS announcements, [[Ted Kendall|Kendall]] reconstructed complete versions using what could be salvaged from available material. | |||
Snatches of ancient dance music appear in several shows - these are from HMV B 1588, recorded by [[ Jack Hylton|Jack Hylton and his Band]] in 1923. Usually, ''Just Like A Thief'' is used, but in ''[[The International Christmas Pudding]]'', when [[Neddie Seagoon|Seagoon]] threatens to form a new show band, the other side, ''[[Zez Confrey|Greenwich Witch]]'', is played. | |||
===Note=== | |||
{{notelist|group=jb}} |
Latest revision as of 21:29, 19 March 2023
The Goon Show, series six was a series of 30 shows (including three specials) aired between 20 September 1955 and 29 August 1956. Spike Milligan wrote the majority of the shows on his own, then Eric Sykes came in to help with five of them, and Larry Stephens with one. Eric Sykes wrote the Christmas special, The Missing Christmas Parcel on his own. Peter Eton produced the first 21 (he co-produced The Missing Christmas Parcel with John Lane) shows in the series, with Pat Dixon producing the remaining five, with the exception of the special, China Story which was produced by Dennis Main Wilson. All the shows were recorded on a Sunday and transmitted on the following Tuesday evenings, with the exception of shows 10, 15 and the Christmas special.
Please accept our apologies
‘This is the BBC Home Service. Please accept our apologies… We present the extraordinary talking-type wireless Goon Show.’
An established and popular hit for BBC Radio, The Goon Show enjoyed selected repeats from its fifth season at 7.30pm on the Light Programme from late April 1955 through to the end of June, with around four million listeners tuning in - a larger audience than for the original broadcast on the less popular Home Service. In the meantime, the show's three stars - Harry Secombe, Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan - had gone their separate ways during the summer break. Spike, who wrote most of the series' scripts, had been too ill to record a special edition of The Goon Show at the end of May, and the broadcast was shelved.
While Spike's career faltered, Peter Sellers had been shooting the movie The Ladykillers at Ealing Studios since April, and following its completion in June he made radio appearances such as Star Struck and Variety Playhouse. Harry Secombe also featured in radio shows like Star Bill and Star Struck, and television spectaculars Including Variety Parade, with the BBC keen to exploit him on TV with further editions of Secombe Here! Unfortunately, the new commercial ITV organisation were not slow to book the star for a series of his own that autumn.
The trio were re-contracted for The Goon Show on Monday 6 June 1955, with a deal covering thirteen shows to be recorded at 9pm on Sundays from 18 September to 11 December, and broadcast two days later at 8.30pm on Tuesdays; there was also an option for thirteen more shows to be taken up by Friday 11 November.
A pay rise
Spike's business manager, Beryl Vertue, wrote to Patrick Newman, the BBC's Variety Booking Manager, on Tuesday 14 June to ask for a rise to 20 guineas per show for her client, commenting, ‘He realises this is slightly more than the railwaymen are asking for, and hopes that a General Strike will not ensue as a result of his request!' Newman good-naturedly agreed, and the contract was reissued on Tuesday 21 June. In the meantime, a recovering Spike took part in shows such as Man About Town. In mid-June, it was agreed that the General Overseas Service would take The Goon Show upon its return, but the station requested that the pace of the show be reduced to make it easier for listeners to follow on short wave.
As there was no demand for the earlier shows, producer Peter Eton was told that all editions of The Goon Show made prior to September 1954 could be destroyed. There was also the long-outstanding matter of a live show to tie-in with turning on the Morecambe illuminations on Friday 19 August; by Monday 4 July Eton advised that he could only recommend against the project, noting that since initial talks ‘a lot of water - some of it rather muddy- has flowed under Milligan's bridge.’ Furthermore, Peter's film schedule made the event impractical, although possibly something could be worked out for August 1956.
A chained melody
Meanwhile, Spike and Peter took the Goons into the commercial recording arena by making a 78rpm record for Parlophone - without Harry, whose recording contract was with Philips. Playing Eccles and Bluebottle, the duo recorded a comical cover version of Jimmy Young's chart-topping hit Unchained Melody. On the flipside, listeners would hear Minnie Bannister and Henry Crun warbling Dance with Me, Henry. Recording took place at EMI Studios on Abbey Road, London on Wednesday 29 June, but the owners of Unchained Melody objected to the send-up. ‘The Goon record has been chained up for the time’; noted the Daily Mirror on Thursday 15 September, ‘It will be released when the publishers give the word.’
From Monday 1 August, Harry, Spike and the show's harmonica player Max Geldray performed on a number of week-long variety bills on the Moss Empire circuit, with venues including the Brighton Hippodrome and the Southend Odeon. Peter was also in variety again at locations such as Chiswick Empire.
The looming arrival of ITV caused concern across the BBC. and on Friday 2 September, Peter Eton ruminated on the future of The Goon Show. 'Both Harry Secombe and Spike Milligan are now heavily embroiled in rather sordid Commercial Television negotiations which, if successful - and I sincerely hope they're not - may well mean the end of 'The Goons' after next April,' he wrote. Harry starred in another edition of Secombe Here! on Saturday 3, this time accompanied by Peter Sellers as his guest, while in the next show, Arenascope Presents OB Parade from Earls Court, Harry made an unexpected appearance with Spike Milligan and Eric Sykes on the live variety broadcast. Followmg this, Harry, Spike, Peter and Max united for a week in variety at the Bristol Hippodrome from Monday 5 September.
North America takes an interest
Before recording began, it was confirmed that the CBC in Canada was to start running The Goon Show from Thursday 29 September, while in the USA, NBC would take it at 8.30pm from Thursday 3 November. Spike was deeply appreciative of these sales, writing to the BBC's Head of Variety Pat Hillyard on Monday 10 October to say ‘I believe you put yourself out and went above certain authorities to do so. For this I would like to thank you very much.’ Hillyard replied, ‘The important thing about all this is, I think, that we should be able to share a common sense of humour, and congratulations to you, Spike, for blazing the trail!’
Over the summer, Spike's co-writer, Eric Sykes, had been writing The Howerd Crowd and TV shows for Max Bygraves, and would only contribute to the first couple of programmes in the new run of The Goon Show. However, the structure Eric had brought to the series over the previous year stood Spike in good stead to deliver increasingly tight and polished scripts; Count Fred Moriarty and Grytpype-Thynne continued to hatch all manner of plots to ensnare the luckless Ned Seagoon. Nevertheless, the writing was still a strain for Spike. ‘It was all fun for Peter and me,’ recalled Harry, ‘Spike had the worst of it. He had to stay bock and get on with the work half the time. He had the responsibility.’
Meanwhile on the music front, since the previous series Judd Proctor had replaced guitarist Don Fraser in the line-up of the Ray Ellington Quartet. The first show, The Man Who Won the War, was a parody of the recent vogue for war-time best-sellers, such as 1954's Reach for the Sky about air ace Douglas Bader, or The Colditz Story written by POW Pat Reid.
A new character
A new decrepit character to join Minnie and Henry was created for Harry to play: the toothless Uncle Oscar who made infrequent appearances in later series. The popular Eccles and Bluebottle begin to appear together more often, and following on from the previous year's nonsense phrase of ‘ying-tong iddle-i-po’, Ned Seagoon's new gibberish was 'needle nardle noo'. In terms of performance, Peter also now played Crun with a marginally deeper voice. The Man Who Won the War kicked off recordings on Sunday 18 September, and the Radio Times heavily promoted the return of the series the following Tuesday. ‘Danger! Goons at Play’ was an article by Richard Bennett in which Peter Eton discussed the show, explaining The new series is, of course, dedicated, like the others, to the destruction of humanity. The Goons are steadily and relentlessly decivilising the nation. 'The show claimed to have seven million addicts across the country hanging on catchphrases like Eccles' ‘It's good to be alive’ and Grytpype-Thynne's ‘You silly twisted boy’, while Spike cited his influences as Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, Stephen Leacock and Rabelais. With a cartoon of the Goons as balloons, the billing page announced ‘Anarchy returns to the air in the form of Harry Secombe, Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan who let loose on the army at 8.30 this evening.’ The Radio Times even retained a billing which included the show title and the increasingly fanciful synopsis from the front of the recording scripts.
Rigoletto on Bond Street
The debut show was warmly received in the Daily Sketch where John Balfour proclaimed, ‘The Goon Show is pure radio.’ Asked if he would try to take the series to television, Spike replied ‘Not a chance… This will always be radio…, Our listeners are fanatics. They stick with us. Because movies come in, oil-painting didn't go out, did it?’. Listening figures remained strong at around three million on the Home Service. However, Spike was less happy with plans to reschedule the recording planned for Sunday 30 October. A prior claim on the Camden Theatre by the music department meant the Goons would have to relocate to the Garrick and share the venue with the comedy show Take It From Here. A recording time of 3.45pm was suggested. An incensed Spike wrote to Patrick Newman to complain on Thursday 22 September, fuming ‘Anybody who comes to hear a show at 3.45 on a Sunday afternoon must be: (a) without a home (b) Gormless. Psychologically it is a bad time to perform a comedy show. It is like doing Rigoletto in the middle of Bond Street, but apparently my opinion does not matter any more. Go ahead, grind it out. Perhaps you would care to tell Milligan that this early recording is at his (and Seller's and Secombe's) request!!!’ was a handwritten note on this missive. Patrick Newman resolved the confusion in the coming weeks, asking Spike if he had ‘a lack of confidence in yourself’. ‘You Win’ declared Spike via Beryl on Thursday 29 September.
Playout changes
On Thursday 22 September, Harry featured on Associated-Rediffusion's ITV launch programme Channel Nine, and the new commercial network then carried ATV's The Harry Secombe Show on Saturdays from 24 September to 29 October, with scripts by Eric Sykes. Thus the second edition of ‘the extraordinary talking-type wireless Goon Show’ referred to Harry's work for ATV. the fact that Ray Ellington had announced his plans to marry actress Ann West (later known as Anita West) and saw a jubilant Major Bloodnok start to comment ‘I'm in condition tonight!’ The 7.30pm Light Programme repeat of The Goon Show kicked off on Saturday 1 October, having been precluded the previous week by an omnibus of The Archers; these generally attracted a couple of million listeners. Next day, the team recorded The Lost Emperor at the Aeolian Hall rather than the Camden. This show dropped the traditional play-out of Crazy Rhythm composed by Irving Caesar, Joseph Meyer and Roger Kahn in favour of Ira and George Gershwin's Oh, Lady Be Good!, and over the next two weeks the orchestra would sign-off with A Gal in Calico by Arthur Schwartz and then Jimmy McHugh's (and Dorothy Fields) tune On the Sunny Side of the Street before Crazy Rhythm was again adopted. Following recording of The Lost Emperor, Peter and Max teamed up for a week's variety at the Hippodrome, Ipswich.
Eccles Sings
The sudden changes of script which had plagued the end of the previous series returned. For the fourth show, Spike pulled his planned script, The Sale of Manhattan, and instead substituted a tale entitled Napoleon's Piano to be recorded on 9 October; the replacement script introduced Eccles singing popular songs such as Alan Lerner and Frederick Loewe's I Talk to the Trees (plus the novelty songs Close the Door and Twenty Tiny Fingers in coming weeks), phrases such as ‘Have a gorilla’ and even a mention of HMS Boxer, the ship which took Spike to Salerno in Italy in 1943. More topically, it referred to the UK's annexing of Rockall on 18 September, and the associated brass plaque ceremony. However, by now, the Radio Times has already been published with the wrong details. Napoleon's Piano was not taken by the Midlands, where coverage of the Norfolk and Norwich Triennial Musical Festival pre-empted it.
The General Overseas Service kicked off their broadcasts on Thursday 13 October when The Man Who Won the War was broadcast at 10.30am, 10.1S pm and 5.30pm the following day. With the next show, The Case of the Missing CD Plates, gags about Jimmy Young's current chart hit The Man from Laramie started to feature. Meanwhile, there was further rescheduling of planned shows. Although the Radio Times informed listeners that the following Tuesday they could hear The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu, the script delivered by Spike for recording on Sunday 23 October was Rommel's Treasure… as remarked upon by announcer Wallace Greenslade in the show itself. This replacement drew upon the 1942 Desert Campaign between the Allies and German-Italian forces of which Spike had been a part.
In the last week of October, Peter and Spike embarked upon a Goonish television venture, a filmed half-hour pilot episode spoofing British crime support films entitled The Case of the Mukkinese Battle-Horn. The script was mainly written by Larry Stephens (Spike's former writing partner on The Goon Show) while Dick Emery, who had deputised for Spike on the series in 1952/3, stood in for Harry. Characters such as Eccles, Henry and Minnie featured in this offering from Merton Park Studios, the home of Scotland Yard and other such references which Peter and Spike were sending up in an attempt to attract the British and American markets.
Goon trio sent to Coventry
‘Goon Trio Will Head Birthday Show Comedy Team’ announced the Coventry Standard on Friday 28 October, revealing that Spike, Harry and Peter would be together on stage for the city's birthday show for several weeks. After recording Foiled by President Fred – a story inspired by the deposing of President Juan Peron of Argentina following a revolution during September – on Sunday 30, the Goons travelled to the Midlands city where they appeared in the variety Birthday Show for the Coventry Hippodrome written by themselves along with Eric Sykes, Jimmy Grafton (the Goons' original editor and Harry's agent) and Larry Stephens. ‘This is a Birthday Treat to remember’ declared the reviews. Meanwhile, Harry released his first record from Philips: On with the Motley (Vesti la giubba).
The Radio Times is upset
After having printed a synopsis for Foiled by President Fred which bore no resemblance at all to the finished programme, the Radio Times decided that advance information was simply too unreliable, and from the show broadcast on Tuesday 8 November - Shangri-La Again!, a pastiche of the 1937 movie Lost Horizon based on James Hilton's novel - declined to print any further episode titles or synopses. Meanwhile, on Friday 4 November, the options to make thirteen further editions of The Goon Show were taken up by the BBC, with the shows to record from Sunday 18 December, with the formal contracts issued on Tuesday 15; with no recording on Christmas Day, the shows would continue taping from 1 January to 11 March at the Camden. Meanwhile, on Monday 14, the trio were contracted to record a special insert entitled Post Early for Christmas for Children's Hour, this was to be written by Eric Sykes.
Peter is a naughty boy!
Peter Eton was less than happy with Peter Sellers' behaviour when recording The International Christmas Pudding on Sunday 13 November: ‘He did something which put Harry off. In the Max Geldray number I […] told him to stick to the script. We went back […] and he started fooling about again, and I said, "If you do that again, I'll fire you." He thought I wouldn't dare, so he did it again, so I hod to fire him. Later he come back and apologised.’ Apologising to Pat Hillyard on Monday 14 November, Peter explained that the 'bother' was due to the ‘Extreme mental stress of the previous week’ and was ‘surprised and shocked at Peter Eton's attitude’ although admitting that he was in the wrong. Hillyard replied on Friday 18 that he took ‘the gravest view of your refusal to re-record the opening spot’ and wanted ‘an assurance that this sort of thing will not happen again.’ On Sunday 20 November, Peter responded to the BBC executive, saying that he had listened to the show in Coventry and felt that the show was unharmed by his behaviour, adding ‘A very well known Actor Producer who is on ardent Goon fan […] happened to mention that he thought it was the best show of the present series.’ Backing down from his suggestion of sabotage on Monday 21, Hillyard informed Peter, ‘So, for as I am concerned, the incident is forgotten, and I hope that you too will forget it.’
Peter, Harry and Spike were interviewed at the Hippodrome for the Midlands Home Service magazine programme What Goes On, broadcast to the local listeners early on the evening of Friday 18 November. That Sunday, the trio were back in London taping The Pevensey Bay Disaster. Unfortunately, the same day there was a serious derailment of a passenger train at Milton in which 11 people were killed. Suddenly a comedy show about a railway became decidedly less funny. In place of the recorded show, China Story - a popular edition from the previous series and one of Spike's favourites - was put out in its place on Tuesday, while the Light Programme replaced that week's Sunday repeat with Family Favourites on 'financial grounds.'
Peter Eton departs
Rather than sell The Case of the Mukkinese Battle-Horn to television, it was decided instead to screen it theatrically as a support film in the New Year. Meanwhile the deferred script The Sale of Manhattan was finally recorded on Sunday 27 November, after The Missing Christmas Parcel (Eric's insert for Children's Hour) taped at lunchtime; in this, the Goons emphasised that gifts and letters for Christmas needed to be sent before 19 and 21 December respectively. Then, during the following week, Peter Eton - the producer who had made The Goon Show a success since taking the helm in 1952 – announced that in early 1956 he would be leaving BBC Radio to become a producer at Granada Television.
Another postponed script, The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu, was taped on Sunday 4 December, and again contained gags directed at commercial television. A few days later on Thursday 8 December, The Missing Christmas Parcel kicked off the first quarter hour of Children's Hour, and even contained a brief contribution from senior BBC announcer John Snagge, a fan of the show who had contributed to Nineteen Eighty-Five the previous year.
Planning ahead for Christmas on Friday 9 December.Assistant Head of Variety Jim Davidson indicated that two programmes would have to be recorded on Sunday 18 December, and noted that one of these could be a fresh version of the unbroadcast The Pevensey Bay Disaster, but with all references to a train crash deleted. By now, the Coventry stage show was drawing to a close, with Spike rather dejected by some of the reception from local audiences whom he felt had not understood the finer aspects of his routine. Pinned to his dressing room door were notes which he had written reading, ‘Mr S Milligan died at 8.10 again - Dr Sproles Thirk’ and ‘For sale: Ten-minute act with recorded applause - then ghastly silence - Apply within.’ The show closed on Saturday IO December, and acidic asides to Coventry would feature in his forthcoming scripts.
The Lost Year was recorded at the Garrick on Sunday 11, and saw Harry's chart success with On with the Motley (which peaked at number 16) becoming a running gag for the team, while the script also made reference to BBC announcers - such as Leslie Mitchell – having defected to ITV stations. Peter too was about to hit the big time with acclaim for his role in The Ladykillers which premiered just before Christmas. With the stage show over, Spike appeared on BBC TV in Great Scott, It's Maynard while Peter and Max were in the variety bill Stars from the Goon Show at the Northampton New. Spike made minimal changes to The Pevensey Bay Disaster and, now entitled The Hastings Flyer — Robbed, it was recorded on Sunday 18 December before The Greenslade Story. This new script thrust Wallace Greenslade centre stage with a story built around him, and saw John Snagge drop in at the Camden Theatre to take part in the recording with gags about Harry's chart hit. In this show, Peter's semi-regular Lew character was specifically ATV impresario Lew Grade - partner to Val Parnell.
While Harry began rehearsals as Buttons in Cinderella at Manchester's Palace Theatre, Peter and Spike united for a BBC Light Programme show, The Listening Room, in which Peter Sellers would spoof The Critics and select as one of his records a new song by Spike. This was the nonsense piece entitled I'm Walking Backwards for Christmas, written by Spike on his way home one night on the tube because he was unimpressed with the festive pop music on offer. The song was taped at Portland Place on the afternoon of Wednesday 28 December and included – along with Parlophone's unreleased Dance with Me, Henry – in Peter's live broadcast later that evening. On Friday 23 December Jim Davidson informed producer Pat Dixon – one of the original champions of the Goons at the BBC – that from Sunday 15 January 1956, he would be shadowing Peter as the new ringmaster attempting to keep order on The Goon Show. That evening, Peter Sellers was massively impressed with the zany quality of The Dick Lester Show from Associated-Rediffusion, and phoned the writer/director, suspecting that he and Spike had found the creative force to bring the Goons to television in 1956…
Programme notes, episode notes and cast biographies researched and written by Andrew Pixley
Episodes
Music
Episode # | Show | Artist | Song(s) | Writer(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | The Man Who Won the War (a.k.a. Seagoon MCC) |
Max Geldray | You Go to My Head | J Fred Coots Haven Gillespie |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Razzle Dazzle | Charles Calhoun | ||
2 | The Secret Escritoire | Max Geldray | Someone to Watch Over Me | George Gershwin Ira Gershwin |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Play It, Boy | Matt Dubey Harold Karr | ||
3 | The Lost Emperor | Max Geldray | The Peanut Vendor | arr: Moisés Simons |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Lover Come Back to Me | Sigmund Romberg Oscar Hammerstein II | ||
4 | Napoleon's Piano | Max Geldray | Ain't Misbehavin' | Harry Brooks Fats Waller / Andy Razaf |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Bloodshot Eyes | Hank Penny Ruth Hall | ||
5 | The Case of the Missing CD Plates | Max Geldray | The Lady Is a Tramp | Richard Rodgers Lorenz Hart |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Cloudburst | Claude Cloud arr. Bill McGuffie | ||
6 | Rommel's Treasure | Max Geldray | Charmaine | Erno Rapee Lew Pollack |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Love Me or Leave Me | Walter Donaldson (music) Gus Kahn (lyrics) | ||
7 | Foiled by President Fred | Max Geldray | Have You Ever Been Lonely (Have You Ever Been Blue)? | Peter De Rose William J. Hill (as George Brown) |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | The Birth of the Blues | Ray Henderson Buddy G. DeSylva Lew Brown | ||
8 | Shangri-La Again | Max Geldray | Pete Kelly's Blues | Ray Heindorf Sammy Cahn |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Rap Your Troubles in Drums | George Shearing | ||
9 | The International Christmas Pudding | Max Geldray | Me and My Gal | George W. Meyer Edgar Leslie E. Ray Goetz |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | The Crocodile Crawl | Sam Coslow | ||
10 | The Pevensey Bay Disaster | Max Geldray | One, Two, Button Your Shoe | Johnny Burke (lyrics) Arthur Johnston (music) |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | I Want You To Be My Baby | Jon Hendricks | ||
11 | The Sale of Manhattan (a.k.a. The Lost Colony) | Max Geldray | Baia | Ary Barroso |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | I Love to Ride | Campbell | ||
12 | The Terrible Revenge of Fred Fu-Manchu | Max Geldray | Exactly Like You | Dorothy Fields Jimmy McHugh |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | We'll All Go Riding On a Rainbow | Harry M. Woods | ||
Special | The Missing Christmas Parcel | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — | ||
13 | The Lost Year | Max Geldray | Blue Star | Victor Young |
The Ray Ellington Quartet |
|
| ||
14 | The Greenslade Story | Max Geldray | One, Two, Button Your Shoe | Arthur Johnston (music) Johnny Burke (lyrics) |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Jingle Bells (a.k.a. One Horse Open Sleigh)[c] |
James Lord Pierpont | ||
15 | The Hastings Flyer — Robbed | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — | ||
16 | The Mighty Wurlitzer | Max Geldray | I'm in the Mood for Love | Dorothy Fields Jimmy McHugh |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Late Night Final | — | ||
17 | The Raid of the International Christmas Pudding | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — | ||
18 | Tales of Montmartre | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — | ||
19 | The Jet-Propelled Guided NAAFI | Max Geldray | I'm Just Wild About Harry | Noble Sissle (lyrics) Eubie Blake (music) |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Three-Handed Woman | — | ||
20 | The House of Teeth | Max Geldray | St. Louis Blues | WC Handy |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Who's Got the Money? | — | ||
21 | Tales of Old Dartmoor | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — | ||
22 | The Choking Horror | Max Geldray | 'S Wonderful | George Gershwin Ira Gershwin |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Cloudburst | Claude Cloud arr. Bill McGuffie | ||
23 | The Great Tuscan Salami Scandal | Musicians' Strike | — | — |
Spike Milligan | I'm Walking Backwards for Christmas | — | ||
24 | The Treasure in the Lake | Max Geldray | I'm Beginning to See the Light | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet |
|
| ||
Special | The Goons Hit Wales | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — | ||
25 | The Fear of Wages | Max Geldray | Side by Side | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet |
|
| ||
26 | Scradje | Max Geldray | Sweet Lorraine | Cliff Burwell (music) Mitchell Parish (lyrics) |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Hold Him Tight | — | ||
27 | The Man Who Never Was | Max Geldray | Makin' Whoopee | Walter Donaldson (music) Gus Kahn (lyrics) |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | Will You Still Be Mine? | Tom Adair Matt Dennis | ||
Special | China Story | Max Geldray | — | — |
The Ray Ellington Quartet | — | — |
Playouts
The usual playout for series six is Crazy Rhythm in C, whereas in the fifth series it was played in F. Enterprise attacks the band for a few weeks in this series; the playout of 6/3 is Oh, Lady Be Good! that of 6/4 is A Gal in Calico from the 1946 film The Time, The Place and The Girl and in 6/5, the playout is On The Sunny Side Of The Street. Where the original playout exists it was been used (in Compendium 3). Where it does not, is in poor quality, incomplete or obscured by TS announcements, Kendall reconstructed complete versions using what could be salvaged from available material.
Snatches of ancient dance music appear in several shows - these are from HMV B 1588, recorded by Jack Hylton and his Band in 1923. Usually, Just Like A Thief is used, but in The International Christmas Pudding, when Seagoon threatens to form a new show band, the other side, Greenwich Witch, is played.
Note
- ^ Recorded 20 November 1955
- ^ Postponed from 22 November 1955
- ^ Because of the seasonal nature of the Quartet number, on the Transcription Reissue this was replaced by ABC Boogie (Max Spickol/Al Russell) taken from The Whistling Spy Enigma or The Mystery of the Marie Celeste (solved).[2]
- ^ a b Pixley, Andrew; Kendall, Ted (2009). The Goon Show Compendium Volume Three (Series 6 – Part 1) (CD). BBC Audiobooks. booklet 1, p. 9; booklet 2, pp. 8, 11, 14. ISBN 978-1-4084-1044-8.
- ^ Kendall, Ted (2009). The Goon Show Compendium Vol 3 (Booklet 2). BBC Worldwide. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-4084-1044-8.