The Great Statue Debate
"The Great Statue Debate" | |
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The Goon Show episode | |
Episode: no. | Series: 8 Episode: 26 |
Written by | |
Announcer | Wallace Greenslade |
Produced by | Charles Chilton |
Music |
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Recording Number | TLO 51440 |
First broadcast | 24 March 1958 |
Running time | 35:11 |
SHOW 8/26: The Great Statue Debate (CD 6,Track I)
Pre-recording: Sunday 23 March 1958, 6.30pm, Camden. DLO 51440B.
Recording: Sunday 23 March I 9S8, 9pm, Camden. TLO 51440.
First Home Service Braadcart: Monday 24 March 1958, 8.30pm. Ratings: 1.5 million. RI: S8.
Repeot: Thursday27 March 1958, IOpm,2.3 million [Light Programme].
The Great Statue Debate is an episode from The Goon Show. It is the twenty-sixth, and final show, in the eighth series.
A pre-recording (DLO 25010) session took place Sunday 19 January 1958, 5pm. at The Camden Theatre, Camden Town, London. The recording (TLO 22507) for transmission was created later that same Sunday, also at The Camden, at 9pm.
The first Home Service broadcast was the next day, Monday, at 8.30pm 20 January 1958, its ratings were 2.6 million.
The show was repeated on the following Thursday at 9.30pm, 26 December 1958, on the Light Programme to 2.3 million listeners.
- Friday 9.30pm, 6 March 1964 on the Home Service in Vintage Goons, to 0.5 million listeners.
- Friday 9.30pm, 20 August 1965 on the Home Service in Let's Laugh Again, to 0.2 million listeners (the broadcast was affected by a fault on the reproduction equipment).
Transcription Service Synopsis
Picture if you can, England's Parliament – five-hundred and thirty politicians and one man – tramping the country, and at their head an ordinary tobacco statue of James the Second (believed to be dead). This is the climax to the otherwise unbelievable story of a Homeless Government and its efforts to find a suitable house! You can't get the wood you know!
Music
- The BBC Radio Orchestra was conducted by Wally Stott
- Max Geldray plays Paper Moon (Harold Arlen (music)
Yip Harburg (lyrics)
Billy Rose (lyrics)) - The Ray Ellington Quartet plays Lady Mac (Duke Ellington
Billy Strayhorn)
Technical
Originally recorded on TLO 51440 (15 ips ¼" tape recorded at Broadcasting House).
The TLO 51440 master tape no longer exists, and the version of the show included on The Goon Show Compendium Vol 8 was compiled from the TGS disc, the POTG master tape and domestic recordings of both the original transmission and the 1964 repeat.[1]
8/26 - The Great Statue Debate. Originally recorded on TLO 51440. This tape no longer exists, and this issue has been compiled from a tape in the Bernie Andrews collection, the TGS disc and a domestic recording of the original transmission.This version includes several gags which were edited out of the original transmission version, plus the unused playout and the Goons' goodnight to the studio audience. Bill Greenslade's query about the recording is addressed to Bobby Jaye, the panel Studio Manager on this series.
Show Notes
- The final recording of the run came on Sunday 23 March with The Piano Clubber (a.k.a. The Dreaded Piano Clubber) for the Transcription Service and The Great Statue Debate for the Home Service. This new script was another collaboration between Spike Milligan and John Antrobus and was inspired by a story in the Daily Express on Tuesday 4 March that the Ministry of Works had announced a plan to relocate the brass statue of King James II from Trafalgar Square to the Foreign Office, making way for a new bronze of Sir Walter Raleigh to commemorate the 350th anniversary of the founding of the Commonwealth of Virginia. The script also made references to Mrs Gerald Legge (i.e. socialite Raine McCorquodale), Minister for Housing Henry Brooke and the controversial Rent Act which had become law in July 1957, and even a supposed message from Sir Ian Jacob that the show was under-running!
- ‘They've never had it so good’ - a remark made in 1957 by Harold Macmillan, the Prime Minister of the day, about the degree of affluence among the population in general. This was indeed a time of rising living standards, although growth was uneven – Greenslade talks of ‘the recession’ in the opening of The Great Statue Debate.
References
- ^ Kendall, Ted (2012). The Goon Show Compendium Vol 8 (Booklet 2). BBC Worldwide. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-4458-2560-1.