This Day In Bizarro History: Graham Chapman & Monty Python

Today marks the 40th birthday of Monty Python’s Flying Circus.  Yesterday was the 20th anniversary Graham Chapman‘s death.

It’s time for a Python Post.

I can’t say I’ve been a longtime fan of the Pythons.  I grew up a sheltered kid in rural America, and so never even heard of the Monty Python until I made it to college (just a few years after poor Graham Chapman left us).

But once there, I ran into a veritable army of geeks who seemed to speak a different language.  They’d been allowed to go off to Renaissance Fairs when they were teenagers (while I only heard about them on t.v.).  Heck, even my t.v. viewing was limited.  They’d gotten to watch t.v. shows like Mystery Science Theater 3000 (while my family was some of the last hold-outs against cable television).

But nothing made me more isolated than when they spoke this odd language of theirs.  High-pitched fake English accents yipping (sometimes drunkenly)  “We are the Knights Who Say Ni!  Your mother was a hamster and your father smelled of elderberries.”

Then they’d laugh.

I’d found out over time that the lines were from Monty Python and The Holy Grail.  In college, I’d watched The Holy Grail along with its superior successor, The Life of Brian.  I liked The Life of Brian, but didn’t know what the fuss was about.  What was it that led people to be so devoted to this stuff that they memorized the lines?

I thought the Python fans were just a brood of geeky histrionics united by their broken sense of humor.

Fast forward to this past summer.  My husband bought a boxed set of the BBC’s Monty Python’s Flying Circus (1/2 off at our local bookstore).

This was what the big deal was all about.

When I watched Flying Circus, I realized that I was enjoying an absurdist’s banquet.  I don’t want to take anything away from the Pythons later work (much of which I’ve yet to sample, to be honest).  But I’ve found that Flying Circus remains, some 40 years after its debut, the smartest program on television (okay, on DVD on television, but well, you get the point).

Yes, a lot of the humor is lost on me, as an American.  Flying Circus was, at its heart, a satire of the BBC (circa late-60s).  Some of the references must sail over my head.  Yet at its heart, the show was, I think, about taking any sacred cow and exposing it to a high-IQ, low-brow, absurdist roast.

In the world of Flying Circus, Great historical figures abound (often playing soccer football against each other, or competing in game shows, or making odd appearances in courtrooms).  Bishops strut around their neighborhood turf like Mafia dons, surrounded by an entourage of Luca Brasi-esque Priests.  CIA agents have their brains transplanted into dogs to perfect their disguise. Dysfunctional families compete for the honor of being the nation’s “Most Awful” brood, judged by a celebrity panel that would have made “The Gong Show” proud. Pantomime horses face a “life or death struggle” due to an economic downturn.

Skits stop without punch lines.  The fourth wall comes down.  Characters and situations reoccur out of place in the narrative.  Segues between skits blur reality and take storytelling in the fractal direction.  All of this decades before deconstruction became all the rage.

Such was the genius of Monty Python’s Flying Circus.

Which brings us to the late, great Graham Chapman.  Fans of Bizarro fiction should take note that it was Chapman’s influence that contributed the quality of high weirdness to much of Flying Circus. Chapman’s contribution to the writing of Python sketches was often to rev up the oddity to such a degree that it stopped being a change of degree and became a change of kind.

I consider Chapman a huge influence on the fiction I’ve begun to write as an author of Bizarro fiction, so I feel the need to give him the space he deserves.  Stay tuned for a Graham Chapman tribute in the next few days.

For more information on what the Pythons are up to these days, check out Python Online

This Day In Bizarro History: Talk Like a Pirate Day

On this date, in a year we do not know, the ex-wife of Mark Summers (aka, “Cap’n Slappy”, inventor of “Talk Like A Pirate Day” ) was born.  So the Cap’n chose this date, back in 1995, to inaugurate this splendid festival.

Unlike many other, older holidays (the origins of which are shrouded in mystery), the beginnings of “Talk Like A Pirate Day” are relatively well-known.  What wikipedia tells us is this:  Summers and his friend John Baur (aka, “Ol’ Chumbucket”) were competing in a grueling racketball match.  When one of the men let out a raucous “arrrggghh” during the match, they realized they were onto something and thought everyone should be encouraged to join into the fun.

Who knew pirates played racketball?

Anyway, the date of the match was actually June 6.  But, that was the anniversary of the D-Day Invasion of Normany (an event which, if my history is correct, no pirates had a hand in).  So, they changed it to a date which they knew that they’d remember:  the birthdate of Summer’s ex-wife.

No word on whether the divorce happened before or after Summers decided to designate the woman’s birthday “Talk Like A Pirate Day”.

This year, there’s quite a complication with Talk Like A Pirate Day, actually, as it falls at the same time as the Jewish High Holy Day of Rosh Hashanah.  One can only imagine the implications for services at temples and synogogues everywhere for those who observe both traditions (for example, for Jewish men, the delicate question is, which goes on top, the yamulke or the pirate hat?  And what does it sound like to hear the beautiful Jewish services spoken and sung like…pirates?).

Thank goodness Talk Like A Pirate Day never falls close to Christmas.  I can’t imagine the midwestern drawl of the folks at my church telling the story of the savior’s birth whilst hopping around on a fake pegleg and substituting an “Argggghh” for each “Amen”.

Fun Pirate Links To Help You Celebrate The Day
Monty Python’s Flying Circus:  Football (Soccer) Match Between Gynecologists and Long John Silver Impersonators (starts at about 1:50 into the clip)

The Official Talk Like A Pirate Web Site

The Talk Like A Pirate Day Wikipedia Page

This Day In Bizarro History

Patty_HearstOn this day in 1975… “Newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was captured by the FBI in San Francisco, 19 months after being kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army.” (source:  New York Times)

Ah yes, Patty Hearst!  A story that just oozes with ’70s quirkiness.  Old money!  Stockholm Syndrome!  John Waters!  (remember, Waters cast Hearst in small roles in no less than five of his films!)

I think for readers to really understand just how weird this story was, we have to remember the place of the Hearst Corporation in American publishing and broadcasting.  The Hearst family was (and, I guess, still is) a big deal.  To everyone under 30 who may have no clue who Patty Hearst was, just imagine if Paris Hilton was kidnapped by a group of political radicals and was then filmed participating with them in bank robberies!

In fact, the high degree of weirdness in this story sometimes obscures the more tragic aspects — such as Patty Hearsts’ claims to have been raped and physically assaulted after having been kidnapped (the alleged rapists died before they could be brought to trial).  These days, it’s all too easy to just think of the Patty Hearst story just in terms of its oddness, to think of Patty Hearst as a sort of comic book character, and not in terms of the extremely traumatic experience she must have endured.

But that having been said, she’s seemed to have found some peace by embracing her very odd claim to fame.  Her sentence was commuted by President Carter and she was later officially pardoned by President Clinton.

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