I am probably a Hancock heretic, but I don't find the show funny and I didn't first time around either. I wonder if some adherent of H's Half Hour would try and explain the magic? It ends for me after that tuba solo......
Hancock resurrected
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Humour is a very personal thing. I watched the Blood Donor last weekend for the first time in many years and still found it hilarious. Monty Python left me cold but my brother loved it (and still does).
Trying to explain the appeal of humour is like trying to explain a Picasso painting to a blind man."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostHumour is a very personal thing. I watched the Blood Donor last weekend for the first time in many years and still found it hilarious. Monty Python left me cold but my brother loved it (and still does).
Trying to explain the appeal of humour is like trying to explain a Picasso painting to a blind man.
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amateur51
It's all about the synergy between Galton & Simpson's scripts and Hancock's verbal dexterity, something that The Lad grew to realise too late, sadly.
IMHO, of course
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It was a great pioneer in the development of what has become a favourite type of English humour, namely the pricking of pretension. Hancock's bombast and self importance was in a direct line to Captain Mainwaring and others. The Hancock radio shows were also miracles of comic timing. I used to watch them standing around a microphone at the Playhouse, scripts in hand, and if I shut my eyes I could be in East Cheam!
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amateur51
It's so sad to watch him reading his lines from huge cardboard signs off-camera. He'd given up learning the lines, either because of the booze and pills or because of hubris about his 'talent', who knows? The fall was rather swift and unpleasant to watch.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostIt was a great pioneer in the development of what has become a favourite type of English humour, namely the pricking of pretension. Hancock's bombast and self importance was in a direct line to Captain Mainwaring and others. The Hancock radio shows were also miracles of comic timing. I used to watch them standing around a microphone at the Playhouse, scripts in hand, and if I shut my eyes I could be in East Cheam!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIt's all about the synergy between Galton & Simpson's scripts and Hancock's verbal dexterity, something that The Lad grew to realise too late, sadly.
IMHO, of courseI keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI am probably a Hancock heretic, but I don't find the show funny and I didn't first time around either. I wonder if some adherent of H's Half Hour would try and explain the magic? It ends for me after that tuba solo......
Why, that's very nearly an armful.
Does Magna Carta mean nothing to you? Did she die in vain?
To waste one second of one's life is a betrayal of one's self! I wonder what's on television?
What a nice man....... He's walked of with my wine gums!
I thought my mother’s cooking was bad, but at least her gravy used to move about a bit.
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amateur51
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostIn The Blood Donor just the way he says "AB rhesus negative" is an acting master-class in itself
That way madness lies.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI agree but I think that like, surprisingly, Laurence Olivier, he had a tendency to look too deeply into the workings. When Olivier did his corked-up Othello (I think), people told him that he was wonderful. His response was something like "I know I was, but how do I do it?"
That way madness lies.
'Oooh! Just above this flabby chin'.
Reminds me of the delights of Uncle Mac and Saturday mornings.
The "H for Hancock Calling" segment taken from 'The Diary' episode of 'Hancock's Half Hour' Radio Series 4. One of my favourite pieces of radio comedy ever f...
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI was a child and can remember Hancock being one of the few things on the radio I really loved (along with Goons, Journey into Space)
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Don Petter
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI'd almost forgotten about Journey Into Space. I just looked it up in Wikipedia where there is an article about it of mind-numbing detail.
[Department One, Keynsham, spelt K-E-Y-N-S-H-A-M, Bristol]
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