TIM BROOKE-TAYLOR. Born Timothy Julian Brooke-Taylor in Buxton,
Derbyshire, 17 July 1940. Attended Cambridge University. Married
Christine Wheadon in 1968; children: Ben and Edward. Acted with
the Cambridge Footlights Revue while at university; subsequently
wrote for various 1960s comedy series and co-starred in
The Goodies;
later appeared in situation comedies and consolidated reputation
as radio performer. Address: Jill Foster Ltd, 3 Lonsdale Road, London
SW13 9ED, U.K.
TELEVISION
SERIES (selection)
1962-67
On the Braden Beat
1966-67 The Frost Report (co-writer)
1966-67 At Last the 1948 Show (also producer)
1970-80, 1981-82 The Goodies
1984-88 Me and My Girl
1987 You Must Be the Husband
FILMS
Twelve
Plus One; The Statue; Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
RADIO
I'm
Sorry, I'll Read That Again; I'm Sorry, I Haven't a Clue; Hello
Cheeky; Does the Team Think?; Loose Ends; The Fame Game; Hoax.
RECORDINGS
Funky
Gibbon; The New Goodies LP; The Goodies' Beastly Record; The Least
Worst of Hello Cheeky; The Seedy Sounds of Hello Cheeky.
STAGE
The
Unvarnished Truth; Run for Your Wife; The Philanthropist.
PUBLICATIONS
Rule
Britannia; Tim Brooke-Taylor's Golf Bag; Tim Brooke-Taylor's Cricket
Box.
See
also Cleese,
John
Tim Brooke-Taylor
has established himself as a familiar face on British television
since making his first appearances in the early 1960s, when he was
one of a celebrated generation of young new comedians and comedy
writers to emerge from the famous Cambridge University Footlights
Revue.
Brooke-Taylor
began his television career working for On the Braden Beat,
which was one of a flood of innovative new comedy shows to be created
around 1962 to 1964. Subsequently he teamed up as a writer with
future Monty Python star Eric Idle on The Frost Report and
also contributed as writer and performer to the spin-off series
At Last the 1948 Show, on which his collaborators were John
Cleese, Marty Feldman, Graham Chapman and Aimi Macdonald, under
the leadership of David Frost as producer. This last show was a
significant step forward in British television comedy, having a
distinctly surreal air with its unconnected sketches and eccentric,
often slapstick humour, which with the benefit of hindsight paved
the way for the Monty Python series, among other successors.
After teaming
up as straight man to Marty Feldman on Marty, Brooke-Taylor
entered upon the most successful collaboration of his television
career to date, completing a highly popular comedy trio with Graeme
Garden and Bill Oddie in The Goodies. Oddie, Garden and Brooke-Taylor
had in fact already worked together once before with some success,
first developing their sparky three-man act in the series Twice
a Fortnight in 1967. Anarchic, weird and often hilarious, The
Goodies sought to save the world from such bizarre threats as
a marauding giant kitten and a plague of Rolf Harrises. Pedalling
into action on a beflagged three-seater bicycle, the trio were purveyors
of a more slapstick, lighthearted brand of comedy than their counterparts
in Monty Python and consequently appealed to a wider age
range, with many fans in their teens or even younger.
Much of the
humour evolved from the contrasting, and ludicrous, personalities
of the three heroes. While Graeme Garden was the obsessive boffin
who dreamt up all manner of wacky schemes to save the world and
Bill Oddie was a short, scruffy hippy with a strong cynical streak,
Tim Brooke-Taylor was the cleancut patriot in union jack waistcoat,
always ready with a rousing Churchillian speech when things looked
bleak but first to bolt when danger reared its head. Targets of
the humour included a range of contemporary fads and issues, from
satirical swipes at the science-fiction adventure serial Dr.
Who to take-offs of the Hollywood western.
The series was
hugely successful, but ultimately it fell victim to the BBC's indecision
about whether it should be scheduled for adult or younger audiences
(despite pleas from the performers themselves it was broadcast relatively
early in the evening, thus restricting the adult content of the
material). The team switched to London Weekend Television in 1981
in the hope that they might fare better there, but there was no
real improvement and no more programmes were made after 1982.
After The
Goodies the three stars went their more or less separate ways,
Tim Brooke-Taylor managing to maintain the highest profile in subsequent
years. As well as establishing himself as a prominent panellist
on such long-running radio programmes as I'm Sorry I Haven't
a Clue he also developed a second television career in situation
comedy, starring in several efficient but fairly unremarkable series
in the 1980s and early 1990s. Perhaps the most successful of these
latter efforts was Me and My Girl, in which Brooke-Taylor
gave support as best friend (Derek Yates) of Richard Sullivan, an
advertising executive struggling to bring up a teenage daughter
on his own. Typical of other series that were greeted with only
lukewarm praise was You Must Be the Husband, in which Brooke-Taylor
was the startled uptight husband of a woman newly revealed as the
bestselling authoress of salacious romantic novels.
-David
Pickering