Dr. Who style Blackadder considered

This little snippet of info surfaced in a recent interview with Rowan Atkinson on the BBC website.

Asked why there had never been a Blackadder feature film, Atkinson said it was “surprisingly tricky” to expand the sitcom format to an hour and a half.

He doesn’t see a movie version ever happening. “We’ve all just gone our different ways, it’s very difficult to get people back together.

“It’s very difficult to create the comic creative consensus that we all enjoyed in the 1980s – the writers, producers and actors – and even if you get the same people together, they don’t necessarily have the same ambitions and attitudes.”

Atkinson, who in 1999 starred in a Doctor Who special for Comic Relief, said it had been “a secret ambition” of his at one stage to play the Doctor.

“I remember we were thinking of doing a Blackadder episode called Doctor Whom in which Blackadder would be effectively the Doctor and Baldrick would be his sidekick. But that never came to anything.”

Blackadder cast reunite for Dickensian BBC Comedy

Filming has started on BBC Two’s new comedy The Bleak Old Shop Of Stuff which will feature Stephen Fry and Tim McInnerny. Beginning with a one-hour Christmas special followed by three 30-minute episodes shown in early 2012, Stephen will portray evil lawyer Malifax Skulkingworm.

Other fine British comic actors appearing in the series include Robert Webb and David Mitchell along with Celia Imrie, Pauline McLynn and Katherine Parkinson.

Blackadder Remastered on iTunes

If you don’t own a DVD player and you have one of those new-fangled iPoddy thingies, then you’ll be pleased to know that you can buy Blackadder Remastered on iTunes for the princely sum of £19.99 (I’m not sure how much it costs in foreign money). It contains all the episodes from all four series and Blackadder’s Christmas Carol. Unfortunately, it doesn’t contain any of the additional content found on the DVD. In my opinion, it’s a waste of money.

But if you really must have it, go get it here.

Blackadder Soundboard for iPod/iPhone

Got an iPod Touch or iPhone? Want to listen to classic Blackadder phrases and quotes? Then you need the ‘OFFICIAL’ Blackadder Soundboard app!

According to the blurb on iTunes, the app features the best quotes from Blackadder, Baldrick and all your favourite characters. Also includes images taken directly from the show, allowing you to see the characters and you relive classic Blackadder moments.

Additional features include:

TIME DELAY – set a delay time and a sound clip, hide your phone and watch as your mates get a surprise.
SLIDESHOW – hear all the sounds with their images in a montage.
SHAKE – play a random quote.

Here’s a couple of lovely screenshots for your enjoyment.

The app is available to download now on iTunes priced at 69p.

 

Blackadder Remastered – The Ultimate Edition

It has been quite a while since I last updated Blackadder Hall; to be honest, there has been hardly anything of great worth to write about so the site has been ticking along on its own for the past couple of years.

However, time has come for me to do a little bit of updating here and there. First off, and yes, I know its been out for some time now, but there is a ‘new’ Blackadder DVD boxset; Blackadder Remastered – The Ultimate Edition [DVD].

What will one find on this DVD spectacular? Here’s the features list:

– Remastered series: The Black Adder, Blackadder II, Blackadder the Third, Blackadder Goes Forth
– New commentary by Rowan Atkinson and John Lloyd, Stephen Fry, Ben Elton and Richard Curtis, Tony Robinson and Tim McInnery
– Blackadder Rides Again: special 60-minute documentary to mark the 25th anniversary
– Exclusive extended interviews with Hugh Laurie, Rowan Atkinson, Richard Curtis and Ben Elton, Tony Robinson, Stephen Fry
– Costumes Revisited with Miranda Richardson, Patsy Byrne, Tony Robinson, Tim McInnery
– Plus Blackadder’s Christmas Carol, Blackadder the Cavalier Years, Blackadder Back and Forth, Baldrick’s Video Diary and more

The boxset is available to buy online from Amazon and is worth picking up if only to see me on Blackadder Rides Again.

A Blackadder Homage in Song

This just in from Blackadder fan Tarjei..
“This is just a link to a song I made, originally in 94, but I recorded it a couple of months ago, and made this (rather silly) slideshow in order to put it on youtube. Anyway, spot the quotes! Almost all the lyrics are snippets from blackadder 4, joined together. Greetings from a Blackadder fan in Norway.”

It’s fantastic!!! Well done Tarjei – I love it!

Blackadder meets Shakespeare – NOT Blackadder

Hot news just in.

I emailed writer Richard Curtis regarding the charity sketch that has for a long time been considered a ‘Blackadder’ special. Well, not wanting to be the bearer of bad news, I can confirm that this is NOT a Blackadder sketch. Rowan is simply playing an un-named character and not a member of the Blackadder family.

Blackadder Goes Forth to the West End

A week in the life of Rowan Atkinson. On Christmas Day, he and his wife Sunetra slipped quietly into a school in Kennington, south London, to bring some cheer to 2,000 troubled children brought together by the charity Kids Company. The comedian’s eyes welled up with tears, said one witness.

That night, Atkinson was interviewed for a BBC1 documentary celebrating 25 years of the comedy classic Blackadder. Looking ill at ease in the role of Rowan Atkinson, he made the surprising disclosure that there was at least one episode of Blackadder Goes Forth he had never seen until he happened to find it on his in-flight entertainment. “I’m not a great laugher, sadly,” he admitted, “but I might have sniggered at it, which was my way of saying that was very funny.”

And yesterday he was due on stage for two preview performances of the musical Oliver!, produced by Cameron Mackintosh at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. It is testimony to his status as king of British comedy that, with little pedigree of stage acting and less singing, he is set to become the biggest attraction in London’s West End as the Jewish miser, Fagin. Unlike Alec Guinness in the controversial 1948 screen adaptation of Oliver Twist, Atkinson does not wear a prosthetic nose.

“I think the thing people will be most surprised about is the complexity of the character,” Rupert Goold, the production’s director, told the Observer. “I’m sure they expect him to be funny, but he’s delivered something that is really complex. Like Shylock, it’s one of those parts that you’d have a problematic relationship with because it’s been used as a rod to beat Jewish identity with. You can’t shy away from that. In the last preview I saw, Rowan had lost a little bit of his Jewish accent and I wanted that to come back because I don’t think it is an unsympathetic portrayal.”

Seldom has a performer been as inscrutably determined as Atkinson to let his work do the talking. An appearance on ITV1’s This Morning sofa became tortuous whenever the actor was asked a remotely personal question. He once refused to tell a journalist how many children he has. On another occasion, the Observer approached him at a party with an innocuous question about Blackadder; after an excruciatingly long pause, he replied: “No comment.” Even on Blue Peter, he appeared as Mr Bean rather than himself. His private persona, says Goold, is sometimes “like a ghost”.

Another Blackadder documentary, on the G.O.L.D. channel earlier this year, featured interviews with its writers Richard Curtis and Ben Elton and cast members including Robinson, Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie, Tim McInnerny and Miranda Richardson. All the old gang, in fact, except Atkinson.

Why the reticence? The evidence suggests that there is no great enigma, no great cliche about inner turmoil and the tears of a clown. Atkinson, who turns 54 next week, simply seems to lack the showbiz gene. He has a private hinterland of fast cars and family and the key to his brilliance may be that he sees it as nothing more and nothing less than a job. Goold added: “He’s got something that’s really important in comedy, which is taste, partly because he’s a very self-contained private man, so you don’t feel he’s somebody who’s desperate for a laugh. You get the sense that he would have the greatest 12 year old boy gift ideas.

‘Some comedians are so eager to have you love them that they’ll push that to the nth degree, whatever that takes, whereas with Rowan you feel he enjoys it like he enjoys the purr of the engine of one of his beloved cars. It’s a personal experience for him and that means he’s indifferent to vulgarity and cheap laughs.”

Tony Robinson, whose Baldrick tormented Blackadder with every “cunning plan”, echoes the sentiment. “He’s one of the few mega performers who genuinely has a full and fulfilling life away from showbusiness,” he said last week. “In my experience, I can’t tell you how rare that is. He has a beautiful wife and family and good on him. Yet he remains for me the consummate comedy performer of his generation.”

Robinson added: “He’s a very shy man, so it’s not like the first time that you meet someone such as Rik Mayall or Mel Smith where you’ve overwhelmed by the force of their personality. When he’s not working, you are unlikely to realise that he’s in the room, but as soon as he starts, all attention focuses on him, partly because of this extraordinary supreme talent that he’s got.”

Performing was not in his blood. Atkinson was the third son growing up on a 400-acre farm and attended Durham’s Chorister School aged 11, where he was teased by fellow pupils who thought he looked like an alien. Two years above him was Tony Blair, described by the school’s headmaster as “outgoing” compared with Atkinson, who was “shy with a slight stutter”. He went to Newcastle University and studied engineering, before arriving at Queen’s College, Oxford, for an MSc in engineering science.

When he turned up at the Oxford sketch writing group, he reminded fellow student Richard Curtis of a cushion: sitting on a chair and saying nothing. Curtis recalled: “I thought he was a stuffed toy because he didn’t say anything for the first three meetings – just a curiously shaped object in the corner. Then just when we were trying to decide what the material should be, and we’d all been handing in sketches for months, Rowan actually stood up and did two absolutely astonishing sketches.”

Atkinson dazzled at the Edinburgh Festival and toured with Angus Deayton as his straight man. At Amnesty International’s benefit, The Secret Policeman’s Ball, in 1979 he performed a hilarious sketch as a headmaster addressing a room of schoolboys. He then joined Mel Smith, Griff Rhys Jones and Pamela Stephenson in the vanguard of alternative comedy, the sketch series Not the Nine O’Clock News. Two years later, he became the youngest performer to have a one-man show in the West End.

Then came four series as Edmund Blackadder in the sprawling comical chronicle of English history now regarded as a gold-plated classic, ranking with or even surpassing Dad’s Army and Fawlty Towers. By the final series, set in the First World War trenches, Atkinson found in the character a cynical antihero worthy of Catch-22’s Yossarian. The climax touched greatness with Blackadder pretending to be mad in a failed bid to get out of the maddest situation in history.

“I just remember feeling the impending doom over my character,” Atkinson said. “I remember feeling this strange knot in the pit of my stomach. It was the first time as an actor that I had felt the predicament of my character. I was going to die at the end of the week.”

It has since been observed that the world is divided into two irreconcilable schools: fans of Blackadder and fans of Atkinson’s next manifestation, Mr Bean. The former, which started on BBC2, was Oxbridge satire with clever wordplay in the tradition of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore and Monty Python. The latter, on ITV, was physical humour with minimal dialogue in the tradition of Benny Hill. It has shown a similar ability to cross cultural boundaries, gaining audiences in a hundred countries. The 1997 film version, Bean, took £152m to become the most lucrative British film of all time and was followed by Mr Bean’s Holiday last year.

Atkinson, whose Eurosceptic brother Rodney is a former UK Independence Party candidate, made a rare foray into politics when he campaigned successfully against the government’s proposals to outlaw “incitement to religious hatred”, arguing that they would in effect criminalise the telling of Catholic, Jewish or Muslim jokes. He has had a mild flop, with the BBC TV series The Thin Blue Line and made several Hollywood appearances, although he once opined that the only film he was really proud of being in was Four Weddings and a Funeral

His 15 per cent stake in the film and TV company Tiger Aspect has helped generated a personal fortune estimated at anywhere from £65m to £100m. On a typical day, he is likely to be relaxing at his Chelsea townhouse or driving go-karts round the tennis court of his country pile, a former rectory in the Oxfordshire village of Waterperry.

The actor’s great extravagance is collecting vintage cars and driving them at events such as the Goodwood Festival of Speed. John Lloyd, his long-time producer, once summed Atkinson up thus: “He is certainly not a workaholic. He once said to me that he wasn’t bothered about going into showbusiness, but it was the only way he could find of affording the cars he wanted. I think that’s why, in interviews, he doesn’t think his private life is anybody’s business. There’s no article to be written airing his dirty laundry. He’s just a blameless family guy.”

So don’t expect Atkinson to treat the first-night reviews of Oliver!, including his ability to sing “You’ve got to pick-a-pocket or two, boys” eight times a week, as a matter of life and death. But equally, expect something special from a man who, like the best of wits, has nothing to declare but his genius.

The Atkinson Lowdown

Born: Rowan Sebastian Atkinson in Gosforth, near Newcastle, on 6 January 1955, the youngest of three sons of farmers Eric and Ella Atkinson. He married Sunestra Sastry, a make-up artist on Blackadder, at the Russian Tea Room in New York in 1990; they have two children, Lily and Benjamin.

Best of times: Critically, Blackadder, in which Atkinson coined immortal comic lines such as: “He’s madder than Mad Jack McMad, the winner of last year’s Mr Madman Competition.” Commercially, Mr Bean, in which his rubber face and elastic body earned comparisons with Chaplin, Keaton and Laurel.

Worst of times: A 1986 attempt to crack Broadway ended three weeks after New York Times critic Frank Rich condemned his “toilet humour”. In 2001, the pilot of a Cessna plane in which Atkinson and his family were flying from Mombasa to Nairobi passed out, but Atkinson took the controls and saved the day.

What he says: “Sometimes I wonder what I’m doing in showbusiness. It’s as though I wandered in accidentally and there’s no way out. People who meet me think, ‘What a miserable git.’”

What they say: “Rowan has not one ounce of showbiz in his life. It is as if God had an extra jar of comic talent and for a joke gave it to a nerdy, anoraked northern chemist.” Stephen Fry, Blackadder co-star and best man at Atkinson’s wedding.

Source: Guardian Unlimited

Never seen Blackadder footage and Pilot episide snippets to be broadcast

Hot news just in Blackadder fans; the forthcoming TV documentary Blackadder Rides Again (Christmas Day BBC1 10:30-11:35) will feature some never-before-seen footage…. Here’s what you can expect..

  • A small sequence from the Pilot Episode that has never been broadcast on TV
  • One or two deleted or extended scenes from Series 1
  • Some “clean” footage from the various title sequences of series one (i.e. without the captions)
  • One of the specially shot trailers for Blackadder II (although it’s not best quality) *could be what I have on YouTube
  • Some studio footage from Blackadder Goes Forth
  • Blackadder Goes Forth rehearsal footage
  • The raw footage of the “over the top” sequence from the final episode
  • And a little, tiny glimpse of some backstage stuff from Blackadder Back And Forth
  • There’s also some rare photos I believe

It’s all there to tell the story of the show, so the clips are really there to illustrate what’s being said. Sadly the quality of the studio recording footage from “Potato” wasn’t good enough, so it couldn’t be featured.

Also, my appearance is towards the end of the programme and leads in to the big question of will there be a fifth series.

Blackadder Rides Again broadcast on Christmas Day

ust found out that Blackadder Rides Again will be broadcast on BBC1 on Christmas Day at 10:30pm.

Oh, and just found out that I’m going to be in it… I’ve only got a small part but it still requires me to sign a release form.

Consider me excited!