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20 years of chuckles

(September 2007)

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NI
Nini
all new Phil posted:
Anyone who dares to criiticise the Chuckle Brothers deserves to be slapped in public.

This is a conundrum if ever there were one, can't tell if you're being sarcastic or not given your dry wit and all.

The Chuckle Brothers are not sacrosanct from those who may disagree with others who do not find two middle-aged guys who make The Krankies seem somewhat less like a lucid LSD flashback humorous. Some people even think they were dead or one died and replaced or something, still not upping their funny ante unless you're under the age of 8 or just pre-disposed to laughing at things at the level of the basic banana skin joke. But if I cannot rag on the Chuckles then at least let me say something about The Krankies, at least they're truly creepy.
:-(
A former member
the Krankies

But their Fan'dabi'doz
RU
russnet Founding member
[quote="Nini"]
all new Phil posted:
But if I cannot rag on the Chuckles then at least let me say something about The Krankies, at least they're truly creepy.


Just please don't tell me the little boy Krankie is in fact a grown up woman.
LL
Lottie Long-Legs
Paul and Barry are legends. Game over.
TV
tvarksouthwest
jrothwell97 posted:
Twenty years too long I say.

Bear in mind that one member of the ChuckleVision writing team is a regular contributor of gems recovered from his N1700 collection on MHP...
BH
BillyH Founding member
That's the same guy?! Wow!

I have this vision of him dealing with a twisted N1700 tape by saying "Oh dear, oh dear oh dear" now...
TV
tvarksouthwest
Some of them are twisted; that's why TV Ark only has two single stills of the BBC1 Christmas ident for 1979, as opposed to a clip.
WE
Westy2
623058 posted:
I thourgh I would put it in here:

can you believe it its been 20 years!

I have never actually watch them, unless nothing else was on, but there not that bad.

didn't their start on 08/.15 from Manchester ?

Quote:
The Chuckle Brothers - AKA Barry and Paul Chuckle - celebrate 20 years of their BBC children's show ChuckleVision this week.

At the Bide-A-Wee retirement home, two old men step gingerly from the doorway.

Suddenly, one of them slips on a banana skin, sending him flying in the air and onto his back with a groan.


The Chuckle Brothers in 1996
The brothers' first BBC series was called Chucklehounds

In Pictures: Filming the show

But no-one rushes to help the old man to his feet. Instead, a peal of laughter sounds from the people standing nearby.

The 'old' men are none other than the Chuckle Brothers - purveyors of banana skins, custard pies and mushy peas - and they are on the set of the latest series of their ChuckleVision children's TV show, near Watford.

Ask most children under the age of eight, and they will tell you: the Chuckle Brothers are hilarious. To them they are Eddie Izzard, Ricky Gervais and Russell Brand rolled into one.

It is also ChuckleVision's 20th birthday. The first ever episode aired on 26 September 1987.

"Twenty years, is that how long?" asks Paul, feigning amazement.

"It doesn't seem like 20 years. It feels like two or three," says Barry who, at 63, is three years older than his brother.

"After 20 years we are still coming up with new ideas, which is amazing."

To me, to you


The gags and the funnies, the falling on your backside or walking into a door or into a lamppost is age-old comedy
Paul Chuckle
When children come face-to-face with the Chuckle Brothers they squeal with delight, or regard them with shy reverence. Students have been known to bow down at their feet.

But it is their To Me, To You catchphrase that is recognisable to most. And if they don't use it during one of their regular stage shows, they know there's going to be trouble.

"Kids will say to us 'you didn't say it,'" says Paul. "They really want to hear it."

But while the catchphrase - rapidly delivered in their Yorkshire tones - was never intentional, it is now a firm favourite of removal men up and down the land.

"We've used it ever since we were kids at home, if we were moving a chair or something," says Barry.

Barry and Paul Chuckle
Barry (left) and Paul dress up as their 'Granddads' for an episode
"Then we did it in the first series of ChuckleVision, and people suddenly coming up to us and saying it."

Of the 300 ChuckleVision episodes made, Paul and Barry reckon the catchphrase is in 35%. They can't remember how many times they have fallen over.

ChuckleVision has taken the brothers to the moon and in search of the Loch Ness Monster. They have been golfers, plumbers, and even turned their hand to chimney sweeping.

Today they are a little greyer around the whiskers, but their enthusiasm is undimmed.

Double-act

There is vague talk of retirement, but these graduates of RADA - Rotherham Academy of Dramatic Arts, if you please - admit they know little else.

The brothers come from a family of entertainers. Their father, Gene Patton, was a comedian, their mother a dancer, while two of their older brothers, Jimmy and Brian, have their own long-running double act.

Chuckle Brothers
The new series of ChuckleVision will be screened next year

Showbiz, they say, runs through them like lettering on a stick of seaside rock.

The brothers' act won the ITV talent show New Faces in 1974, but contractual problems meant they could not take up TV offers. By the time they could, producers had given up trying.

So they made a living peddling their end-of-pier style show around provincial theatres and pantomimes, eventually landing their big TV break in the unlikely setting of Ashton-under-Lyne, Greater Manchester, in the mid-1980s.

"We were asked to do a tour with Ward Allen, the ventriloquist with a big dog," explains Paul.

"So we went to Ashton-under-Lyne, and one afternoon there were 28 people. We thought we'd just go out and enjoy ourselves, which we did.

"What we didn't know was Martin Hughes and Peter Risdale Scott from the BBC were in the circle upstairs. We got a call the next day asking to meet us for lunch, and it has just gone from there."

Down with the kids

The brothers bounded onto children's TV in 1985 dressed as giant furry dogs in ChuckleHounds. The show was a hit, and two years later ChuckleVision was born.

After 20 years of inexpertly carrying furniture, falling down manholes, and slipping on banana skins, the Chuckle Brothers are still going strong, and they are still down with the kids. The reason, they say, is simple.

"Anyone can have a laugh at our type of comedy," says Barry.

Paul adds: "It's age-old comedy that goes back to Roman times. The gags and the funnies, the falling on your backside or walking into a door or into a lamppost is age-old comedy. If you hurt yourself, people think it's funny.

"As people get older they get talked into what they think should be funny by their peers. You are talked into finding things funny, instead of just watching. If something is funny, it's funny, if it's not, it's not.

"You can't do that with kids. You can't tell kids what is funny. They tell you."

#http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7012553.stm


Does the 'New Faces' appearence still exist? I assume not!
RM
Roger Mellie
buster posted:
Must be 20 years since the first Going Live as well in that case


I can confirm Going Live started twenty years ago-- confer BBC's cunningly titled I Love 1987 .

I didn't mind the Chuckle Brothers when I was a kid; I can't help but smile when they come on TV now-- maybe I'm getting soppy in my old age.

Thanks for the article anyway, and remember: No slacking!
PT
Put The Telly On
Paul and Barry were on that Celebrity Comic Relief does Hair cutting for charity programme thingy in March and they both seemed quite shy.
RM
Roger Mellie
nok32uk posted:
Paul and Barry were on that Celebrity Comic Relief does Hair cutting for charity programme thingy in March and they both seemed quite shy.


Really? Not so shy if an alleged incident at Doncaster Service Station is anything to go by Wink

I think they were interviewed on Calendar not so long ago, judging that Calender's Got Talent contest if I recall-- their comic magic is still there!

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