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I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again

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I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again was a long-running BBC radio comedy programme that originally grew out of the Cambridge University revue Cambridge Circus. It had something of a cult following and was broadcast initially on the BBC Home Service (renamed BBC Radio 4 in September 1967).

It was first broadcast on April 4 1964 and the eighth series was transmitted in November and December 1973. An hour-long 25th Anniversary show was broadcast in 1989. Humphrey Barclay was the producer until 1968 and from April that year the task was shared by David Hatch and Peter Titheradge.

The cast






  • Bill Oddie (became one of the three members of The Goodies). He has written many books, and has been an important spokesman on wildlife and ecological issues since c.1980. Bill Oddie wrote and performed a daft but well-crafted song in the middle of most programmes. He was co-writer (with Graeme Garden) of several episodes of the Doctor in the House television comedy series
  • Tim perfected an awfully upper-class high-pitched feminine voice for the ghastly Lady Constance de Coverlet, who would often arrive at the close of a lengthy adventure to a rapturous audience welcome. John and Jo developed poignant - almost romantic - dialogues as the respectable but dysfunctional couple "John and Mary", a forerunner of the relationship between Basil and Sybil later televised in Fawlty Towers.

    The influence of the radio series

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    As with Round the Horne, the cast's adventures would sometimes be episodic with cliff-hanger endings each week as with The Curse of the Flying Wombat. Christmas specials normally included a spoof of a traditional pantomime (or several combined). They had few qualms about the use of puns - old, strained or inventive - and included some jokes and catchphrases that would seem politically incorrect by the mid 1970s. Graeme's impressions of Eddie Waring (a rugby league commentator), Bill's frequent send-ups of the game-show host Hughie Greene and John's occasional but manic impressions of Patrick Moore (astronomer and broadcaster) built these people into eccentric celebrities in a way that the Mike Yarwood, Lenny Henry, Rory Bremner, Spitting Image and Dead Ringers programmes would do for other TV presenters with similar disrespect years later.
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    The show ended with an unchanging sign-off song which Bill Oddie performed as "Angus Prune". Spoof dramas were billed as Prune Playhouse and many parodies of commercial radio were badged as Radio Prune, but the name Angus Prune seemed as random and incidental as the name Monty Python, which appeared seven years later.

    Although the BBC radio shows ITMA, Much Binding in the Marsh, Take it from Here and Beyond Our Ken had conditioned listeners to accepting a mix of music, sketches and jokes within a 30 minute show, and Round the Horne was currently doing this, ISIRTA (as it was known to its friends), accelerated the transitions and certainly seemed more improvised. It was one of those programmes where you were unlikely to get all the jokes on first hearing so would have to listen to the scheduled repeat (or an illegal tape recording) to discover what you had missed. It thus helped prepare the television audience for At Last the 1948 Show, the Q Series from Spike Milligan and Monty Python's Flying Circus.

    It may also have influenced other fast-paced British radio programmes such as Radio Active , On the Hour, The Sunday Format, and The News Huddlines.

    Some of the cast also appear in the radio comedy quiz show I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue, which was originally a spinoff from ISIRTA but has outlived it by decades.

    Since December 2002, examples of ISIRTA can be heard on BBC 7 (available on the web, digital radio and digital television). Currently, it is broadcast on Mondays at 14.30 and Tuesdays at 06.30 hours (London time).

    Listeners in Australia can also frequently find ISIRTA in the 05:30 vintage comedy timeslot on Radio National.

    Catchphrases

    My name is Angus Prune
    and I always listen to I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again
    (You Don't!)
    My name is Angus Prune
    and I never miss I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again
    (Get Away!)
    I sit in my bath
    And I have a good laugh
    Cause the sig tune is named after me
    (Tell us yer name!)
    My name is Angus Prune
    And this is my tune
    It goes I-S-I-R-T-A
    I'm Sorry I'll Read That AGAIN!

    Episode titles

    10,000 BC (The Dawn of Civilization) -- Ali Baba and the 38 Thieves -- All Hands on Venue -- Beau Legs -- Boadicea -- The British Army -- Bunny and Claude -- Butler Dunnit -- Camelot -- Champion, the Wonder Mouse -- The Curse of the Flying Wombat (a serial) -- Dentisti -- Doctor Clubfoot of the Antarctic -- Doctor Why -- England in Medieval Times -- Films -- The Ghost of McMuckle Manse -- The Ghost of Objectionable Manor -- Goldilocks and Prince Valiant -- Incompetence -- Julius Caesar -- Lady Godiva -- Liverpool -- The Lone Stranger -- Macbeth -- My Man, Grimbling -- Operation Chocolate -- Othello -- The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire -- Robin Hood -- Robinson Prunestone -- Sir Prancelot -- Supernatural -- Teddy and Rupert Bear -- Voyages of Ulysses -- The Vikings -- William the Conqueror

    Episode roles and cast lists — in order of appearance

    "Robin Hood" — written by Graeme Garden and John Cleese

    Story narration — sung by David Hatch
    'Curtain' — Tim Brooke-Taylor
    Maid Marion — Jo Kendall
    Friar Tuck — Bill Oddie
    Robin Hood — Tim Brooke-Taylor
    Alan 'a Gabriel — Graeme Garden
    Will Scarlet — David Hatch
    Little John — John Cleese
    Sir Angus of the Prune — John Cleese
    Grimbling (the Bailiff) — Bill Oddie
    Sheriff of Nottingham — Graeme Garden
    Master of Ceremonies for the 'Archery Competition' — John Cleese
    Deputy Sheriff — Graeme Garden
    "The Curse of the Flying Wombat" — written by Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie
    'King Lear' — John Cleese
    Tim Brown-Windsor — Tim Brooke-Taylor
    Mr. Hatch — David Hatch
    Lady Fiona Rabbit-Vacuum (Jim-Lad) — Jo Kendall
    Captain Cleese — John Cleese
    'Lookout' — Bill Oddie
    Masher Wilkins — John Cleese
    Grimbling (Butler to Tim's Aunt) — Bill Oddie
    Lady Constance de Coverlet — Tim Brooke-Taylor
    Slave-girl trader — Bill Oddie
    Colonel Clutch-Featheringhaugh — David Hatch
    Nosebone (the Great White Hunter) — Bill Oddie
    Wong (the Supply-keeper) — Tim Brooke-Taylor
    Wong Tu (his brother) — John Cleese
    'Armand' — Bill Oddie

    External links


    I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again
    Tim Brooke-TaylorJohn CleeseGraeme GardenDavid HatchJo KendallBill Oddie


     


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