Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Royal Canadian Air Farce

Encyclopedia : R : RO : ROY : Royal Canadian Air Farce


Royal Canadian Air Farce is a Canadian radio and television show, broadcast on CBC Television.

The show, a weekly topical sketch comedy series, focuses on political and cultural satire, and is one of the most popular Canadian television shows. It was aired as a radio show from 1973 until its television debut in 1993. It is still on the air to this date.

Cast (TV show)

Former cast members (TV show)

History

The group started in Montreal, Quebec in 1970 as an improvisational theatre revue called The Jest Society, a play on then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's famous goal of making Canada a "Just Society".

After a number of personnel changes, the group became "The Royal Canadian Air Farce" in 1973 with a lineup that consisted of Abbott, Ferguson, Goy, Morgan, Broadfoot and non-performing writers Gord Holtam and Rick Olsen. They debuted on CBC Radio that year, and quickly became one of the network's most popular programs. They travelled throughout the country to record their weekly radio broadcasts, which featured a mixture of political and cultural satire.

Recurring characters included addle-brained hockey player Bobby Clobber (Broadfoot), Sgt. Renfrew of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Broadfoot), Mike from Canmore (Morgan), and socialite Amy De La Pompa (Morgan), along with political figures such as Brian Mulroney, Joe Clark and Pierre Trudeau. Additional characters included Prof. Hieronymus Wombat of the National Research Council, and funeral director Hector Baggley.

Another recurring character, making vacant-minded political comments, was the Honourable David J. Broadfoot, member of Parliament for Kicking Horse Pass, and leader of the New Apathetic Party. In a fall 1979 sketch, the troupe spoofed that year's election: the Liberals and New Democratic Party formed an alliance, as did the Progressive Conservatives and the Social Credit Party. Each won 132 seats in a 265 seat house. Broadfoot won the 265th seat. Asked by the media what he would do when the House of Commons met, Broadfoot said boldly, "I shall... abstain!!!"

Some popular sketches in the late 1980s and early 1990s included "joint broadcasts" by CTV and CBC, overlaying opening theme music. When The Journal debuted on CBC in 1982, Air Farce spoofed the program's repeated use of the "sounder", and the use of satellite to connect people to talk to one another (including husband in living room to wife in the kitchen), as well as the seeming similarity between original hosts Barbara Frum and Mary Lou Finlay.

The original Royal Canadian Air Farce television show, 1980
Enlarge
The original Royal Canadian Air Farce television show, 1980

The Farce troupe recorded a one-hour television special in 1980, which evolved into a ten-week series and two sequel specials in addition to their regular radio series. The shows were essentially staged versions of the radio show, with many of the sketches performed in front of a live studio audience, the cast members reading from scripts rather than acting out the roles. Despite the decent ratings for the initial special, simply staging the radio sketches did not translate well on television.

In the early 1980s, Air Farce's summer radio hiatus periods were filled by another comedy troupe, The Frantics, who later moved on to their own TV series, Four on the Floor. Later summer hiatus periods, however, were filled by Ferguson and Abbott playing classic comedy recordings. In the late 1980s, CBC Radio launched another 30-minutes weekly political satire, Double Exposure. Though the programs were never in direct competition, some found the latter show fresher and edgier.

In 1992, Air Farce took a second plunge into television with 1992: Year of the Farce, a satirical New Year's Eve special. A ratings smash, the special led the troupe to produce another weekly television series, which debuted in 1993. However, this time the move to television was permanent, and the radio series was discontinued. Broadfoot retired from the troupe when they moved to TV, although he continued to make occasional guest appearances. The practice of having a show on New Year's Eve continues to this day, and such episodes are typically titled "Year of the Farce". In recent years, Air Farce has also had the honour of counting down the seconds before the New Year on CBC.

Recurring characters on the TV series included commentators Mike from Canmore (Morgan) and Jock McBile (Morgan), movie critic Gilbert Smythe Bite-Me (Abbott), bingo player Brenda (Goy), and political and cultural figures such as Jean Chrétien (Abbott), Preston Manning (Ferguson), Sheila Copps (Goy), Lucien Bouchard (Ferguson) and Paul Martin (Ferguson).

However, Colonel "Teresa" Stacy (Ferguson) quickly emerged as the show's most popular character -- each time he appeared, Stacy would load up the Chicken Cannon and fire rubber chickens and other assorted projectiles at whomever he deemed the most annoying public figure of the week (or year).

Morgan retired from Air Farce in 2001, and the remaining three members carried on with a rotating stable of guest stars until Holmes joined the show in 2003. Holmes added celebrity figures such as Paris Hilton and Liza Minnelli, and Canadian politicians such as Belinda Stronach, to the troupe's roster of characters.

Later, in 2005, after a lockout at CBC, Air Farce gained two new cast members, who had previously appeared on the show as recurring guest stars: Alan Park and Craig Lauzon. The addition of these two newcomers brought the total number of performers in the troupe to six.

While the show is held up as de facto Canadian tradition, some critics have felt that that the television show's quality has diminished over the past few seasons. However, it still continues to draw solid ratings each week.

Sketches

Recurring sketches

Some of the recurring sketches on Air Farce include: right right right right right right

Individual sketches

Some of Air Farces' famous individual sketches include:

Politically-correct version of \"O Canada\"

In response to criticisms from different groups about O Canada's lyrics, Air Farce had guest star Seán Cullen sing an edited, politically correct version of the anthem. The skit was performed on 5 October 2001.

The following is the lyrics of the edited "O Canada".

O Canada, our living quarters and aboriginals persons, including Inuit, Métis, and First Nations land
True patriot love, implying affection, but not in a sexual way, in all thy gender non-specific spouse offspring's suggestion
With growing hearts, we get horny, the true North strong and free
From far and weight-challenged, O Canada, we stand or sit on guard for thee
Non-denominational, gender-unspecified supreme being keep our land, glorious and free
O Canada, we stand ready to sit down and discuss our differences in a civilized manner for thee
O Canada, we stand ready to sit down and discuss our differences in a civilized manner for thee

Albums

The Air Farce released eight comedy albums during its radio days, all of which were available on the Air Farce website (only a few are now) ([1]).

Guests

Air Farce has its share of guests, including those who portray themselves. Although the show originally prides itself in having only Canadian guest stars, this claim does not hold to scrutiny (with Doug Flutie and Carlos Delgado among the guest stars).

Awards

The Air Farce has received many awards including

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: