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You're just a door, I'm Rik fucking Mayall.

@mayallintuition

100% pure undiluted Rik Mayall.
(this is a sideblog, likes and follows come from @asongthatsingsitself)
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Rik May all on the T.V. programme ‘Boom Boom, out go the lights’ from the early 80’s. From https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0080201/synopsis?ref_=m_tt_ov_pl: ‘Barely noticed when it originally appeared, Boom Boom… Out Go the Lights has acquired a retrospective importance as the TV launchpad for the alternative comedy generation. With the insane optimism of youth, producer Paul Jackson originally pitched the idea of a 26-part series capturing the new cabaret scene. In the end, the BBC granted him one half-hour slot. It was the beginning of a lengthy association with alternative comedy for Jackson.

Jackson elected to show solo performers, meaning neither Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall’s regular partner in 20th-Century Coyote, nor Peter Richardson, the other half of the Outer Limits duo with Nigel Planer, appeared. Richardson, in particular, was angry at being excluded, beginning a long-term feud with Jackson. Ruby Wax was also recorded, but in the end her material was left out. For want of money to commission a signature tune, Jackson took the programme’s title from the repertoire of Paul Jones’ Blues Band, who begin the show and also perform two other songs.

The show highlights the diversity of performance styles within the scene. Keith Allen and Sayle bring an aggressive, slightly manic edge (the latter performs 'Ullo John, Gotta New Motor?’, an unlikely chart hit in 1982). Tony Allen is laconic and aloof, while Planer, presenting the character of dreary hippy Neil that would bring him cult status in The Young Ones (1982-84), performs a hilariously self-pitying ballad, accompanying himself with ramshackle guitar. The revelation, though, is Mayall. Coiled and intense, he delivers two wonderful examples of pretentious, neurotic poetry - 'Theatre’ and 'Vanessa’, the latter a lovelorn tribute to Vanessa Redgrave (“Vanessa, I shall go to my grave with a broken heart / But at least it will be a red grave”) - pausing repeatedly to berate the audience for their lack of due reverence. Mayall plays it absolutely straight, in a performance that is a world away from the wilful overacting he later favoured.

Screened in a thankless slot - 10.20pm on BBC2 - the show got a subdued reception (“the worst audience response in the history of the department,” was how Jackson recalled it), but the BBC was intrigued enough to commission a second show, which went out seven months later (tx. 5/5/1981) under the same name. All the cast but Keith Allen reappeared, joined by Peter Richardson, Ade Edmondson, Pauline Melville and Andy de la Tour, with music provided by Dexy’s Midnight Runners.

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Dear old Rik sums up the Monday mood…

Source: Pinterest

mayallintuition がcomedy-cookie をリブログしましたweird-limbo フォロー#rik mayall presents#dancing queen
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関連投稿

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things rik mayall & ade edmondson invented

• comedy

• friendship

• good television 

• swearing

• doodling on the walls

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My 'wonderful, generous, foul-mouthed and hysterical' father: daughter pays tribute to Rik Mayall - Telegraph

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A F***ing Good Life: Remembering Rik Mayall

Remembering Rik Mayall – An American perspective 

I fell in love with a man on the day he died. They say you learn a lot about a person by reading an obituary, but I was never one of those maudlin obit collectors. But I saw the name Rik Mayall cross my screen early on the morning of June 9, and I felt a rush in my ears. My Facebook post about it only garnered one comment. There were only a few of my friends who even knew, or cared, who Rik Mayall was. And that broke my heart.

 I learned about Rik Mayall when I was 22-year-old college student in 1985—the first time his landmark comedy series “The Young Ones,” which he created, wrote, and starred, splashed across MTV. We knew at the time that we were living in a unique time in history; we were very aware that the ‘80s were going to be written about and satirized and romanticized later, and for me, Rik Mayall represented a comic version of everything I loved—and hated—about the 1980s.

Some of my favourite Rik moments

Rik Mayall was a very talented man, sent from God knows where to bless us all with his grace and genius. With Adrian Edmondson, they became one of the most beloved comedy duos in British history. 

So, I thought that as 2018 is rolling in, we should take a look at some of the best moments/things that Rik Mayall has ever said and done in his lifetime. Enjoy!

“I don’t have moments of weakness. I’m Rik Mayall.”

“I’m frightened of interviews.”

“It’s difficult to for me, to look into the eyes of a journalist and trust him to present it as you say.”

Rik Mayall’s Five Mantras

1. All men are equal. Therefore no one can ever be your genuine superior.

2. It is your future, yours to create. Your future is as bright as you make it.

3. Change is a constant in life, so you must never, ever lose your wisdom.

4. If you want to live a full and complete human life, you have to be free. Freedom is paramount.

5. Love is the answer. Love is the answer.

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