tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20008671.post3241532518244739087..comments2023-10-10T15:24:59.808+01:00Comments on The Dreaming Arm: Dead Comics Society, Issue 1: Kenny EverettCWhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01352092020697710430noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20008671.post-10234261009961997512011-05-17T05:44:03.352+01:002011-05-17T05:44:03.352+01:00Online Bingo
Sightline Payments<a href="http://www.jackpotjoy.com/" rel="nofollow">Online Bingo</a><br /><a href="http://www.benzinga.com/news/11/03/902201/bally-technologies-to-acquire-sightline-payments" rel="nofollow">Sightline Payments</a>Quách Đại kahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02670389561960280846noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20008671.post-13067986696055095212007-11-04T21:43:00.000+00:002007-11-04T21:43:00.000+00:00Like Phil and Ciaran, I remember Kenny Everett’s T...Like Phil and Ciaran, I remember Kenny Everett’s TV shows from the time I was at primary school. Kenny Everett like The Young Ones was censored by parents and kids were hard pushed to get past their parents and sneak a viewing. So I only got to watch snippets of his characters – surreal figures from a netherworld of satire and sexuality. I remember fleeting images of his bizarre creations – bearded women with huge breasts, a city gent in suspenders and a preacher with gargantuan hands. Psychologists could have a hay day interpreting such characters. He was certainly a loner, not part of the 80’s in crowd who brought us The Young Ones and Comic Strip Presents. He was one of a kind, not at ease with his sexuality and prone to depression. Comfortable perhaps only within the raucous and ostentatious constructions he depicted, a Peter Pan of comedy who will remain in the public consciousness for a long time to come.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20008671.post-17671396500242941102007-10-06T12:51:00.000+01:002007-10-06T12:51:00.000+01:00Phil, I think you’ve hit the nail on the head ther...Phil, I think you’ve hit the nail on the head there. I remember the general well, a topical concept during the days of the cold war and US Reaganite intervention in Nicaragua, Grenada, etc - very clever political satire and quite relevant today in the age of the US neo-con “let’s nuke ‘em” type attitude. Bush would have approved of him.<BR/><BR/>It was certainly the type of show that children of primary school age used to love because of its anarchic, in-your-face style and the fact that their parents (quite rightly!) strongly disapproved. My parents were very much in the same camp as yours here!CWhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01352092020697710430noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20008671.post-86542921263456130652007-10-06T12:48:00.000+01:002007-10-06T12:48:00.000+01:00Any mention of Everett evokes memories for me, fro...Any mention of Everett evokes memories for me, from the age of 8 or 9 (I probably wasn't supposed to be looking at it, but I did, and so did thousands of my peers). I remember all the characters that Ciaran has mentioned already, and I also recall Everett doing a hilariously bigoted right-wing American General Patton/McArthur character, with massive shoulder epaulettes, whose only solution to dealing with the enemies of the US (and this category, in his view, included those people who did not like their mothers' apple pie on Sunday) was to:<BR/><BR/>"...round em' up, put em' in a field, and bomb the bastards!!!"<BR/><BR/>I think that although his comedy may very well have peaked too early, perhaps his illness may have had something to do with his subsequent decline - he was able to maintain a radio show. His comedy at its height was capable of being enjoyed and understood by children and adults alike. <BR/><BR/>It is also worth mentioning in the context of Everett that whether you hated or loved him (and my mum and dad fell very definitely into the first category!) he managed to carry on with a comedy career while suffering from periodic bouts of severe depression. Perhaps all the great comedians suffer from a vein of melancholia.<BR/><BR/>He met his final illness with resignation, stoicism, and even good humour. I remember the last TV footage of him before his untimely death, his emiciated figure smiling and shaking hands with fans and autograph hunters, wrapped up like an eskimo against the cold. Perhaps he even saw death as a happy release from his troubles on earth.<BR/>He displayed no bitterness against anybody in his final years, and even joked that his first task in heaven would be to "get" the man who had infected him with HIV! I hope that wherever he is now, Kenny's troubles will be at an end."Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com