With the news that Victor Lewis-Smith’s Radio 1 programmes
are to get a Radio 4 Extra repeat next month – their first airing since 1990 –
I thought it timely to dip my toe into the VLS archive. Victor Lewis-Smith studied Music at York University and made
his first broadcasts for the campus radio and TV station. His professional
radio career started at the newly launched BBC Radio York in July 1983 with a
Sunday morning programme known as Snooze
Button (followed a year later by One-
Way Family Favourites).(1)
Whilst still on Radio York in 1984 national radio beckoned
and Victor performed a series of comic vignettes alongside Laurie Taylor (for
many years billed on-air as “Laurie Taylor, Professor of Sociology at York
University”) under the title Modern
Manners.These were part of the
station’s ill-fated Thursday morning sequence Rollercoaster, the whole being linked by Richard Baker.
Victor Lewis-Smith (pictured top right) was part of the weekend
team when Radio York launched in 1983.
The following year Modern
Manners transferred to the second series of the Sunday morning magazine
show The Colour Supplement. (2) Here
are two clips of Modern Manners from
21 July and 11 August 1985.All these
years later I still call the Radio Times the “Raddy Otimees”!
By now Victor was also working behind the scenes at Radio 4
as a producer on Midweek. Presenter
Libby Purves had to deal with an increasingly oddball set of guests and on one
memorable occasion(3), when Libby was
on holiday, the replacement was Arthur Mullard, hardly the most eloquent of
hosts. This show has now passed into the realms of radio infamy and you can
chortle away at clips from that programme on this edition of iPM. Ever the performer Victor
Lewis-Smith gets in on the action over the talkback.
Listener reaction to that edition of Midweek was divided: “what a ridiculous programme”, “it was worth
the whole licence fee”, “an insult to the listening public”, “sheer genius” and
“an insult to one’s intelligence”.
Lewis-Smith worked as a producer on Midweek and then Start the
Week in 1985 and 1986 by which time he was appearing on Ned Sherrin’s Loose Ends with his comedy writing
partner Paul Sparkes – they’d met at York University. You can hear one of those
frenetic sketches on my post about Ned Sherrin.
Amongst the Sherrin acolytes on Loose Ends was Radio 1 producer John Walters and it was John who
promoted the idea of Victor putting together a show for Radio 1. That show,
airing in May 1988, featured a character first heard in some of the Loose Ends sketches, a spoof DJ named Steve ‘More Music’ Nage, complete with a
nasal mid-Atlantic twang, a kind of proto-Mike Smash type. It was a mickey take
on the sound of the station that was now employing him – his shows would
consistently lampoon the BBC – complete with jingles and faux dedications. Here's a clip from that show:
Victor Lewis-Smith would appear on Radio 1 over two years.
The first show in his own name went out late on Boxing Day night in 1989 under
the title Victor Lewis-Smith’s Christmas
Message, though it contained nothing seasonal.My tape machine was running that evening and
here’s the recording. Note at the end a continuing obsession with mention of
TV’s Mr Derek Batey.
His fast-paced approach, slick tape-editing, multi-layered
sound, funny voices and musical pastiche contained elements of Jack Jackson and
Kenny Everett’s styles – his acknowledged influences. But his comedy, and
certainly that on Radio 1, was increasingly dripping with vitriol, insults and
sarcasm. At the same time one detects a genuine love of radio and the parodies
of old style radio shows, films and newsreels show a nostalgic undertone that
would also manifest itself in the TV editions of Buygones.
Listening back to the programmes you can appreciate their
technical brilliance with Lewis-Smith providing all the voices, but at the end
of half-an-hour it is also quite draining. You feel like you’ve been bludgeoned
with a giant comedy hammer.
Two series and two specials followed on Radio 1. It’s the first
ten-part 1990 series that’s getting the Radio 4 Extra repeat starting at 22.30
on Friday 8 May 2015. One wonders if they’ve edited out the warnings that
preceded and followed each programme. Where Radio 1 listeners really possessed
of such delicate sensibilities? “The following programme contains material
which some people may find offensive. If you consider yourself likely to be
offended then perhaps you’d like to retune to another frequency for the next
thirty minutes. You may like to telephone your views about the programme, call
9274364 prefix 01 if you live outside London. Your comments will be passed onto
the Controller of Radio 1. Extracts may also be used in future programmes”. I’m
still not sure if this was intended to be taken seriously.
Recalling these shows former station controller Johnny
Beerling wrote: “It was quite brilliant but there was hardly a single BBC rule
which Victor did not seek to break in delivering new and challenging comedy. He
would always deliver his finished programme at the last possible moment so there
was little time for the poor Radio 1 producer responsible for it to do much
editing”.
One rule that Lewis-Smith broke was to obtain permission
from the participants to use the recordings of his hoax phone calls. These
calls were a staple of the shows, witness the one in the first programme to
Harrods complaining of his dissatisfaction with a vacuum cleaner purchased for
supposed “specialist” use to “suck the dust off sausages”.
Ahead of the Radio 4 Extra repeats here’s taster of that
first show:
I’ve not heard if there are plans to repeat the second series.
At the time of its first broadcast a number of edits had to be made (4) and one
programme features a skit on the now-verboten subject of Jim’ll Fix It.
Dedicated to the memory of Mrs Tribley.
(1) One-Way Family
Favourites replaced Snooze Button
in the Spring of 1984, again on a Sunday morning. A typical Radio Times billing read “a sideways
Sunday lunchtime entertainment from the heart of Yorkshire. This week Victor
links up with Katie Boyle in the lost City of Atlantis”. (2) The first series of The
Colour Supplement in 1984 was presented by either Sarah Kennedy or Fern
Britton with roving reporter Nigel Farrell.The second series in 1985 was presented by Margo MacDonald. (3) The edition broadcast on 21 May 1986 (4) Some of the removed hoax calls made it onto the album
Nuisance Calls. “Hear the tapes the BBC never dared transmit”.
Programmes for BBC Radio 1:
Steve ‘More Music’
Nage 30 May 1988(1 hour) Victor Lewis-Smith’s
Chrsitmas Message 26 December 1989
Victor Lewis-Smith
Series 1: 10 shows 31 March 1990 to 2 June 1990
Bank Holiday Special: 27 August 1990
Series 2: 4 shows 4 July 1992 to 25 July 1992
Christmas Special: 26 December 1992
The comedy factory that was Week Ending proved to be one of the most enduring programmes in
Radio 4’s history and helped launch the careers of hundreds of comedy writers. It
first aired forty-five years ago today.
The roll-call of scriptwriters who ventured into the famous
writers’ room is formidable and includes Pete Spence, Guy Jenkin, Andy
Hamilton, Colin Bostock-Smith, Ian Brown, Richard Quick, Alistair Beaton, John
Langdon, James Hendrie, Barry Pilton, Simon Bullivant, David Renwick, Steve
Punt, Ian Pattinson, John O’ Farrell, Simon Brett, Rob Newman, David Baddiel,
Richard Herring and Stewart Lee to name but twenty!
But how did it all start? BBC television had ridden the wave
of topical satirical comedy in the early 60s but by the end of the decade had
gone cold on the idea. BBC radio’s Listen to this Space had enjoyed a successful four series run but its star
Nicholas Parsons was now controlling proceedings on Just a Minute.
Meanwhile Radio 4 controller Tony Whitby was having to
reshape his schedules to accommodate the re-alignment of the station’s output
in accordance with the Broadcasting in
the Seventies policy and he let it be known that he wanted a ‘light’
Saturday night show. Comedy producer David Hatch came up with the proposal for
a review of the previous seven days “featuring comic sketches performed by a
band of actors, punctuated with quick-fire gags and devoid of a studio
audience”. The programme’s title was What
You Missed.
Hatch, working alongside co-producer Simon Brett, pulled
together a show that featured members of the BBC’s Drama Rep (1) and a young
comedy writer called Peter Spence who’d previously written for Les Dawson, Crackerjackand the Quiz of the Week.
Tony Whitby was also drafting in some TV names to front some of his new shows –
Richard Baker on Start the Week and
Robert Robinson on Stop the Week – so
Nationwide’s Michael Barrett was
picked to host What You Missed.
By the time the pilot was recorded on 23 January 1970 the
programme had been re-titled Week Ending.
(2) From the start some of Week Ending’s
now familiar elements were in place: the short news gags that would later
develop into the pithy ‘newslines’ and the look at next week’s news. (3)
The pilot was a success and the series got the full
go-ahead, kicking off at 23.05 on Saturday 4 April 1970. That first show, of
which no recordings exist (4), also introduced another element to the format,
the Week Ending theme tune known as Smokey Joe, a piece of library music
that would bookend the show for the next twelve years.
Although Tony Whitby had foist Michael Barrett onto the
producers he wasn’t that happy with his performance, but then neither was
Barrett who felt out of place: “I wasn’t sure whether I was supposed to do it
deadpan and straight or whether I was supposed to turn myself into a comic.” As it happened the production team got the
opportunity for a re-think when a General Election was called in May and the
programme pulled from the schedules – a fate it would endure until 1987 when it
did continue throughout the election campaign.
Week Ending
returned to the airwaves in June 1970 initially with Graeme Garden acting as
host. But by 1971 the programme was now talking on its familiar sound and feel
with less reliance on the Drama Rep and with David Jason, Bill Wallis and later
that year Nigel Rees taking on the multitude of gags, sketches and
impersonations. The reliance on actors was very much Week Ending’s modus operandi, in contrast to today’s topical comedy
shows.
David Jason has found fame in the 1960s on ITV’s Do Not Adjust You Set but his radio
work, mainly in the 1970s, is overlooked. He was a superb mimic and as well as
his Week Ending work – he stayed with
the show until 1983 – he was a regular on TheImpressionists and starred in four series of The Jason Explanationalongside Sheila Steafel and Jon Glover.
Nigel Rees’s appointment was a little more unusual. At the
time he was more familiar to radio listeners as a reporter on Today, The World at One and Movie-Go-Round
and he’d previously worked at Granada and ITN. But from his days at Oxford, and
more particularly, performing in various Oxford revues he’d met Simon Brett and
it was he who invited Nigel to join Week
Ending, where he remained until 1976 – just in time for The Burkiss Way and devise Quote … Unquote.
For most of the 1970s and 1980s Week Ending retained a core
cast of four. Joining in 1976 was David Tate, another stalwart he remained with
the show until 1993. A year later saw the recruitment of the first regular
female member, Sheila Steafel, who stayed until 1982. This meant, at the very
least, that Nigel Rees or David Tate no longer had to ‘do’ the Queen or
Margaret Thatcher.When Sheila left she
was replaced by Tracey Ullman. (6) But in 1983 Sally Grace joined the
programme, intitally for just two weeks whilst Ullman was in America, but she
remained a fixture until the final edition some fifteen years later.
From that period here’s the tenth anniversary show from 4
April 1980. The cast are David Jason, Bill Wallis, David Tate and Sheila
Steafel. It starts off with a rather different version of the sig tune.
From a couple of years later this edition aired on 30 April
1982 just a few weeks into the Falklands War. Performing on this occasion are
David Tate, Chris Emmett, Sheila Steafel and Jon Glover. My recording comes
from the Saturday repeat as, for some reason, two sketches were cut from the
original transmission.
There was considerable cross-over with Radio 2’s topical
comedy show The News Huddlines (more
of which in a future post) amongst the writers but the man providing the
impressions on Huddlines, Chris
Emmett, also had a 20-year association with Week
Ending.There was also some
cross-over with ITV’s Spitting Image.
Chris worked on some episodes as did other Week
Ending voices Jon Glover (1980-98) and Alistair McGowan (1989-93).By the 1990s there were usually three
regulars plus one ‘other’, too numerous to list here. The ‘regulars’ though
included Toby Longworth (1993-96), Jeffrey Holland (1993-96), Dave Lamb (1994-98)
and Sarah Parkinson (1997-98).
With a voracious appetite for topical sketches and
one-liners Week Ending employed an
open door policy for writers, the first programme to do so. By 1977 there was a
Writers’ Room at 16 Langham Street where every Wednesday budding comedy writers
could pitch their ideas alongside the small number of commissioned writers.
Added to this absolutely anyone could send in their newslines and experience
the thrill of hearing their joke make it to air and their name added to the
ever lengthening end credits.
As well as providing a training ground for comedy writers Week Ending also saw its fair share of
producers, 49 in all during its full run. Many went on to become recognised
names in radio and TV comedy: Paul Mayhew-Archer, Paul Spence, Griff
Rhys-Jones, Geoffrey Perkins, Jimmy Mulville, John Lloyd, Bill Dare, Jan
Ravens, Harry Thompson, David Tyler, Sarah Smith, Armando Iannucci and so on.
In later years there was something a revolving door policy
on producers, much to the ire of the regular performers. Whilst in part this
was radio policy to let producers learn the ropes it also reflected the need
for the show to remain fresh and also to encourage the use of new talent on air
too. Sally Grace recalled that “there was one week when I had three people with
L-plates on. They were friends of the producer, who fancied having a go. One
was a dentist. Another actually said, ‘Do I speak when the green light some
on?’” (7)
To celebrate the programme’s twentieth anniversary producer
Jon Magnusson and scriptwriter Bill Matthews compiled the two-part documentary
for Radio 4 titled Two Decades of
Weekending (sic). Providing the links was Sir David Steel, who had himself
been the butt of several jokes on the series, especially during the SDP-Liberal
alliance period with David Owen. Part one was first heard on 31 August
1990.
For such a long-running show Week Ending rarely courted controversy but it hit the headlines in
1980 when it lampooned the tabloid newspaper editor Derek Jameson in a Man of the Week skit written by John
Langdon. Describing him as “the archetypal East End by made bad”, “a
nitty-gritty titivation tout” and a man “who is to journalism what lockjaw is
to conversation and who still believes that erudite is a glue.” Jameson sued
the BBC for libel. When it came to court four years later the jury found the
sketch innocent fun and fair comment and so he lost the case and ended up
paying £75,000 in legal costs. Jameson
never got over that “character assassination” as he recalls in the second part
of Two Decades of Weekending first
broadcast on 7 September 1990. (8)
Over the years Week
Ending itself was subject to parody, some good humoured mickey-taking and
some with a bit more edge. Here are four examples. The first from a 1980 episode
of The Burkiss Way has fun with Week Ending’s by now familiar recital of
writers in the end credits. Both Andrew Marshall and David Renwick wrote for Week Ending and, of course, Chris Emmett
who reads out the names (most of which are genuine) worked on both. Plus
there’s Jo Kendall apologising for the “somewhat unwarranted outburst. In
future, the closing credits on Week
Ending will be kept considerably shorter … by reading out the names of the
people who listen to it”.
The second clip is also from a 1980, an episode of Injury Time, one of the programmes that
occupied Week Ending’s time slot
whilst it took a summer break. You’ll detect that the writer, probably Rory
McGrath, may not have been entirely happy with his Week Ending experience. As well as another go at the end credits
there are digs at the programme’s well established sketch formula: the Father and Son routine in which the
offspring ask increasingly precocious and complicated questions on a news story
and the A&B where the listener
eavesdrops on two men in a pub (originally Jason and Wallis) picking apart a
story and usually ending with the catchphrase “Well, this is it”. Appearing
here with McGrath are Jimmy Mulville, Martin Bergman and Robert Bathurst. (9)
The third clip is from a more affectionate look at the
programme, and indeed the whole of the network, A Day in the Life of Radio 4. The cast were all Week Ending alumni: Russell Davies (who
provided this script), Chris Emmett, Sally Grace and Sheila Steafel. It was
broadcast on 3 September 1983, though my recording was made of the 29 December
repeat.
And finally Chris Morris couldn’t resist having a pop at the
programme in a 1991 episode of On the
Hour. In practice the Thank God It’s
Satire Day sketch was more than likely written by Stewart Lee and Richard
Herring, again former Week Ending
contributors. The nonsensical closing credits are written and performed by
Morris.
Regular listeners to Week
Ending will remember the theme tunes, Smokey
Joe and that classic piece of 80s pop Party
Fears Two, both of which feature in the recordings I’ve posted. But there
were, in fact, four themes during the programme’s run.
Smokey Joe played
by Small-Group Jazz used between April 1970 and April 1982 Party Fears Two by
the Associates used between May 1982 and July 1993 Week Ending Signature
Tune specially composed by Richard Attree with a newsy feel to it. Used
from September 1993 to July 1997 Week Ending Signature
Tune composed by Richie Webb and Matt Katz with a more funky news style
used from October 1997 to April 1998
Sunday Times 24 September 1989
Somewhat unusually Week
Ending also made brief appearances over on Radio 2, popping up on some
celebratory comedy/light entertainment shows. Here are a couple of examples.
First David Jason, David Tate, Sheila Steafel and Bill Wallis join Roy Hudd on The Light Entertainment Show from
October 1982. The second clip comes from a live programme hosted by David Frost
in September 1988 to mark 21 years of Radios 1, 2, 3 and 4, The Radio Show, Radio Show. Appearing
here are Sally Grace, David Tate and Jon Glover.
By the early 1990s the series was beginning to struggle and
there were threats that the plug would be pulled. The high turnover of
producers didn’t help and cast veterans Bill Wallis and David Tate had moved
on. In 1993 Gareth Edwards was brought in as Executive Producer and the show
got something of a re-launch. Edwards tackled the issue of a vast number of
writers on small commissions that had led to a lack of commitment and direction
in the Writers’ Room. The regular cast members were now Sally Grace, the
recognised star of the show, with Jeffrey Holland (Hi-de-Hi’s Spike Dixon) and Toby Longworth.
New network controllers inevitably mean schedule changes and
the incoming James Boyle (arriving in late 1996) would cut a swathe through Radio
4’s programmes. By July 1997 Week Ending
was already earmarked as being for the chop and the obituaries were written
before the last series started in the October. A number of established
programmes were dropped and others re-timed. The supposed replacement for Week Ending was the Sunday night show The Beaton Generation in which “Alistair
Beaton hosts a satirical comedy discussion programme”. It ran for 12 weeks.
(10)
The final edition, Week
Ending Ending, aired on 3 April 1998 with the Saturday repeat going out
exactly 28 years after the first broadcast.Here’s that final show complete with a re-appearance of David Hatch and
a production credit for Jonathan James-Moore, by then Head of Radio Light
Entertainment.
And that is the end of next week’s news. In the next post in
this series I recall The News Huddlines.
Week Ending
1132 episodes broadcast over 83 series between 4 April 1970
and 3 April 1998.
Plus 147 specials such as Year Ending and compilation shows for the BBC World Service
broadcast either annually or monthly under the Two Cheers for … banner.
Additional reading:
Prime Minister, You
Wanted to See Me-A History of Week Ending by Ian Graves & Justin Lewis
(Kaleidoscope Publishing 2008)
With thanks to Charles Rooke.
Notes:
1:Sean Arnold,
Geoffrey Collins, Garard Green and Frederick Treves all featured in the pilot
episode.
2: The World at One
presenter William Hardcastle also appeared in the first episode.
3: This feature, always prefaced “And Now Here is Next’s
Week’s News” was eventually dropped in 1991.
4: For the first ten years only 25 complete episodes exist
in the BBC Sound Archives.
5: Spot him in a couple of episodes of The Avengers.
6: Alison Steadman also appeared during 1983, yet another News Huddlines crossover.
7: I’ve not been able to establish who Sally is referring to
here.
8: The BBC made it up to Derek Jameson by employing him on
Radio 2’s Breakfast Show a couple of years after the court case.
9: Injury Time also
featured Emma Thompson in the cast though she’s not heard in this clip.
10: Radio 4 listeners didn’t have to wait too long for a
topical comedy show as The Now Show
launched in October 1998.