Peter Cook's biased judge sketch (complete)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

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  • @douglasharre7156
    @douglasharre7156 8 месяцев назад +20

    Not only brilliantly written, but shows a great understanding of the intelligence of the audience.

  • @alcyonepiano
    @alcyonepiano Год назад +54

    Utterly superb. How he managed to keep it together with the audience screaming with laughter and deliver 'chews pillows' without corpsing, is one of the mysteries of the universe. RIP genius.

  • @theresafarren3236
    @theresafarren3236 Год назад +30

    I think possibly the greatest sketch ever .,,, oh god I wish he was still with us

  • @BenjaminKerstein
    @BenjaminKerstein 6 лет назад +189

    This is absolute, pure, unadulterated genius. Long live Peter Cook, master of the deadpan.

    • @alexjewell2351
      @alexjewell2351 3 года назад +18

      Gone too soon, way before his time. He had so much more to give. Comedy just isn't like that anymore.

  • @velvetraptor8540
    @velvetraptor8540 6 лет назад +74

    I'm American. I never heard of the Thorpe Affair but I got the gist in a few minutes here on RUclips. Let me tell you, even if the audience knows nothing this is one of the most hysterically funny skits I have EVER seen. I think about Cook sitting on his own sofa writing this. cracking himself up, rolling on the floor, giving himself a wonderful time. Just brilliant. Thanks, Peter.

    • @velvetraptor8540
      @velvetraptor8540 6 лет назад +6

      Plus I love that loud, junky, chipped up lectern. Fits perfectly.

    • @t87871
      @t87871 Год назад +10

      the Thorpe affair is covered in a brilliant 2017 BBC miniseries called A Very English Scandal with a lot of great actors, funny and serious scenes, and amazing writing! 10/10 recommend

    • @yhho8473
      @yhho8473 4 месяца назад

      I remember it.this is a brilliant and excellent mirror on the British class system/old boy network.Thorpe was guilty as

  • @michaelmuldowney8
    @michaelmuldowney8 7 лет назад +279

    This came from the 1979 Secrets Policemans Ball shows. There were 4 shows. After the first show - one review remarked the lack on relevant biting satire. Peter Cook wrote this entire sketch in less than 3 hours and had it ready for the second show that night. A true genius.

    • @downlink5877
      @downlink5877 5 лет назад +9

      He adapted it from one Christopher Booker wrote for Private Eye.

    • @jimbobeire
      @jimbobeire 2 года назад +2

      @@dalegarraway9865 Thanks for the link.

    • @truthseeker7001
      @truthseeker7001 2 года назад +30

      And the "self confessed player of the pink oboe" was added minutes before he took the stage after asking the assembled comics & performers for another euphemism for homosexuality. Billy Connolly offered up the euphemism and minutes later it was hilariously injected into the monologue.
      Truly a work of genius and with his multiple characters interviewed by Clive Anderson, I would say a high achievement of his latter career.

    • @iancrause1856
      @iancrause1856 2 года назад +5

      @@truthseeker7001 and his Why Bother? series, with Chris Morris.

    • @truthseeker7001
      @truthseeker7001 2 года назад +7

      @@iancrause1856 haha, yes! I mean, come on - Cook and Morris!!! They both are the standout comedians of their generation. Even though it's only 7 episodes, Brass Eye is still my favourite show of all time.
      I met Morris after a Stewart Lee gig at Leicester Square Theatre and I was so overwhelmed with fandom that I probably looked a complete tw*t with red face, stuttering and all. Morris and Cook are my comedy idols.
      I wish Morris would put out more work as his stuff is gold and no one outside of Charlie Brookes puts as acerbic a lens on society.

  • @johnboyce1916
    @johnboyce1916 Год назад +20

    Beautifully written and beautiful timing
    Peter Cook you are missed

  • @piplee1439
    @piplee1439 8 месяцев назад +32

    Thank the Lord this was caught on celluloid

  • @charlywobershalek7142
    @charlywobershalek7142 8 лет назад +203

    Peter Cook was a genius, this will never grow old. And if, someday, in the far future, it eventually does, there'll be nothing left to laugh about.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 6 лет назад +12

      IT WILL ALWAYS BE RELEVANT, WITH MORE AND MORE EXAMPLES. WE NOW HAVE A ENGLISHMAN ( TOMMY ROBINSON ) ARRESTED, CHARGED AND IMPRISONED, WITHOUT BASIC LEGAL HELP OR A JURY, WITHIN 5 HOURS, AND IMPRISONED FOR 13 MONTHS. HIS CRIME ? STANDING OUTSIDE A COURT, ASKING AND RECORDING PASSERS -BY, THERE OPINIONS OF THE TRIAL INSIDE. HE WAS NOT, CAUSING A PUBLIC AFFRAY, AS HE IS ACCUSED OF, HE WAS ALONE, WITH NO CROWDS OBSTRUCTING ANYONE. ORWELL WAS RIGHT, IT IS IN CLEAR SIGHT NOW, NO PRETENSE, JUST BLATANT DISREGARD FOR COMMON BASIC RIGHTS OF OPEN DISCUSSION AND FREE EXPRESSION.

    • @Traitorman..Proverbs26.11
      @Traitorman..Proverbs26.11 5 лет назад +3

      And now we have Trump, his litter, his lapdogs, his enablers and his cult followers yet again proving the point.

    • @malcolmcartlidge3743
      @malcolmcartlidge3743 4 года назад +3

      @@Traitorman..Proverbs26.11 Mate, who the fk else have the septics got to choose from? Hilldog?, Biden? Bernie? - Trump will win again in November, democracy son, got to love it.

    • @romanramirez7847
      @romanramirez7847 4 года назад

      Malcolm Cartlidge You’re further proving the point that Trump sucks with not being able to take a joke.

    • @beverlyfletcher4458
      @beverlyfletcher4458 4 года назад

      So true.

  • @hopecentrechurchyork8398
    @hopecentrechurchyork8398 3 года назад +161

    The savage courage and genius of this attack on the judicial handling of the Jeremy Thorpe murder trial is simply jaw dropping

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Год назад

      so was the 'Trial? all the ranks of the 'old brigade' were on show, including Free masonry

    • @mzreid6386
      @mzreid6386 Год назад +15

      Yep. Satire....how we miss you.

    • @juliebone4929
      @juliebone4929 Год назад +6

      Best work of Hugh Grant in the play about Jeremy Thorpe too. He acted in that one.

    • @henrysmith883
      @henrysmith883 Год назад +3

      @@juliebone4929yes he was brilliant in it

    • @petesmith9472
      @petesmith9472 Год назад +1

      And its accuracy

  • @barney6888
    @barney6888 6 лет назад +105

    For over 40 years i've told everybody i know that the funniest man that ever lived was Peter Cook. I still believe it. It's not just the script, it's the accent.

  • @DudleyMod
    @DudleyMod 10 лет назад +80

    One of the most classic pieces of British comedy ever to grace the screen

    • @kyawkyawwin1
      @kyawkyawwin1 2 года назад +3

      Quite possibly the finest.

  • @KBJ58
    @KBJ58 2 года назад +23

    I used to do some bits for Richard Ingrams' mag, 'The Oldie', a lot of the staff from which came over from 'Private Eye'. Richard, and everyone else who worked there said that when Peter came into the magazine offices, work ceased and he held court for as long as he felt inclined, reducing everyone to dribbling wrecks. Most of the funniest things he ever said were never written down because he thought them up on the spur of the moment. He was a complete one-off, and I doubt will ever be bettered. I just regret never having had the chance to meet the man.

  • @chazbrennan9632
    @chazbrennan9632 7 лет назад +110

    It wasn't just that he embodied funny, with his entire lanky body a pillar of deadpan, in the same way that Milligan vibrated with desperation and clownish electricity; it was that the man could just WRITE. He could sit down for a half-hour and just WRITE A SKETCH. Like Mozart: alone, no copies, no tests, no duds or false starts; no throwing of ideas about. You waited thirty minutes and out popped a finished, polished, timed, hilarious perfect piece of humorous art. He was a genius. He made the hardest work on earth look like a child's-play.

    • @Dreadtower
      @Dreadtower Год назад +2

      Yeah. If you’re a writer you can just sit and go with it, get focused on, and absorbed, in it. Or, if lazy, have a wife like Dylan Thomas, who kicked him out into his ‘writing shed’ where there was nothing else to do.
      You can see that he’s structured it as he’s gone. There are several sections, each coming to a comic climax. He manages the speed of the gags as he builds each climax.
      So it’s writing, but creating structure as you go and using comedic elements to best effect.
      So it’s good quality comedy writing is the thing.

  • @johnPaul-qn3dg
    @johnPaul-qn3dg 6 лет назад +66

    Here because of the brilliant 'A very English Scandal' I get the context now and Peter Cook was a genius

  • @Mike20216
    @Mike20216 6 лет назад +69

    nearly 40 years ago and still brilliant, Cook was a genius.

  • @bennewnham4497
    @bennewnham4497 6 месяцев назад +8

    This is possibly his best ever work. In June 1979, Cook performed all four nights of The Secret Policeman's Ball, teaming with John Cleese. Cook performed a couple of solo pieces and a sketch with Eleanor Bron. He also led the ensemble in the finale - the "End of the World" sketch from Beyond the Fringe. In response to a barb in The Daily Telegraph that the show was recycled material, Cook wrote a satire of the summing-up by Justice Cantley in the trial of former Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe, a summary now widely thought to show bias in favour of Thorpe. Cook performed it that same night (Friday 29 June - the third of the four nights) and the following night. The nine-minute opus, "Entirely a Matter for You", is considered by many fans and critics to be one of the finest works of Cook's career.

  • @ferocel
    @ferocel 10 лет назад +69

    Possibly the best timing of anyone ever.

  • @gravlaxbob355
    @gravlaxbob355 Год назад +11

    I admit I never heard of Peter Cook before and do not know the subject matter but just to see him deliver that speech without even a single smirk is priceless (and free!).

    • @shanenolan5625
      @shanenolan5625 8 месяцев назад

      You might remember him as the priest in the Princess bride. With the funny voice ( marriage ) ?
      He had tv shows , movies, comedy albums. And he was the editor owner of a political satire magazine. He and dudley Moore were a comedy duo from 1959 to 1979 . ( they were famous already before finishing college)
      His father was a very high level civil servant. He was expected to follow and was to be groomed for a great government career. He was a genius and a rebel .
      If you search. ( Peter cook and dudley Moore) you will get a lot of clips .

  • @Electricshrock
    @Electricshrock 5 лет назад +51

    When he says 'unable to carry out a simple murder plot', it's like the whole thing shifts a gear.

  • @paxxop
    @paxxop 6 лет назад +24

    I first saw this when the movie of The Secret Policeman's Ball, where Peter Cook did it, was shown in Australia. Had no idea it was a parody of an actual event, but enjoyed it for the sheer comic brilliance. The "pink oboe" phrase especially stuck in my mind as a highlight which I've never forgotten. Then a few days ago I was recommended to watch "A Very English Scandal" and learnt the background...and it becomes even funnier, even so many years later. What a great talent, was Peter Cook, to be able to create this piece that not only stands on its own for those like me who didn't know the context, also justifiably lampoons a biased judge, and still works 30 years later.

    • @iainstevenson6658
      @iainstevenson6658 Год назад +3

      It was Billy Connolly who gave him the pink oboe idea

  • @jonnybrowne
    @jonnybrowne 10 лет назад +32

    A piece of genius from Peter Cook, one of THE greatest British comedians, I remember buying the 12" single of this sketch!

    • @peterjenkins7324
      @peterjenkins7324 10 лет назад +9

      He was one of, if not THE, best comedians of our time. We were very fortunate

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 5 лет назад +1

      was it a 12 inch pink album ?

  • @Lindsay-t2e
    @Lindsay-t2e 2 месяца назад +4

    40+±± years on this still makes me cry laughing.
    PETE NEVER CRACKS !!!!

  • @occamsrayzor
    @occamsrayzor 9 лет назад +63

    His like shall not be seen again - an unsurpassed satirical and comedic genius.

  • @david552
    @david552 15 лет назад +26

    "It is conceded that the money arrived, what happened to it after that we shall never know... it will be a sad day for this country when a leading politician cannot spend his election expenses in anyway he sees fit."
    Still relevant today, I think.

  • @janetrickwood2484
    @janetrickwood2484 4 года назад +63

    A genius. He was from a time when comedy could be allowed to percolate, unlike now. A genius.

  • @stephenreeds3672
    @stephenreeds3672 4 года назад +7

    How much we need him now. This is chillingly accurate. Justice.... my arse!

  • @Kimdino1
    @Kimdino1 9 лет назад +447

    Absolutely brilliant. I'm sorry for those who weren't around at the time of the Thorpe Affair as much disappears with the loss of context.
    This piece of satire was a very good demonstration of the 'old boy network' at work. A very biased judge was allowed to blatantly twist the evidence & drag the jury to what he wanted them to say, and his behaviour was supported by the establishment - but not the public at large who were up in arms about his behaviour.
    And Peter Cook satirised this brilliantly with his performance being described by two key journalists as "actually not that different from the original.".

    • @mutmeista
      @mutmeista 9 лет назад +24

      +Kimdino1 strangely still relevant.

    • @soundbelch1600
      @soundbelch1600 9 лет назад +30

      +Kimdino1 The specific context might have diluted over time but the overall context, that of the establishment protecting their own, is even more relevant given the events of the last 15 years, namely the Hutton Inquiry, the child abuse allegations, and the upcoming Chilcot report.

    • @jvanhee71
      @jvanhee71 8 лет назад +10

      And quite probably the events of 9/11

    • @tarnopol
      @tarnopol 7 лет назад +6

      Info here: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorpe_affair

    • @wuffothewonderdog
      @wuffothewonderdog 7 лет назад +14

      Add to that list the closure of the Dunblane report for a hundred years on the orders of Gordon Brown, which protects senior Labour politicians connected to the shooting of a dozen very young children and their teacher.

  • @beanshapedhorror
    @beanshapedhorror 15 лет назад +39

    What a wonderful example of Cook's comedic character acting! For those new to Cook & Moore and perhaps a little confused by the style, the Frog & Peach sketch is always a good starting point.
    Thank you for posting this.

    • @jeanmyers1787
      @jeanmyers1787 2 года назад +6

      Or try the One Legged Tarzan sketch 😂

    • @squishedpimp
      @squishedpimp Год назад +3

      surely you mean the Peche a la frog?

  • @DavidBromage
    @DavidBromage 10 лет назад +157

    The name of the sketch is "Entirely a Matter for You". It is a parody of an actual event when Justice Sir Joseph Cantley summed up for the acquittal of the Rt Hon Jeremy Thorpe. Thorpe was accused of conspiring to have Andrew Gino Newton murder Thorpe’s former lover, Norman Scott. Peter Bessell was the chief prosecution witness. That will help explain some of the lines. Peter Cook performed this just a few hours after the actual Cantley summing up.

    • @Johnny-sj9sj
      @Johnny-sj9sj 6 лет назад +3

      Dаvіd Вrоmаgе ha ha! And we shall now sing “As shepherds shot their dogs by night“

    • @gavpowell1981
      @gavpowell1981 6 лет назад +7

      "It sounds biased to modern ears" You think?? I thought Rumpole of the Bailey exaggerated all these things, but a judge actually calling the complainant a parasite and a vagabond is utterly bizarre - the most he should have said was "Whatever you may think of this person's character, you must consider only the evidence." not "Sure, the man is a scumbag and a ne'er-do-well, but it's possible he's not lying."

    • @gavpowell1981
      @gavpowell1981 6 лет назад +4

      It's not the transcript per se I take issue with, merely your reading of its propriety. And you paraphrased rather than quoted, as seemingly the full quote is
      "He is a crook, a fraud, a sponger, a whiner and a parasite . . . But, of course, he could still be telling the truth.”
      It's the same as the Birmingham Six trial and the Archer trial - utterly biased and completely loaded in a way to try to sway the jury.

    • @gavpowell1981
      @gavpowell1981 6 лет назад +4

      "You people" being someone who disagrees with you? I'm sorry you feel you've had to make sooo much effort to, err, reply to a discussion you started.
      The quote makes no difference to the meaning but adds further abuse, which is relevant. Was Scott a crook? How so?
      The judge is obliged to remind the jury that the perceived character of the witness should not detract from their evidence, but NOT to pointedly highlight all of those perceived flaws, and calling someone a liar before saying "It might be true though" is utterly ridiculous. Thorpe was a proven liar himself, but instead is given a glowing character reference by Cantley.
      Having never known Thorpe or Scott, I don't find either of them terribly sympathetic characters from interviews, but the summing up in the trial was like rounding up sheep.

    • @gavpowell1981
      @gavpowell1981 6 лет назад

      Simon Lomberg I have time to waste at the moment, and can't get worked up about people on the Internet, I just enjoy the debate and hopefully learn something along the way.

  • @kyawkyawwin1
    @kyawkyawwin1 5 лет назад +8

    One of the greatest sketches of all time.

  • @bigbearfuzzums7027
    @bigbearfuzzums7027 4 года назад +14

    The funniest but true sketch ever to be recorded for all time! Trials have never changed and never will!

    • @ghengiscant538
      @ghengiscant538 2 года назад

      So true , I think Peter Cook could have done wonders with the judges summing up in the trial of O.J. Simpson .

    • @kyawkyawwin1
      @kyawkyawwin1 2 года назад

      Absolutely.

  • @michaelweir9459
    @michaelweir9459 10 лет назад +19

    This is over 35 years old. As funny now as when I first saw it on 'The Secret Policeman's Ball'.

  • @kentishtowncowboy
    @kentishtowncowboy 10 лет назад +46

    Superbly done. Excellent parody of the judge (manner, speech, articulation) in the Thorpe murder trial all those years ago. Very clever.

    • @sysiphuscorinth
      @sysiphuscorinth 10 лет назад +5

      this is the beauty of british humour of the 60's / 70's before ultra PC kicked in...

    • @kentishtowncowboy
      @kentishtowncowboy 10 лет назад +2

      Ronan FitzGerald Agreed. :-)

    • @lukesixtynineuk
      @lukesixtynineuk 10 лет назад +7

      Ronan FitzGerald What the fuck has this got to do with PC?
      Get off the Bernard Manning bandwagon!

    • @nigelsinspirations4160
      @nigelsinspirations4160 10 лет назад

      lukesixtynineuk

  • @paulphilipempey1
    @paulphilipempey1 5 лет назад +55

    "A self-confessed player of the pink oboe....."

    • @malcolmcartlidge3743
      @malcolmcartlidge3743 4 года назад +8

      And, and lo "a self confessed chicken strangler" struth what happened to this brand of Brit' humour Paul?

    • @karpizan
      @karpizan 4 года назад +14

      A line fed to him by Billy Connolly, apparently

  • @bandolero5068
    @bandolero5068 Год назад +7

    Sorely missed, he would have had a field day with today’s bunch of ministerial clowns

  • @namcat53
    @namcat53 Год назад +1

    Every courtroom must witness this sketch. Its similarity and relevance to recent events in America is significant.

  • @richardneedham2134
    @richardneedham2134 11 лет назад +23

    I despair of ever hearing such a talented satirist ever again. Irreplaceable!

  • @lynneceegee8726
    @lynneceegee8726 6 лет назад +93

    HAving just watched the 3 episodes of "A Very English Scandal" and seen for the first time just how the judge deliberately mislead the jury, and repeatedly insulted and harassed Norman Scott , I think Peter Cook's sketch is rather on the mild side. I'm still astonished how that disgusting old man was not struck off for his unprofessional and biased behaviour.

    • @philburtoft535
      @philburtoft535 6 лет назад +9

      Disgusted but hardly surprised. He did what he thought he had to, as did Thatcher when she covered for the child molester Smith. Power does strange things to people, peer pressure and self interest blurr right and wrong

    • @mikekemp9877
      @mikekemp9877 5 лет назад +1

      @@philburtoft535 indeed you are right in the avbs show maudling covers up a crime for thorpe not even knowing or caring what its about just does it because thats what they do.incredible

    • @scarfhs1
      @scarfhs1 5 лет назад +3

      He wasn't struck off because he was doing the job he had been asked to do by the establishment.

    • @robertdarby1039
      @robertdarby1039 4 года назад +3

      I am reminded of the Jeffrey Archer libel trial when he sued the Daily Star for libel, less than a decade later. Another Establishment cover up. This is from Wiki:
      The description the judge (Mr Justice Caulfield) gave of Mrs Archer in his jury instructions included: "Remember Mary Archer in the witness-box. Your vision of her probably will never disappear. Has she elegance? Has she fragrance? Would she have, without the strain of this trial, radiance? How would she appeal? Has she had a happy married life? Has she been able to enjoy, rather than endure, her husband Jeffrey?" The judge then went on to say of Jeffrey Archer, "Is he in need of cold, unloving, rubber-insulated sex in a seedy hotel round about quarter to one on a Tuesday morning after an evening at the Caprice?"
      Archer won the case and half a million in damages. He was subsequently convicted of perjury for lying in the trial.
      Justices Cantley and Caulfield were cut from the same cloth. They both did exactly what the Establishment wanted.

    • @stephenreeds3672
      @stephenreeds3672 4 года назад +2

      @G*man Scott was an ill man who was exploited by Thorpe. The whole case is a severe indictment of this country and it's "justice" system. The Toffs always win.

  • @MrJetexjim
    @MrJetexjim 6 лет назад +51

    What a pity Peter Cook isn't around today. I'd love to see him 'do' Jacob William Rees-Mogg.

    • @shanewright2772
      @shanewright2772 5 лет назад +7

      Cook described himself, politically, as a "conservative anarchist". Is that not in essence what Rees-Mogg and his father are/were? That' not to say it still wouldnt be very funny. I can't imagine Cook ever not being funny.

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 5 лет назад +9

      He'd have seen through the fakery of Jacob (and Boris). In Beyond the Fringe he famously did an impression of the then-PM Harold Macmillan that was shocking to many Tories, but Macmillan himself got the joke and even went to see the show. Cook's impressions of Macmillan became more sympathetic over the years, particularly as it became clear the real Macmillan detested Margaret Thatcher: 'When I call Mrs Thatcher "that ghastly woman", I don't call her ghastly *because* she's a woman. And I don't call her a woman *because* she's ghastly. But she is a woman. And she is ghastly.' Paternalistic and aristocratic? Yes. But also a genuine belief in public service. Tories today have neither this, nor the undoubted strength of Thatcher that she didn't care whether she was liked as long as she was respected.

  • @coldeb8911
    @coldeb8911 6 лет назад +9

    Lol.. I remember this when it first came out.. as the whole Thorpe thing is now in the public eye again (due to the recent drama ) it's never been a better time to watch the very brilliant Peter Cook lampooning the Judge again. .Classic!

    • @FredNerk57
      @FredNerk57 2 года назад

      Just watching it now on repeat in Australia - it is uncanny how much the Judge at times looks like Hugh Grant's JT

  • @dozysplot
    @dozysplot 14 лет назад +5

    Utter brilliance, The best he ever did done by the best there ever was . . .
    God I miss him . . . .

  • @richardenglish2195
    @richardenglish2195 9 лет назад +86

    Anybody who's watched this knows what a comic master Cook was, so there's no point re-emphasising that here; all I will say, however, is that this is one of his finest pieces and a truly breath-taking piece of satire.

  • @grimtweaker
    @grimtweaker 15 лет назад +5

    So glad this is still available. Probably the best piece of satire ever written.

    • @redscouse7056
      @redscouse7056 Год назад

      People don't have the intelligence to understand this type of comedy anymore, such a shame. Long live lord gnome

  • @johnh7101
    @johnh7101 9 лет назад +25

    Masterful performance by the master of comedy himself. RIP Pete!

  • @paulthomas6252
    @paulthomas6252 6 лет назад +7

    Brilliant! I remember like yesterday the trial and the events leading up to it, and I've enjoyed watching A Very English Scandal these last few weeks, but I've never seen this sketch before. Thanks davidon30, pmsl.

    • @richardruff8712
      @richardruff8712 Месяц назад

      Yes, the Secret Policeman's Ball events were amazing.... I remember it on TV many, many years ago.... Once seen, never forgotten...

  • @matthewlaurence3121
    @matthewlaurence3121 10 лет назад +22

    I think my father was in the audience at this performance. We still have the cassette tape they sold to the audience once the show was finished. It was 1979, when he was living in London. Not sure how many performances they did, he might not be at this specific show. The Secret Policeman's Ball, 1979.

  • @LennyJohnson5
    @LennyJohnson5 7 лет назад +17

    Genius. Both Peter Cook and Dudley Moore were great losses to our cultural life, but luckily film like this survives to demonstrate their genius to future generations.

  • @simonpatterson3288
    @simonpatterson3288 Год назад +12

    For those who weren't there, this script was written overnight (the Secret Policeman's Ball was a day or so after closing arguments), which makes it even more brilliant. If you go back to the actual trial it is frightening just how much Judge Cantley - the judge in the Thorpe trial - sounded like, and briefed the jury in a manner almost identical to this. Satire. Superb

    • @stevewest4994
      @stevewest4994 Год назад +3

      I think someone (Billy Connolly?) told Cook a "pink oboe" joke just before he went on stage and he worked that into the script on the spot.

  • @tombirmingham7033
    @tombirmingham7033 8 месяцев назад +1

    I want this played at my funeral.

  • @mnd1955
    @mnd1955 7 лет назад +13

    Peter Cook was a riot. This is pure, unadulterated genius.

  • @jeanmyers1787
    @jeanmyers1787 4 года назад +4

    I vaguely remember Thorpe affair. I looked it up & Peter Cook is absolutely brilliant.

  • @ernestscribbler-Inyenga
    @ernestscribbler-Inyenga 14 дней назад +1

    …….a self confessed player of the pink oboe ….. !!! Genius

  • @kipling1957
    @kipling1957 4 года назад +1

    Brilliance I have not seen in many, or in many years.

  • @MrDaiseymay
    @MrDaiseymay 5 лет назад +32

    This gigantic piss take of our legal system, will never become irrelevant.

    • @johnnyhammer
      @johnnyhammer 5 лет назад +2

      Indeed. Just ask Tommy.

    • @bigbearfuzzums7027
      @bigbearfuzzums7027 4 года назад +1

      Indeed on both sides of the pond...for all time! The only justice is bought justice stolen justice and justice by calling in every scrap of black mail and every last skeleton and even a borrowed lot in the car boot! ...

    • @captainanopheles4307
      @captainanopheles4307 4 года назад

      @@johnnyhammer and by Tommy you mean Stephen.

    • @johnnyhammer
      @johnnyhammer 4 года назад

      @@captainanopheles4307 What's your point?

    • @TheCrazydawg123
      @TheCrazydawg123 3 года назад

      @@johnnyhammer are tommeh

  • @rickglorie
    @rickglorie 2 года назад +1

    This is brilliant, delivery, timing, great material, what a talent.

  • @indyandnorbert1
    @indyandnorbert1 11 лет назад +10

    Hilarious sketch, used to work at The Law Courts, some of it was pure theatre, there were some priceless retorts at times from both sides of the bench, repartee from razor sharp minds that few political commentators or so called comedians could match today. The witty repost, brilliant

  • @Calilasseia
    @Calilasseia 14 лет назад +11

    This has to be one of the most stellar pieces of satire ever penned ... it still results in hilarious laughter 31 years on, and to think that it was cooked up (pardon the pun) as a quick addition to the evening's proceedings!

    • @geoffpoole9107
      @geoffpoole9107 6 лет назад

      It was part of a series of benefit concerts for Amnesty International. The shows had gone well but were considered a bi tame- just reprising classic comedy sketches. Fortunately the Thorpe trial had just finished and Peter Cook wrote this classic.

  • @trevordance5181
    @trevordance5181 8 лет назад +16

    I seem to remember a joke that came out at the time of the Jeremy Thorpe/Norman Scott trial...
    Apparently a book was written about it entitled, "Scott And The Arse Antic"

  • @marioantoniodemellodias1603
    @marioantoniodemellodias1603 Год назад +2

    Absolute genious. Peter Cook is one of the best in British humour.

  • @richardcooper3530
    @richardcooper3530 6 лет назад +5

    brilliant. the recent tv dramatization of the thorpe case brought all this back.

  • @1966Hillman
    @1966Hillman 10 лет назад +23

    Just genius! And jogged a few memories of the trial itself. It was one of those scandals where many suspected the establishment had simply closed ranks to protect one of its own (old Etonian, former bank director, party leader, etc.).

    • @hugolindum7728
      @hugolindum7728 6 лет назад

      1966Hillman
      They were protecting him too because he was a homosexual, and they thought the scandal could be revolutionary.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 4 года назад

      @@hugolindum7728
      If he had been the PM, perhaps. The head of the Liberals, no.

  • @joejoesguitarinventions
    @joejoesguitarinventions 6 лет назад +5

    "that is a matter entirely for you"..
    the whole sketch is classic!!

  • @JohnSpringateMusic
    @JohnSpringateMusic Год назад

    Utterly brillant. Ive watched this sketch so many times and it never fails to make me laugh!

  • @artemiszeus9735
    @artemiszeus9735 6 лет назад +2

    He took an almost holistic approach to satire. Love this. Entirely a Matter For You.

  • @staceyroberts6044
    @staceyroberts6044 6 лет назад +10

    You may think this is a comedy sketch But no it is a REALITY OF THE JUDGES summing up

  • @NPA1001
    @NPA1001 7 лет назад +23

    Milligan and Cook are so far ahead of the rest when it comes to comedy genius it's unfair to compare anyone else.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 6 лет назад +2

      NPA1001
      What about Cleese and Sellers?

    • @ImYourHuckleberry_29
      @ImYourHuckleberry_29 Год назад +1

      ​@@anonUK naaah. Still outclassed by Spike and Peter.

  • @francaperotti5934
    @francaperotti5934 6 лет назад +6

    I remember this sketch but at the time i was too young to get the joke but still made me laugh.

  • @routeman680
    @routeman680 2 года назад +1

    So brilliant. This is peak satire, Cook at the top of his game.

  • @NxDoyle
    @NxDoyle 4 года назад +12

    I know that "self-confessed player of the pink oboe" levelled Billy Connolly.

  • @taliesyn12
    @taliesyn12 17 лет назад +2

    Still promts tears of mirth.Well done for posting this. Peter,you are so missed m8.

  • @karpizan
    @karpizan 4 года назад +2

    A truly brilliant pastiche of what must have been one of the most extraordinary and most biased summings-up in British judicial history. The transcript is out there - it'll take your breath away.

  • @marypickard9407
    @marypickard9407 2 года назад +4

    Lived through the whole saga of the Jeremy Thorpe affair. It's only now looking back at the whole corruption and conspiracy that went on, I can fully appreciate Peter Cook's performance.

  • @walterceuppens6988
    @walterceuppens6988 4 года назад +4

    The audience looks surprised and ridiculously happy. I bought the album: still use quotes although I live in France.

  • @RonWylie-gk5lc
    @RonWylie-gk5lc 5 лет назад +2

    At the time of the Thorpe case I was out one Sunday lunchtime in a local social club laughing at a comedian, A normal state of affairs in Newcastle at that time, "out of the blue" he said
    "well lads, have you been following that case "Scott of the Arse Antics?" I cant remember laughing so much for so long lol

  • @ilaconix
    @ilaconix 14 лет назад +18

    "The funniest man ever to draw breath".
    Stephen Fry (I think)

  • @andydavie4525
    @andydavie4525 2 года назад +4

    ...unable to carry out a simple murder plot without cocking the whole thing up. Genius

  • @servicekid7453
    @servicekid7453 Год назад +2

    The thing a lot of modern comics lack is the sheer joy in the english language Cook etc would take. You can see him savouring delivering some of these lines. Not because they are red hot jokes but because they’re just fun to say.

    • @pemj7360
      @pemj7360 Год назад +1

      This piece comedy genius would be wasted on the rabble that call themselves comedians these days . Peter Cook and Dudley Moore and those of their ilk of the days when comedy was actually comedy and not some left wing PC crap . Rip Peter sadly missed but never forgotten

  • @darrenking6026
    @darrenking6026 3 года назад

    Fantastic. Simply fantastic. Thanks for posting.

  • @jon0645
    @jon0645 4 года назад +3

    Peter Cook was a Comedy Genius.
    John Cleese once said , to get 15 minutes worth of material it would take him about two days , while it would take Peter Cook 15 minutes....

  • @peterbradshaw8018
    @peterbradshaw8018 9 лет назад +6

    The best summation I ever heard from a high court judge. If only they had more like him at the Central Criminal Court. DWL

  • @sebastianverney7851
    @sebastianverney7851 3 года назад +3

    One of the reasons we voted to leave the EU was our profound awareness that we are the most superior nation in the world. This goes back to the British Empire, of course, but also to our pride in the British Judiciary, which, as we well know, is the envy of the world. There was the time in 1950 when a crippled and illiterate young man, Timothy Evans, was hung for the murder of his wife (with whom he had rows) and daughter, murders he had nothing to do with. More recently His Honour Mr Justice Dodds was reprimanded by The Judicial Conduct Investigations Office for his gratuitous rudeness to litigants in cases over which he presides. But the younger of my friends may not remember the case against Jeremy Thorpe, a prominent British politician, on trial for arranging the contract killing of his former lover, Norman Scott. We must be grateful to Peter Cook for reading aloud the transcript of His Honour Mr Justice Cantley's summing up for the jury before they retired to consider their verdict. With jurisprudence at this level, it is very understandable why we don’t want to be told what to do by foreigners in Brussels.

  • @jessiejames7492
    @jessiejames7492 12 лет назад +5

    his diction is so spot on !

  • @Bnjolly
    @Bnjolly 16 лет назад +2

    Quite possible the most brilliantly funny thing I have ever seen. Thanks for posting!

  • @danmcbmusic
    @danmcbmusic 2 года назад +2

    How the hell he kept the deadpan vinegar face all the way through is beyond me. Genius.

    • @Krzyszczynski
      @Krzyszczynski Год назад

      He was very practised at it. As a young teen I remember watching avidly every Saturday night as he did his "E L Wisty" spot on the Bernard Braden show. Hilarious absurdities, week after week, which would have had most of us corpsing only a few seconds in, but the deadpan mask only slipped once that I recall, and that was on the very last one he did. (He also cultivated an unblinking stare when doing these pieces - I always watched for a blink that never came.)

  • @hal2473
    @hal2473 8 лет назад +2

    Another terrific Peter Cook sketch.

  • @compusmentus5476
    @compusmentus5476 6 лет назад +1

    Nothing short of genius
    Who now can comment in this inimitable fashion?
    We miss this mans mind, our culture is depleted without him

  • @Mike8981
    @Mike8981 6 лет назад +9

    Very funny, especially after watching the recent, 'A very English affair' lol

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 5 лет назад +1

      very true to reality, better than expected. I remember the case well.

  • @cymrumbeth1977
    @cymrumbeth1977 10 лет назад +30

    Written overnight. Brilliant, only Spike can shine a light to Peter Cook at his best. And where the hell did the phrase "self-confessed player of the pink oboe" come from?

    • @jeffgross6649
      @jeffgross6649 10 лет назад +6

      Funniest line in the sketch, and that's saying a lot.

    • @bountybar
      @bountybar 10 лет назад +25

      the line was suggested to Peter Cook backstage - by Billy Connolly

    • @jeffgross6649
      @jeffgross6649 10 лет назад +1

      Cool.

    • @pbhsfreefringe9797
      @pbhsfreefringe9797 10 лет назад +17

      It ultimately comes from Spike Milligan. There's a Goon Show called "Who is Pink Oboe?" The Goon Show was full of similar innuendo, specialising in broadcasting the punchlines of so-called dirty jokes without broadcasting the setups, so only those who had heard the joke would have understood. For example, the line "it's his turn in the barrel" occurs in more than one Goon Show.

    • @francaperotti5934
      @francaperotti5934 6 лет назад +2

      It came from comic genius.

  • @parhhesia
    @parhhesia 12 лет назад +5

    The characterisation of the right to silence at 6:10 is brilliant... this guy definitely knew his way around a judgment.

  • @MorrisseyBob
    @MorrisseyBob 10 лет назад +8

    With Jeremy Thorpe's death today, I expect many shares of this!

  • @casWilling
    @casWilling 2 месяца назад

    ‘You May choose to believe……… that is entirely up to you’ : if only judges were this fair and balanced now.

  • @Halfdan1
    @Halfdan1 8 лет назад

    I read about this because I had to find out the details for something so already funny without them. I'm glad I did.

  • @alfieconn2692
    @alfieconn2692 Год назад +1

    The "player of the pink oboe line" was supplied by Billy Connolly, apparently.

  •  5 лет назад +15

    "A self-confessed player...... of the 'pink oboe'" - Brilliant

    • @klackon1
      @klackon1 5 лет назад +1

      EarlMinime. You may like this one. Norman Scott subsequenly wrote a book about the affair. It was called "Scott of the arse antics".

  • @BickingtonBoy
    @BickingtonBoy Год назад +1

    A brilliant & unarguable satirical commentary on the conduct of Justice Cantley.

  • @vermilliongecko
    @vermilliongecko 6 лет назад +2

    I watched this without knowing anything about the Thorpe affair and found it mildly amusing but mainly confusing. Having just watched 'A Very English Scandal', I now get it. I was 7 at the time of the trial, so I'm only just now learning about it. Peter Cook was such a great satirist.

  • @sail1948
    @sail1948 10 лет назад +82

    Apparently Thorpe used Vaseline to lubricate his todger before buggering Scott. The instructions on the jar were to "Use Liberally".

    • @edwinscholey990
      @edwinscholey990 7 лет назад +1

      Touche', old sport.

    • @andrewb2968
      @andrewb2968 6 лет назад +4

      It reminds me of the comment of an England test player when faced with using an old, scuffed cricket ball; "You'd need more vaseline than a Tory MP on a Friday night to get a shine back on that ball". Apparently he was not a Tory.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 6 лет назад +3

      Norman Scott wasn't the first person to be shafted up the arse by a British politician and he certainly wasn't the last.

    • @RonWylie-gk5lc
      @RonWylie-gk5lc 5 лет назад

      ha ha ha

    • @thetessellater9163
      @thetessellater9163 5 лет назад

      Yes, I remembered that one! A real joke form 1979.

  • @fpcoleman57
    @fpcoleman57 Год назад

    Words fail me!
    Just utterly brilliant!

  • @FreeLancerLondon
    @FreeLancerLondon 6 лет назад +1

    Just brilliant, laugh out loud funny and timeless. Cery relevant with rhe showing of A very British Scandal on the BBC. Peter Cook, greatly missed!