I didn't see an episode of House until years after I had been a fan of Laurie's comedy career. Imagine how hilarious it is to see one of your favorite comedians playing Dr. House.
@@jordlopez I haven't seen that movie since I was a wee lad, was he really in that? He was also Major -- de Coverley in the Hulu Catch-22 miniseries, which I quite liked. (It didn't follow the book too closely, which is alright since doing a one-to-one adaptation of that kind of book is practically impossible. Heller didn't mind things being changed in adaptation. In fact, he thoroughly enjoyed the 1970 movie adaptation, making him one of the seven people who did.)
@@RabbiHerschel yeah, I distinctly remember rewatching Stuart Little a few years back and being like: "House is his dad? Really?" And there was no way I could misremember such an anomaly lol
My grandfather’s battle blouse was shot clean thru the temple, yet the bullet bounced off his cigarette case which saved his life, but he was nevertheless killed 30 seconds later in his escape attempt because he was half blind and partially deaf with a penchant for tripping over chairs, but all of that was irrelevant as he promptly expired from a… Thus, a Fry & Laurie skit is born.
I never understood this observation. As House, he makes a drawn out meal out of every Amurican weurd. For excellent American accents done by Brits, Band of Brothers is the gold standard.
It's so odd hearing him talk about his grandfather, knowing from "Who Do You Think You Are?" that his maternal grandfather was an Austro-Hungarian Jew from Vienna, who emigrated to England. His name was Neumann.
"I lost my sense of smell while forging the minutest details of a thousand Nazi documents" That's a line from al fresco, fry and Lori's 1983 series with Emma Thompson and Robbie Coltrane.
For their time? They are exactly of their time. There was a lot of this style around then. They are out there for today, probably. Comedy is much more of the everyday now
@@sophitsa79 yeah I guess it’s how ya look at it or how I worded that haha. It just hits my funny bone different than comedians of my day and it pleases me :)
Such a truely talented actor. Beautiful executed example of what the true meaning of the word 'dumb' actually means of which most do not know, yet wrongfully use everyday in every day speech.
Wow really? I thought it was common knowledge that dumb had a medical meaning as well. Surprising. But I guess knowledge is often seen as a negative these days.
If his grandfather wore the cigarette case on his temple he'd just have bits of tobacco in his brain instead of just lead. That's like 1.5mm sheet metal, an 8mm Mauser would go through that like a piece of tissue paper
Not just funny, but a talented comedy writer as well. He and Fry co-wrote these skits. Laurie's comedic timing in House is flawless, and his acceptance speeches at awards shows are hilarious.
a some point Hugh Laurie decided to stop playing comedy and started acting in serious roles. The first of those role I saw him was as the grumpy husband of a hysterical Emelda Staunon in Sense and Sensibility with Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson.
@@kamion53 Mr Palmer wasn't him deciding to stop doing comedy and doing serious roles - a) it's not a serious role (apart from the one line where he offers assistance to the Dashwoods, everything he does is deeply ironic; it's a comic part), b) that was filmed around the same time as the last series of ABOFAL, and he continued to do primarily comic roles for years after that, and c) he was invited to do it personally by Emma Thompson, his long-term friend (and former girlfriend) as basically a cameo.
In the Anglostate, Stephen Fry will be experimented on as our foremost scientists attempt to de-gay and de-Jew him so that he may one day rejoin society.
The "I didn't catch that" joke is quality, and they breezed right past it like it was nothing.
It was nothing. He hadn't thrown it yet!
Ah, Quality....reminds me of Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance.
@@StephenS-2024 that book should have been called “western philosophy and the art of bad parenting”
@@anathamon ha! That's good.
that WAS INDEED NOTHING when compared to the line "it's because i'm dumb, isn't it sir"
Every line of this scene was more unpredictable than the last.
And I'd be alive today
😁😁
“You can’t come because you’re a bastard and we all hate you!”
Epic.
"lets die for Fry who may or may not be born one day" would be such an awesome phrase to motivate soldiers with
Sounds like a marching song,
Left my wife in New Orleans,
To die for Fry and eat fried beans,
Left, Left, Left Right Left
There's something hilarious about seeing a young Dr. House claiming that his deafness and blindness are cancelling each other out.
I didn't see an episode of House until years after I had been a fan of Laurie's comedy career. Imagine how hilarious it is to see one of your favorite comedians playing Dr. House.
Never even occurred to me that obviously in some places people will have only seen Hugh Laurie as House. Absolute quality
@@makkapakka2098 that was me until very recently, he was only House and Stuart Little's dad
@@jordlopez I haven't seen that movie since I was a wee lad, was he really in that?
He was also Major -- de Coverley in the Hulu Catch-22 miniseries, which I quite liked. (It didn't follow the book too closely, which is alright since doing a one-to-one adaptation of that kind of book is practically impossible. Heller didn't mind things being changed in adaptation. In fact, he thoroughly enjoyed the 1970 movie adaptation, making him one of the seven people who did.)
@@RabbiHerschel yeah, I distinctly remember rewatching Stuart Little a few years back and being like: "House is his dad? Really?" And there was no way I could misremember such an anomaly lol
These two are very much the masters of wit and cleverly written dialogue…good on em’
My grandfather’s battle blouse was shot clean thru the temple, yet the bullet bounced off his cigarette case which saved his life, but he was nevertheless killed 30 seconds later in his escape attempt because he was half blind and partially deaf with a penchant for tripping over chairs, but all of that was irrelevant as he promptly expired from a… Thus, a Fry & Laurie skit is born.
This is why I carry my cigarette case on my head.
This is why i don’t smoke.
Sorry to tell you but that won't do anything to stop anything bigger than a pellet gun
@@Voodoo_Robot you won't be surviving any german snipers like that sonny
@@Eralen00 Really? What am I going to do with the bullet proof vest I made out of cigarette cases then?
These two are treasures. I hope they realize how much happiness they’ve brought to the masses.
"if you pardon the pun" "what pun?" xD
never seen this one before...blessed be the algorithm for finally showing this.
Just another Masterpiece of Comedy.
"He was given it by his god-niece as a kind of 'loss-of-virginity' present"
The great thing about them's that they're equally funny.
Yep
Nope laurie is funnier
"I'm blind and deaf, so they cancel each other out" is almost like Norm MacDonald's "I'm a deeply closeted gay man" bit.
The scene they're spoofing from The Great Escape is so sad. This is hilarious.
Laurie does the best American accent of anyone I've ever seen or heard.
Clint Eastwood's American accent was pretty good...
How about Daniel Day Luis?
How about Laurie?
It's because he's blind you see...
I never understood this observation. As House, he makes a drawn out meal out of every Amurican weurd. For excellent American accents done by Brits, Band of Brothers is the gold standard.
Their PG Wodehouse plays are hilarious.
Absolutely… “Wooster and Jeeves” is perfect. But maybe not better than Black Adder. That was a true Dream Team of Brit comedy.
@@TampaDave The only Dream team of British comedy is Monty Python.
It's so odd hearing him talk about his grandfather, knowing from "Who Do You Think You Are?" that his maternal grandfather was an Austro-Hungarian Jew from Vienna, who emigrated to England. His name was Neumann.
Yes, but this was his grandfather on his parents’ side.
@@General_Nothing all grandfathers are on the parents' side.
We’ll surely he wasn’t talking about his real grandfather here, it was likely made up for the skit!
Nnnnueman...
Love the idea that because he’s blind and deaf each lost sense promotes the other, so logically he’s got perfect sight and hearing! 🙈🙉😆
He has amazing sight and hearing, he just can't use it 😂
I don't think it's that funny- it's actually my own situation...
@@loge10 Congrats, I wish I had perfect sight and hearing.
"logically"
The two together!!! Just perfect.
"I lost my sense of smell while forging the minutest details of a thousand Nazi documents"
That's a line from al fresco, fry and Lori's 1983 series with Emma Thompson and Robbie Coltrane.
Oh, thank you!!! I love both these guys so much.
Their chemistry is off the charts!
Fun fact few people know: some parts of this sketch were taken from the POW sketch in the older Fry & Laurie show Alfresco.
Lol these guys are so out there for their time.
For their time? They are exactly of their time. There was a lot of this style around then. They are out there for today, probably. Comedy is much more of the everyday now
@@sophitsa79 yeah I guess it’s how ya look at it or how I worded that haha. It just hits my funny bone different than comedians of my day and it pleases me :)
His grandfather could he be Melchett lol 😂
5.25 minutes of brilliance.
Actually that would be 5.41 minutes or thereabouts
Grandfather on my parents side absolute gold
now this is funny!! the kind of British ‘humour’ i really like. thanks. :) 😋🌷🌱
One of the greatest clips from ABOFAL
Such a truely talented actor. Beautiful executed example of what the true meaning of the word 'dumb' actually means of which most do not know, yet wrongfully use everyday in every day speech.
Wow really? I thought it was common knowledge that dumb had a medical meaning as well.
Surprising. But I guess knowledge is often seen as a negative these days.
The spirit of Python is strong in this one and it is exquisite.
Masterpiece
Heavy“Blackadder goes forth” vibes there.
"Are you deaf?"
"Yes, sir"
Lmao that final line was absolutely brilliant!
Strange to see them so young. Love Fry as Wilde and Laurie as House MD, I think that's the best of both of them.
did you not see Jeeves and Wooster?
_Jeeves and Wooster_ is unequivocally Fry & Laurie's greatest work. _Blackadder_ is a riot as well.
“My grandfather on my parents’s side”
Brilliant!
I wonder if it part of the joke that Hugh calls Stephen Sir despite them being equivalent ranks.
Or battle blouse
Cheers jake :D brilliance XD
I've not seen this one. And I've repeated DAMN and WE'VE BEEN ACTIVATED a hundred times.
"So the Great War and World War II were just vast entertainments laid on for your benefit, were they?"
''Well when you put it that way... yes''.
A cigarette case can be opened and close- Audience: "-HHAAAHAHAHAHAACHAAHCHAHH"
This start reminded me of Christopher Walken's Gold Watch monologue.
If his grandfather wore the cigarette case on his temple he'd just have bits of tobacco in his brain instead of just lead. That's like 1.5mm sheet metal, an 8mm Mauser would go through that like a piece of tissue paper
"Because I'm dumb isn't it sir"
"It belonged to my grandfather on my parent's side"
I literally almost did a spit take watching this.
He did have a mum ! And a dad !
Begging forgiveness. But I can only take Stephen Fry in small doses, which is uniquely difficult as he is quite a large man.
🤣🤣🤣
the laughs are so bought
Was this improvised? Feels brilliantly "Yes, and..."
You can see Fry almost trip over one of his lines. It's scripted, but that doesn't diminish it at all.
"... and I'd be alive today."
Wait, What?
Who is giving electric knives to the prisoners?
My dad was a ww2 sniper ! And I’m alive
He’s only got a bad limp in his House now
Did this inspire Tarantino to the watch story - i think - told in Pulp Fiction to young Bruce Willis?
The first part is just kindergarten show and tell
But done by a adult comic genius.
....battle blouse..... :)
Any attempt at analizing the humour here fails, absurdism is at absurd levels. "my grandfather on my parents' side' sets the stage
Idk, honestly that's the one joke that's almost something you could ordinarily say; it specifies that it's neither of your grandfather-in-laws.
@@hashbrown777 :) I guess that's what I mean about analizing their jokes.
''And I'd be alive today''.
Tarantino borrowed this it seems.
1:50 this is where population ethics comes from
I wonder if this sketch was made after Blackadder IV, given the bit about war skits being in bad taste.
I think it was about a decade earlier
Great entertainers and masterful subversive humor! Probably lost on an audience that laughs at literally every word regardless.
Sounds like what we Yanks refer to as a "laughtrack"....cue Dr Evil air quotes
Lindybeige humor
It's never lupus
Is the audience being gased with laughing gas?
Wow. Didn’t know Dr. House could be this funny.
One of the best British comedy duos of all time
Not just funny, but a talented comedy writer as well. He and Fry co-wrote these skits.
Laurie's comedic timing in House is flawless, and his acceptance speeches at awards shows are hilarious.
a some point Hugh Laurie decided to stop playing comedy and started acting in serious roles. The first of those role I saw him was as the grumpy husband of a hysterical Emelda Staunon in Sense and Sensibility with Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson.
@@kamion53 Thus ruining a brilliant comedic career,
@@kamion53 Mr Palmer wasn't him deciding to stop doing comedy and doing serious roles - a) it's not a serious role (apart from the one line where he offers assistance to the Dashwoods, everything he does is deeply ironic; it's a comic part), b) that was filmed around the same time as the last series of ABOFAL, and he continued to do primarily comic roles for years after that, and c) he was invited to do it personally by Emma Thompson, his long-term friend (and former girlfriend) as basically a cameo.
That is what several of my ex girlfriends said - "you can't come because you are a bastard and we hate you".
Why does it sound so similar to monthy python?
They’re Britons.
Does it?
3:43 was that scripted or not? Because I can't tell XD
Yeah, it had to be. Saying "pardon the pun" when neither of them has made one is bit of a running gag for them.
@@dars5229 Pardon?
what episode is this? and what series? someone tell me the detail of this clip please?
The show's name: A Bit of Fry and Laurie.
That's all I know
Check the video's description
Escalation humor like this just makes no _sense._
FRY… just go away, already
Is this comedy? I don't speak British.
This is definitely a more weird, meta one.
@@Dilmahkana funny.
Are you per chance german?
@@Michael-dj6pd Ich bin Amerikaner.
@@StephenS-2024 That explains the lack of comedic understanding.
Daredevil's cameo in She-Hulk is amazing.
Are you sure you are on the right video?
@@Michael-dj6pd it's a joke, don't worry about it.
@@jeronimo196 That whole show is a joke.
So funny I forgot to laugh. Uh.
It's alright , your from modern times, subtlety is not your strong point.
They didn’t die for you, Stephen; they died for Jesus.
And look where that got them... dead.
That's a dumber reason to die
Astonishing how they put up with that inane, fake laughter back then.
That inane fake laughter was real laughter from an actual studio audience.
In the Anglostate, Stephen Fry will be experimented on as our foremost scientists attempt to de-gay and de-Jew him so that he may one day rejoin society.
They're just too clever to generate funny. Because funny is simply not rational. These are properly educated men.
They're not funny at all.
Not funny
they laugh at literally everything he says? cringe AF
I don't see how that is cringe AF but to each their own..