As I said in my previous blog post, there’s generally so
much to listen to on BBC Radio (and by extension iPlayer) that formerly, I have
been focusing all my listening time on drama.
I’m not sure why I’ve avoided the comedy (possibly because I’m quite
picky when it comes to TV comedy but much more forgiving for radio comedy;
otherwise how could I have such affection for Fibber McGee and Molly and Baby
Snooks???). BBC iPlayer Radio App on
the Smartphone has gotten me to try out some of the comedy series, and for the
most part I’ve been quite impressed. I
don’t know if just-after-Christmas was a good time to try out comedy series for
the first time given so many of them were Specials, but generally I found that
to be a good way into the series as a newbie.
I caught up on a heck of a lot of seasonal comedy on 1
January (though ironically on my computer rather than through the App). In my opinion, the “Christmas Eve” episode of
Love in Recovery by Peter Jackson
was the best of the lot. This series is about
Alcoholics Anonymous, written by a former alcoholic. A group of troubled people meet on Christmas
Eve but insist it’s not an AA meeting. It
stars Eddie Marsan, who I really liked from the BBC Little Dorrit (2008). There were some excellent jokes, especially
the punch-line of the daft cleaning lady who unthinkingly gifts Andy, the group
leader (Marsan) with a bottle of sherry.
Later, I enjoyed the Old
Harry’s Game Christmas Special from 2010.
I had only heard one episode of Old
Harry’s Game before, but I enjoyed this quite a lot. The premise is simple (and easily done on
radio whereas it could be disastrous in other media). Basically comedian (and the writer of this
series) Andy Hamilton is Satan, and the series is set in Hell. While that may not seem like it would reap a
lot of comedy, it does. In this Special,
Satan is feeling a little at loose ends and decides to take a mini-break to the
Lake District, leaving his peon Scumspawn in charge, who has no authority
whatsoever over the demons. Satan ends
up crucifying a lot of hapless blackbirds in the countryside and starts to feel
himself again when he gets to torment an evangelizing Christian, which was by
far the funniest part.
Ed Reardon was
another long-running comedy series with which I was not really that familiar,
so I gave it a go this January. I heard
the Christmas/New Year’s Special, “Ed Reardon at Christmas.” I suppose I thought Ed Reardon was a real
person and that the comedy was sliiiightly more rooted in real life. I enjoyed it—a very pompous hack writer who
spends his Christmas ghostwriting a book about The Great British Bakeoff in someone’s office while drinking lots
of cheap plonk he bought by selling plastic carrier bags.
However, the comedy series I’ve been most enjoying is The Long Swedish Winter by Danny Robins
which is in its second series. It took
me a little while to get into the first episode, which was all about Swedish
Christmas (the gag about a St Lucia girl setting her head on fire fell flat for
me, somehow). However, I quickly warmed
(oy vey) to the characters: Geoff (Adam
Riches), the British ex-pat who has settled in a village in northern Sweden
with Linda (Sissella Benn) and their son John/Jan; his in-laws (Thomas
Orredsson, Anna-Lena Bergelin); and Kurdish-Danish transplant Soren (Farshad
Kogli). Robins himself plays Ian,
another ex-pat.
Recorded on location in Sweden, the whole thing feels quite
natural to the point where I didn’t realize the Swedish actors are all big
comedy stars. Geoff’s predicaments are
quite familiar, but often solved or subverted in unusual ways, and there’s
always an enjoyable self-deprecation which proclaims that this is a British
comedy. In the first episode, highlights
included Geoff, Ian, and Soren belittling Swedish skinheads, a visit from the
Swedish version of Krampus, and Geoff having to cut down a Christmas tree. The second episode takes place mainly in Ikea
and was quite funny, too. I also enjoy
the snippets of Euro Pop you get in each story!
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