Michael Palin
Michael Palin |
---|
Birth name: Michael Edward Palin |
Born: Broomhill, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England | 5 May 1943
Occupation |
Actor, writer, television presenter |
Career milestones |
Monty Python's Flying Circus (1969-1974) Ripping Yarns (1976-1979) A Fish Called Wanda (1988) Around the World in 80 Days (1989) |
Official website |
Palin's Travels |
Michael Edward Palin, CBE (born 5 May 1943) is an English comedian, actor, writer and television presenter best known for being one of the members of the comedy group Monty Python and for his travel documentaries.
Early life and career
Palin was born in Broomhill, Sheffield, South Yorkshire. His father was an engineer working for a steel firm. He started his education at Birkdale preparatory school, Sheffield, and later Shrewsbury School, Shrewsbury. When he was five years old at Birkdale, Palin had his first acting experience playing Martha Cratchit in a school performance of A Christmas Carol. At the age of ten Palin, still interested in acting, made a comedy monologue and read a Shakespeare play to his mother while playing all the parts.[1] After his school days in 1962 he went on to read modern history at Brasenose College, Oxford. With fellow student Robert Hewison he performed and wrote, for the first time, comedy material at a university Christmas party.[2] Terry Jones, also a student in Oxford, saw that performance and began writing together with Hewison and Palin.[3] In the same year Palin joined the Brightside and Carbrook Co-Operative Society Players and first gained fame when he won an acting award at a Co-Op drama festival.[4] He also performed in the Oxford Revue with Jones.
In 1966 he married Helen Gibbins, whom he first met in 1959 on holiday in Southwold in Suffolk — the county he has returned to in recent years to live.
This meeting was later fictionalised in Palin's play East of Ipswich.[5] He has three children with Gibbins.[6] While still a baby, his son William briefly appeared in Monty Python and the Holy Grail as Sir Not-appearing-in-this-film.
After finishing university in 1965 Palin became a presenter on a comedy pop show called Now! for the television contractor Television Wales and the West.[7] At the same time Palin was contacted by Jones, who had left university a year earlier, for assistance in writing a theatrical documentary about sex through the ages. [8] Although this project was eventually abandoned, it brought Palin and Jones together as a writing duo and led them to write comedy for various BBC programmes, such as The Ken Dodd Show, The Billy Cotton Bandshow, and The Illustrated Weekly Hudd.[9] They were also in the team of writers working for The Frost Report, whose other members included Frank Muir, Barry Cryer, Marty Feldman, Ronnie Barker, Ronnie Corbett, Dick Vosburgh, and future Monty Python members Graham Chapman, John Cleese and Eric Idle. Although the members of Monty Python had already encountered each other over the years, The Frost Report was the first time all the British members of Monty Python (its sixth member, Terry Gilliam, was at that time an American citizen) worked together. During the run of The Frost Report the Palin/Jones team contributed material to two shows starring John Bird: The Late Show and A series of Bird's. For A series of Bird's the Palin/Jones team had their first experience of writing narrative instead of the short sketches they were accustomed to conceiving.[10]
Following The Frost Report the Palin/Jones team worked as actors and writers on the show Twice a fortnight with Graeme Garden, Bill Oddie and Jonathan Lynn, and the successful children's comedy show Do Not Adjust Your Set with Idle and David Jason. The animations for Do Not Adjust Your Set were made by Terry Gilliam, who joined the cast on Cleese's recommendation and began working with the Palin/Jones team for the first time. Eager to work with Palin[11] sans Jones, Cleese later asked him to perform in How to Irritate People together with Chapman and Tim Brooke-Taylor. The Palin/Jones team were reunited for The Complete and Utter History of Britain.
During this period Cleese contacted Palin about doing the show that would ultimately become Monty Python's Flying Circus. On the strength of their work on The Frost Report and other programmes Cleese and Chapman had been offered a show by the BBC, but Cleese was reluctant to do a two-man show for various reasons, among them Chapman's reputedly difficult personality. At the same time the success of Do Not Adjust Your Set had led Palin, Jones, Idle, and Gilliam to be offered their own series and, while it was still in production, Palin agreed to Cleese's proposal and brought along Idle, Jones, and Gilliam. Thus the formation of the Monty Python troupe has been referred to as a result of Cleese's desire to work with Palin and the chance circumstances that brought the other four members into the fold.[12]
Monty Python
In Monty Python, Palin played various roles, which ranged from manic enthusiasm (such as the lumberjack of the Lumberjack Song) to unflappable calmness (such as the Dead Parrot vendor, Cheese Shop proprietor, or Postal Clerk). As a straight man he was often a foil to the rising ire of characters portrayed by Cleese.
Palin frequently wrote with Jones for the sketches, including "The Lumberjack Song" and "Spam". Some sketches Palin wrote by himself, (or began by himself) such as the "Spanish Inquisition sketch", in which a fairly widespread catchphrase was created: "Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!"
Other performances
After the Monty Python television series ended, Palin collaborated with Jones on the television comedy series Ripping Yarns and the play Secrets, from the BBC series Black and Blue. He also appeared in All You Need Is Cash as Eric Manchester (based on Derek Taylor), the press agent for The Rutles.
In 1982, Palin wrote and starred in The Missionary, co-starring Maggie Smith. In it, he plays the Reverend Charles Fortesque, who is recalled from Africa to aid prostitutes.
He appeared in Terry Gilliam's films Time Bandits, Jabberwocky, and Brazil. His biggest international role in a movie outside of Python was as stuttering would-be assassin Ken Pile in A Fish Called Wanda, for which he won the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role. The film was such a success that Cleese reunited the main cast almost a decade later to make Fierce Creatures.
After filming for Fierce Creatures finished, Palin went on a travel journey for a BBC documentary and, returning a year later, found that the end of Fierce Creatures had failed at test screenings and had to be reshot.
Apart from Fierce Creatures, Palin's last film role was a small part in The Wind in the Willows, a film directed by and starring Terry Jones. Palin also appeared with John Cleese in his documentary, The Human Face.
He also assisted Transport 2000 and others with campaigns on transport policy issues, particularly those relating to urban areas, and has now become president of Transport 2000.[13]
Palin has also appeared in serious drama. In 1991 Palin worked as producer and actor in the film American Friends based upon a real event in the life of his great grandfather, a fellow at St John's College, Oxford.[14] In that same year he also played the part of a headmaster in Alan Bleasdale's Channel 4 drama series G.B.H..
Palin also had a small cameo role in Australian soap opera Home and Away. He played an English surfer with a fear of sharks, who interrupts a heart-to-heart between two main characters to ask whether there were any sharks in the sea. This was filmed while he was in Australia for the Full Circle series, with a segment about the filming of the role featuring in the series.
Recognition
In 2000 Palin became a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his services to television.[15]
In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, he was voted the 30th favourite by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.[16]
Each member of Monty Python has an asteroid named after him. Palin's is Asteroid 9621 Michaelpalin.[17]
Travel documentaries
Palin's first travel documentary was part of the 1980 BBC Television series Great Railway Journeys of the World, in which — humourously reminiscing about his childhood hobby of train spotting — he travelled throughout the UK by train, from London to Kyle of Lochalsh, via Manchester, York, Edinburgh and Inverness. At the Kyle of Lochalsh, Palin bought the station's long metal platform sign and is seen lugging it back to London with him.
In 1994, Palin travelled through Ireland for the same series, entitled "Derry to Kerry". In a quest for family roots, he attempted to trace his great grandmother — Brita Gallagher — who set sail from Ireland 150 years ago during the Great Famine (1845-1849), bound for a new life in Burlington, New Jersey, USA. The series is a trip along the Palin family line.
Starting in 1989, Palin has appeared as presenter in a series of travel programmes made for the BBC. These programs have been broadcast around the world in syndication, and were also sold on VHS tape and later on DVD:
- Michael Palin: Around the World in 80 Days (1989): travelling as closely as possible the path described in the famous Jules Verne story without using aircraft.
- Pole to Pole (1992): travelling from the North Pole to the South Pole, following as closely as possible the 30 degree line of longitude, over as much land as possible, i.e., through Europe and Africa.
- Full Circle with Michael Palin (1997): in which he circumnavigated the lands around the Pacific Ocean counter-clockwise; a journey of 80,000 kilometres starting on Little Diomede Island in the Bering Strait and taking him through Asia, Oceania and the Americas.
- Michael Palin's Hemingway Adventure (1999): retracing the footsteps of Ernest Hemingway through the United States, Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean.
- Sahara with Michael Palin (2002): in which he trekked around and through the world's largest desert.
- Himalaya with Michael Palin (2004): in which he travels through the Himalaya region.
- Michael Palin's New Europe (2007): in which he travels through Eastern Europe.
Following each trip, Palin wrote a book about his travels, providing information and insights not included in the TV program. Each book is illustrated with photographs by Basil Pao, the stills photographer who was on the team. (Exception: the first book, Around the World in 80 Days, contains some pictures by Basil Pao but most are by other photographers.)
All six of these books were also made available as audio books, and all of them are read by Palin himself. Around the World in 80 Days and Hemingway Adventure are unabridged, while the other four books were made in both abridged and unabridged versions, although the unabridged versions can be very difficult to find.
For four of the trips a photography book was made by Basil Pao, each with an introduction written by Palin. These are large coffee-table style books with pictures printed on glossy paper. The majority of the pictures are of various people encountered on the trip, as informal portraits or showing them engaged in some interesting activity. Some of the landscape photos are displayed as two-page spreads.
In 2005, Palin presented Michael Palin and the Mystery of Hammershoi, about the Danish artist Vilhelm Hammershøi, whose work he collects.
Palin's travel programmes are responsible for a phenomenon termed the "Palin effect": areas of the world that he has visited suddenly become popular tourist attractions — for example, the significant increase in the number of tourists interested in Peru after Palin visited Machu Picchu.[18] In a 2006 survey of "15 of the world's top travel writers" by The Observer, Palin named Peru's Pongo de Mainique (canyon below the Machu Picchu) his "favourite place in the world".[19]
In honour of his achievements as a traveller (especially rail travel), Palin has two British trains named after him. Virgin Trains' Super Voyager number 221130 carries his name externally and a plaque is located adjacent to the onboard shop with information on Palin and his many journeys.[20]. Also, one Railway have named a British Rail Class 153 (unit number 153335) after him.
Bibliography
Travel books
- Around the World in 80 Days (1989) ISBN 0-563-20826-0
- Pole to Pole (1992) ISBN 0-563-37065-3
- Full Circle (1997) ISBN 0-563-37121-8
- Michael Palin's Hemingway Adventure (1999) ISBN 0-297-82528-3
- Sahara (2002) ISBN 0-297-84303-6
- Himalaya (2004) ISBN 0-297-84371-0
- New Europe (2007) ISBN 0-297-84449-0
All his travel books can be read at no charge, complete and unabridged, on his website.
Monty Python
- The Pythons Autobiography by The Pythons (2003) ISBN 0-7528-5293-0
- Diaries 1969-1979: The Python Years (2006) ISBN 0-297-84436-9
Fiction
- Hemingway's chair (1995) ISBN 0-7493-1930-5
- Bert Fegg's Nasty Book for Boys and Girls w/Terry Jones, illus Martin Honeysett, Frank Bellamy et al (1974) ISBN 0-413-32740-X
- Dr Fegg's Encyclopeadia of all world knowledge (1984) (expanded reprint of the above, with Terry Jones and Martin Honeysett) ISBN 0-8722-6005-4
Children's Books
- Small Harry and the Toothache Pills (1982) ISBN 0-416-23690-1
- Limerics or The Limeric Book (1985) ISBN 0-09-161540-2
- Cyril and the House of Commons (1986) ISBN 1-85145-078-5
- Cyril and the Dinner Party (1986) ISBN 1-85145-069-6
- The Mirrorstone w/ Alan Lee and Richard Seymoure (1986) ISBN 0-224-02408-6
Selected filmography
- And Now For Something Completely Different (1971)
- Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975)
- Three Men in a Boat (1975)
- Jabberwocky (1977)
- Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979)
- Time Bandits (1981)
- Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl (1982)
- The Missionary (1982)
- Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983)
- A Private Function (1984)
- Brazil (1985)
- A Fish Called Wanda (1988)
- American Friends (1991)
- The Wind in the Willows (1996)
- The Willows in Winter(1996)
- Fierce Creatures (1997)
Television
- Now! (October 1965 – middle 1966)
- The Ken Dodd Show
- Billy Cotton Bandshow
- The Illustrated Weekly Hudd
- The Frost Report. (10 March 1966 – 29 june 1967)
- The Late Show (15 October 1966 - 1 April 1967)
- A Series of Bird's (1967) (3 October 1967 - 21 November 1967 screenwriter (guest stars)
- Twice a Fortnight (21 October 1967 - 23 December 1967)
- Do Not Adjust Your Set (26 December 1967 - 14 May 1969)
- Broaden Your Mind (1968)
- How to Irritate People (1968)
- Marty (TV series) (1968)
- Complete and Utter History of Britain (1969)
- Monty Python's Flying Circus (5 October 1969–5 December 1974)
- Ripping Yarns (1976-1979)
- Confessions of a Train Spotter: London to Kyle of Lochalsh (1980)
- Michael Palin: Around the World in 80 Days (1989)
- Pole to Pole (1992)
- Irish Railway Journey: Derry to Kerry (1994)
- Full Circle with Michael Palin (1997)
- Michael Palin's Hemingway Adventure (1999)
- Sahara with Michael Palin (2002)
- Himalaya with Michael Palin (2004)
- Michael Palin's New Europe (2007)
Notes
- ^ Ross, 200
- ^ Michael Palin biography
- ^ Ross, 200
- ^ "ABC TV Documentaries: Sahara episode 3/4". Australian Broadcasting Company. Retrieved 2006-09-02.
- ^ Ross, 57
- ^ Warman, Anna. "Travelling with Michael Palin". Retrieved 2006-08-14.
- ^ Michael Palin by John Oliver at BFI Screen Online, URL accessed 13 December, 2006
- ^ Hodgkinson, Tom. "In Conversation with Michael Palin date = 2006". The Idler. Retrieved 2006-12-20.
{{cite web}}
: Missing pipe in:|title=
(help) - ^ Biography at Pythonet.org, URL accessed 17 December, 2006
- ^ "A Series Of Bird's". bbc.co.uk Guide to Comedy.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|accesdate=
ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - ^ Ross, 91
- ^ The Pythons Autobiography By The Pythons; Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin, John Chapman, David Sherlock, Bob McCabe; Thomas Dunne Books; 2003
- ^ Michael Palin on transport fit for all our futures, article by Palin at Transport 2000.org, URL accessed 13 December, 2006
- ^ American Friends at Rotten Tomatoes.com, URL accessed 13 December 2006
- ^ "BBC News". Trio of Dames lead showbiz honours. 31 December 1999. Retrieved 2006-08-15.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ The Comedian's Comedian, URL accessed 13 December 2006
- ^ "JPL Small-Body Database Browser". Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 2006-10-17.
- ^ Webster, Ben (2005-01-14). "Globetrotter Palin brought down to earth by eco-lobby". The Times. Retrieved 2006-08-14.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help); Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^
Wilkinson, Carl (2006-01-08). ""My favourite place in the world"". The Observer. Retrieved 2007-08-18.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Virgin Trains, URL accessed 13 December, 2006
References
- Ross, Robert (1997). Monty Python Encyclopedia B.T. Batsford Ltd, London ISBN 1-57500-036-9
- Wilmut, Roger (1980). From Fringe to Flying Circus: Celebrating a Unique Generation of Comedy 1960-1980 Eyre Methuen Ltd ISBN 0-413-50770-X
External links
- Michael Palin - BBC Guide to Comedy
- Michael Palin - Comedy Zone
- Palin's Travels - official website for the travel series
- Michael Palin's New Europe: An Unofficial Fan Center
- Michael Palin at IMDb
- Michael Palin Centre for Stammering Children
- Michael Palin's entry on the National Treasures website
- English comedians
- English comedy writers
- English film actors
- English screenwriters
- English television actors
- English television presenters
- English television writers
- English travel writers
- English diarists
- Monty Python members
- Alumni of Brasenose College, Oxford
- Honorary Fellows of Brasenose College, Oxford
- Old Salopians
- People from Sheffield
- People from Suffolk
- Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
- 1943 births
- Living people