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#1 | |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,797
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https://groovyhistory.com/benny-hill-show
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#2 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Jun 23, 2005
Location: New York, New York, USA
Posts: 389
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I'd have to say, looking at his Thames output, I'd prefer the ones up to the point Dennis Kirkland became his producer/director in 1979. It was Kirkland who put the show on the path to ruin, which ultimately led to its cancellation - and the whipped up political climate against Hill and his show. I read Kirkland's memoir (under its original title, Benny: The True Story - it was later republished as The Strange And Saucy World Of Benny Hill), and he (Kirkland) came across as rather antediluvian towards women, he was convinced people only saw the show for the girls and little or nothing else (and unfortunately structured the program that way), and was unapologetic about his misogynistic attitudes. The hold he had on Hill was rather unfortunate, and it is equally unfortunate that Hill trusted Kirkland and his judgment far too much and for way too long.
Cited by Thames execs as justification for the 1989 cancellation was an increasing repetition of old gags, sketches, catchphrases and gestures. By then, the show had become increasingly labored, stilted, strained, stale, mechanical, robotic, mannered, affected, predictable, calculated and contrived, with not an ounce of spontaneity; he performed his increasingly timeworn gags in a lifeless, rote, perfunctory, self-conscious/indulgent, phoning/mailing-it-in, been-there-done-that and going-through-the-motions manner; and he and his cast were more and more operating on autopilot and running on fumes, their timing not as sharp and their energy level not as high as 10-15 years before, their delivery not as natural in flow. From 1982 onwards more and more Hill shows looked like - to quote Jackie Gleason on the final season of his own 1962-66 American Scene Magazine - "they had been made on the way to the men's room." (And in terms of some of the gags, especially the quickies, even written on the way to the men's room.) Another concern was that, with the creative well run totally dry, the show was slipping into uninspired mediocrity, amid ever diminishing returns. (They felt even more justified when they saw his New York special on one of the monitors, thinking it "tacky and nasty.") |
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#3 | |
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Member
Forum Regular
Join Date: Feb 20, 2019
Posts: 643
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With the full version of his last shows, you can see in plain sight that the energy wasn't there, the humor outdated, and the same jokes and characters being recycled. The show also had a harder time knowing what to do when Benny Hill became too old to play a dirty old man It didn't know whether it wanted to continue being a naughty show or a family friendly one. |
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#4 |
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Michael Fassbender Fanatic
Moderator
Forum Star Join Date: Jan 17, 2016
Location: California
Posts: 10,746
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My father used to love Benny Hill and I can say if there is one Britcom that never gets old The Benny Hill Show is one of them and next to Britcoms like Are You Being Served? and others Benny Hill's Britcom never loses it's charm and it's a shame that you don't see reruns of The Benny Hill Show anywhere because Benny Hill was one funny guy and people would love to see his show on American TV
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#5 | |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Jun 23, 2005
Location: New York, New York, USA
Posts: 389
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