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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/montypython_getty_251529s_7166.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Wasting a perfectly good education since 1969. [[note]] L-R: Creator/MichaelPalin, Creator/TerryJones, Creator/EricIdle, Creator/GrahamChapman, Creator/TerryGilliam, and Creator/JohnCleese at the Hollywood Bowl, 1980 [[/note]]]]
3
4->''"And now for something completely different."''
5-->-- ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus''
6
7Monty Python is a British comedy troupe, featuring some very well-educated clowns.
8
9DeadpanSnarker Creator/JohnCleese, StraightMan Creator/GrahamChapman and [[TheBard musician]] Creator/EricIdle met at Cambridge University where they were members of The Footlights, a celebrated performing society. [[{{Pantomime}} Panto]]-style actor Creator/TerryJones and his writing partner, NiceGuy Creator/MichaelPalin, had been similarly occupied at Oxford at about the same time. Cleese met [[DerangedAnimation cartoonist/animator]] Creator/TerryGilliam -- the one American in the group, then working for the humor magazine ''Help!?'' -- during the US tour of "The Footlights Revue".
10
11All save Gilliam were recruited as television writers straight out of college. In the amorphous melting pot that was British radio and TV comedy in the late 1960's -- where alliances drawn from the same talent-pool were constantly formed for [[BritishBrevity short-lived projects]] and then dissolved -- meetings in various combinations ensued for our heroes, and considerable mutual respect was earned. In 1967 Idle, Palin, Jones and Gilliam wrote and starred in the UK children's TV series, ''Series/DoNotAdjustYourSet''. At the same time Cleese and Chapman joined together with Tim Brooke-Taylor et al. to produce ''Series/AtLastThe1948Show'', and in 1968 the two provided additional material for the unruly satire ''Film/TheMagicChristian'', also making cameos in the film. Cleese, Chapman, Palin and Brooke-Taylor then collaborated for the one-off TV special ''How to Irritate People'' later that year.
12
13The following year, Cleese and Chapman were offered a show of their own. Who would join them in the new troupe was initially unclear; Brooke-Taylor, later of ''Series/TheGoodies'', was seriously considered (Cleese and the three Goodies had been mainstays of much-loved radio comedy sketch-show ''Radio/ImSorryIllReadThatAgain''), as was jobbing comic actor Creator/DavidJason (also from ''Do Not Adjust Your Set''). But Cleese really wanted to work with Palin, and Palin's three cohorts were ready to move on to more ambitious fare as well, so in the end it all fell into place naturally.
14
15The brash young sextet stormed into a pitch meeting with BBC executives and told them that they had absolutely no idea what they wanted to do, let alone come up with a title for it. In their heads, though, it was going to be ''really really'' cool and groundbreaking and just generally nothing the comedy world had ever seen before - like ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' had been, only more so. Incredibly enough, the execs took a flyer on them. The net result was ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'', and a sketch-comedy troupe for the ages was born.
16
17Writing chores tended to fall along well-established lines: Cleese with Chapman (which Cleese described as mostly him feverishly typing while Chapman smoked his pipe and occasionally tossed out a totally random--but usually brilliant--idea), Palin with Jones, Idle on his own. Gilliam later noted that there seemed to be a further division in comedic sensibilities between the taller, more "aggressive" Cambridge men and the shorter, lighter-humoured Oxford men, the latter of whom Gilliam identified with most closely. He himself worked separately on animations and hence appears only very rarely before the camera.
18
19In terms of acting, the Pythons [[ActingForTwo traded roles]] constantly throughout the show's run, allowing them to show off their impressive acting ranges--but due to their slightly differing delivery styles, some of them gravitated toward certain types of characters more often than others. In the popular imagination, Cleese is generally remembered as "[[DeadpanSnarker The Snarky One]]", Palin as "[[NiceGuy The Cheery One]]", Chapman as "[[StraightMan The Straight Man]]", Idle as "[[FunPersonified The Goofball]]", and Jones as "[[CrossPlayer The Crossdresser]]" (all of them [[CrossCastRole played female characters]] at various points, but Jones' impression of a middle-aged woman is the most iconic).
20
21Over the course of the series, they also acquired a loyal and long-running supporting cast: the unofficial seventh and eighth members of the troupe are British-born/American-raised actress Creator/CarolCleveland and comedic musician Neil Innes, with other frequent guest players including Cleese's then-wife (and future ''Series/FawltyTowers'' collaborator) Creator/ConnieBooth, actor-writer Ian Davidson, and singing troupe The Fred Tomlinson Singers. Creator/DouglasAdams was brought on board for the final season, writing some material and appearing in two episodes as well.
22
23In addition to the ''Flying Circus'' show itself (which ran on the BBC from 1969 to 1974), they made a number of films that are almost universally considered classics. They also had several comedy albums, live stage shows, video games, and participated in a number of fund raisers called the Secret Policeman's Ball shows.
24
25The troupe more or less dissolved into its component parts after their last film, and fell apart definitively when Graham Chapman died in 1989. The last time all six were seen together live was in a brief spot in the 20-year reunion special ''Parrot Sketch Not Included'', where host Creator/SteveMartin revealed they were all being kept in a closet, including a visibly-ailing Chapman seated in the middle; the special aired the day after his death that October. The survivors (particularly Cleese and Palin) still do occasionally perform either on stage or in each other's films. All five held a 1998 reunion in Aspen, Colorado (with Creator/EddieIzzard in tow) and in mid-2014, they took one last collective bow, in a short series of London-based performances characteristically entitled [[Film/MontyPythonMostlyLiveOneDownFiveToGo ''Monty Python (Mostly) Live: One Down, Five to Go''.]] Originally intended as a single one-off held at London's O2 arena in order to raise money to pay for a lawsuit the group lost related to royalties for ''Spamalot'', demand for tickets was so high, they ended up filling the stadium for a week, with the final show filmed and beamed to movie theatres and broadcasters.
26
27Most other things "Monty Python" nowadays (such as ''{{Theatre/Spamalot}}'') fully involve only Creator/EricIdle, with the others as occasional drop-ins: Creator/TerryGilliam now mainly works as a director; Creator/MichaelPalin makes travel documentaries (earning himself a knighthood in the process); Creator/JohnCleese is still the grumpy old face of British comedy (having appeared in the ''Film/JamesBond'' films as [[LegacyCharacter the second]] Q and as Nearly Headless Nick in the ''Film/HarryPotter'' films); Creator/TerryJones was a novelist who battled a form of dementia--which was noticeable during the run of the O2 concerts--before passing due the complications it caused on January 21, 2020[[note]]In an uncannily Pythonesque turn of events, Jones' death ended up being overshadowed by peanut company Planters killing off their "Mr. Peanut" mascot--one can suppose Terry had a laugh about it with Graham upstairs[[/note]], joining Creator/GrahamChapman, who has continued to remain dead...
28
29...although Graham ''did'' return for a brief bit in order to record vocal parts for a [[TheFilmOfTheBook feature film adaptation]] of his 1980 "autobiography", ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Liar%27s_Autobiography A Liar's Autobiography]]''.[[note]][[DontExplainTheJoke Chapman's voice is taken from a reading he did of his autobiography in the late-1980s, while Cleese recorded dialogue to match up with Chapman's other lines.]][[/note]] The film, which also featured four of the other five members (Idle is not involved; when asked why this was [[WordOfGod Terry Jones]] responded simply with "[[CreatorBacklash He's pissed at us]]"), was given a limited theatrical release worldwide in 2012, and aired on American TV channel Epix on November 2 of that year. Chapman has, of course, since gone back to the afterlife, presumably due to prior commitments.
30
31The group was also famous for their rather impressive range of [[HeAlsoDid academic and professional interests outside comedy]], contributing to their general image as [[RenaissanceMan renaissance men]]. Cleese studied law, Chapman was a medical doctor, Idle is a singer and musician, and Jones was a respected medieval historian who published several books on Creator/GeoffreyChaucer.
32
33The Pythons have established a [[https://www.youtube.com/montypython YouTube channel]] as well. Which is available worldwide!
34
35[[AC:Full motion pictures]]
36* ''And Now For Something Completely Different'' (1971): Essentially TheMovie of the ''Flying Circus'', produced and released while the original series was still in production. A collection of their best sketches from the show, reshot on film to introduce the team to American audiences, who didn't catch on quite yet.
37* ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'' (1975): Myth/KingArthur and his knights search for the Holy Grail, infamous for such scenes as the Taunting French Knight and the Knights who say Ni. Adapted into a [[TheMusical Broadway musical]], ''{{Theatre/Spamalot}}!''. Cleese, who quit the ''Flying Circus'' series before its final season in order to make the sitcom ''Series/FawltyTowers'', rejoined the troupe with this film.
38* ''Film/MontyPythonsLifeOfBrian'' (1979): The life (and death) of a man whose life is suspiciously similar to Jesus, famous for TheLongList scene "[[WhatHaveYouDoneForMeLately What have the Romans ever done for us]]?". Now adapted by Eric Idle into an ''oratorio'', of all things, entitled ''Not the Messiah (He's a Very Naughty Boy)'', which premiered with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.
39* ''Film/MontyPythonLiveAtTheHollywoodBowl'' (1982): A live show, recorded in 1980, recreating some of the most famous sketches and songs (often with a twist), and adding new material (as well as some footage from the German episodes). Reportedly this film was made as a way of the troupe to overcome writer's block suffered while creating...
40* ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife'' (1983): A guide from birth to death, all the important stages of human life. The last of the trilogy of non-show related movies.
41* ''Film/MontyPythonMostlyLiveOneDownFiveToGo'' (2014): Live show conceived as a farewell; the 10th and last show was recorded and released as a film.
42
43All of which are also [[HilarityEnsues scathingly satirical and hilarious]].
44
45(Note: you will sometimes see the Terry Gilliam-directed film ''Film/{{Jabberwocky}}'' included in lists of Python films. This is due to it being promoted as ''Monty Python's Jabberwocky'' in some regions at the time of its original release, much to Gilliam's objections. Although it does feature some Python members in the cast, it is not correctly considered a Python film.)
46
47[[AC:Comedy Albums]]
48* ''Monty Python's Flying Circus'' (1970)[[note]]Contains entirely material adapted from Season 1; owned by the BBC and thus was not re-released whenever the others were.[[/note]]
49* ''AudioPlay/AnotherMontyPythonRecord'' (1971)[[note]]First album of their Charisma Records deal, featuring stereo sound for the first time, and a continuous runout groove at the end of "Ethel the Frog" which gave the impression of an infinite broken record. Adapted from Season 2 as well as the first German special, with new material here and there.[[/note]]
50* ''Monty Python's Previous Record'' (1972)[[note]]The Pythons' first collaboration with Neil Innes. TV sketches are mostly from the first half of Season 3, with 1 each from Season 2 and the second German special, and one returning from Do Not Adjust Your Set. Contains more new material than the previous two. Included as a bonus, a short record called "Teach Yourself Heath".[[/note]]
51* ''AudioPlay/TheMontyPythonMatchingTieAndHandkerchief'' (1973)[[note]]A "3-sided" record; side 2 had two concentric spiral grooves rather than one, so that the one that would play when the needle was dropped was completely unpredictable. Mostly new material, with a few sketches from Seasons 1-3.[[/note]]
52* ''AudioPlay/MontyPythonLiveAtDruryLane'' (1974)[[note]]First live album, containing mostly adapted versions of Series 1-3 sketches, along with a deleted sketch from Series 3 ("Cocktail Bar") and a few from At Last The 1948 Show (this was in fact the first appearance of "Four Yorkshiremen" in the Python works).[[/note]]
53* ''The Album of the Soundtrack of the Trailer of the Film of Monty Python and the Holy Grail'' (1975)[[note]]ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin. Billed as the special "Executive Version", whereas no standard version existed.[[/note]]
54* ''Monty Python Live at City Centre'' (1976)[[note]]Features similar material to Live at Drury Lane, and was a US-only release.[[/note]]
55* ''The Monty Python Instant Record Collection'' (1977)[[note]]A compilation of tracks from "Another" through "Holy Grail".[[/note]]
56* ''Monty Python's Life of Brian'' (1979)[[note]]The soundtrack of the titular film.[[/note]]
57* ''AudioPlay/MontyPythonsContractualObligationAlbum'' (1980)[[note]]The final required album from their Charisma Records deal, containing a mix of new material, adaptations of pre-Python material, deleted content from the films, and Series/RutlandWeekendTelevision. Better than it sounds.[[/note]]
58* ''Monty Python's The Meaning of Life'' (1983)[[note]]The soundtrack to the fourth Python film, notably featuring dialogue that was cut from the final version, as well as a link to the Martin Luther sketch that was cut (the sketch itself does not appear, though).[[/note]]
59* ''The Final Rip Off'' (1988)[[note]]A compilation of Charisma-released material, being the first record the Pythons released on Virgin.[[/note]]
60* ''Monty Python Sings'' (1989)[[note]]Another Virgin compilation, naturally focusing on musical material. Contains a recording of Cleese's "Oliver Cromwell". An updated version, ''Monty Python Sings (Again)'', was released in 2014 in preparation for the stage show; it features 3 previously unreleased tracks and the 3 new songs from the stage show.[[/note]]
61* ''The Monty Python Instant Record Collection, Volume 2'' (1991)
62* ''The Ultimate Monty Python Rip Off'' (1994) / ''The Instant Monty Python CD Collection'' (1994)[[note]]The former was released as a sampler for the latter, which is a CD compilation of all albums from "Another" through "Meaning of Life".[[/note]]
63* ''Spamalot'' (2005)[[note]]The original cast recording of the musical.[[/note]]
64* ''The Hastily Cobbled Together for a Fast Buck Album'' (unreleased)[[note]]A bootleg compiled from outtakes, which was meant to receive an official release on Virgin but never did.[[/note]]
65
66[[AC:Theater]]
67* ''{{Theatre/Spamalot}}''
68* ''Not the Messiah (He's a Very Naughty Boy)''
69* ''One Down (Five to Go)''
70
71[[AC:Video Games]]
72* ''VideoGame/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'' (1990)
73* ''Monty Python's Complete Waste of Time'' (1994)
74* ''Monty Python & the Quest for the Holy Grail'' (1996)
75* ''Monty Python's The Meaning of Life'' (1997)
76
77[[AC:Other]]
78* The scripting language Python, while not developed by any member of the cast, was named after them. The standard IDE for Python, IDLE, was similarly named after Python member Creator/EricIdle. And the documentation for said language outright encourages Monty Python references!
79
80!! Tropes / Indexes named after Monty Python sketches:
81* AndThereWasMuchRejoicing
82* TheCoconutEffect
83* DropTheCow
84* DoesNotLikeSpam
85* ExtraOreDinary
86* HelpHelpThisIndexIsBeingRepressed
87* HolyHandGrenade
88* InherentInTheSystem
89* IShallTauntYou
90* KillerRabbit
91* TheKnightsWhoSaySquee
92* MyHovercraftIsFullOfEels
93* NotQuiteDead
94* OnlyAFleshWound
95* OnlyAModel
96* SirNotAppearingInThisTrailer
97* SillyWalk
98* SomeCallMeTim
99* SomethingCompletelyDifferent
100* StrangePondWoman
101* ThereIsNoRuleSix
102* TheseQuestionsThree
103* UpperClassTwit
104* WeAreStrugglingTogether
105* WithThisHerring
106
107----
108!!Tropes about Monty Python:
109* TheAlcoholic: Graham Chapman's unfortunate history with alcoholism is well-documented. Other members of the troupe have recounted days when shooting of ''Flying Circus'' would be held up due to Chapman trying to sneak in a drink before carpooling with the others to the set. It hindered his acting abilities while filming ''Holy Grail'', notably the Bridge of Death, forcing the filmmakers to use a stunt double despite Chapman being an experienced mountaineer. Palin claimed that the others only became aware of what bad shape he was in while filming ''And Now For Something Completely Different'', when he saw that Chapman's briefcase only contained the script (which he was looking in there to get) and a 3/4s empty bottle of tequila, which had been ''full'' that morning.
110* BoisterousBruiser: Creator/JohnCleese is most definitely this out of the group, being not only the tallest, but also the loudest and most intimidating of them all, as seen in the "Self-Defence Against Fresh Fruit" and "Dirty Fork" sketches.
111* CityShoutOuts: In ''Monty Python at the Hollywood Bowl'', the StraightMan in the Nudge Nudge sketch claims his wife was born in Glendale (and gets a huge cheer for it).
112* {{Cuckoosnarker}}: This was the group's M.O. as a whole, combining cutting social commentary with off-the-wall silliness.
113* FakeBrit: The lone American in the group, Creator/TerryGilliam often affects a British accent when he appears in sketches.
114* TheFunInFuneral: Graham Chapman's funeral went about [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsHk9WC7fnQ as you'd expect]]:
115-->'''John Cleese:''' Graham Chapman, co-author of the Parrot Sketch, is no more. He has ceased to be, bereft of life, he rests in peace, he has kicked the bucket, hopped the twig, bit the dust, snuffed it, breathed his last, and [[WentToTheGreatXInTheSky gone to meet the Great Head of Light Entertainment in the sky]]. And I guess that we're all thinking how sad it is that a man of such talent, of such capability for kindness, for such unusual intelligence, a man who could overcome his alcoholism with such truly admirable single-mindedness, should now so suddenly be spirited away at the age of only forty-eight before he'd achieved many of the things in which he was capable, and before he'd had enough fun. Well, I feel that I should say, ''[[CrossesTheLineTwice "Nonsense! Good riddance to him, the freeloading bastard, I hope he fries!"]]'' And the reason I feel I should say this is he would never forgive me if I didn't. If I threw away this glorious opportunity to shock you all on his behalf. [[RefugeInAudacity Anything for him but mindless good taste.]] I could hear him whispering in my ear last night as I was writing this, "Alright, Cleese," he was saying, "You're very proud of being the very first person ever to say 'shit' on British television; if this service is really for me -- just for starters -- I want you to become the first person ever at a British memorial service to say [[PrecisionFStrike 'fuck']]."
116** After that, Eric Idle sang "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life".
117-->'''Eric Idle:''' I'd just like to be the last person at this meeting to say "fuck"...
118* JackOfAllTrades: According to Eric Idle, out of the six regular Python members, Michael Palin has the most talent to be able to play the widest variety of characters out of them all, from the brainless Gumby to "manly" lumberjacks to boring civil servants to zealous Spanish inquisitors.
119* LarynxDissonance: If any of them could do a convincing woman's voice, they certainly didn't try it, since it wouldn't be as funny. Except Idle, who ''did'' sound like a middle-aged woman and was even funnier for it.
120* SignatureStyle: In the early days, the team used to joke that you could tell who wrote any given sketch; any sketch involving HurricaneOfEuphemisms or violent authoritarian figures was Cleese/Chapman, any sketch with large amounts of location filing was Jones/Palin and any sketch with a long monologue descending into gibberish was Idle.
121* StraightGay: Graham Chapman, who passably played his share of aggressively heterosexual characters. In one sketch, he ''shoots'' another character for being gay.
122* SurrealHumor: This was their trademark, the term "Pythonesque" being coined to describe this sort of humor.
123* [[TokenMinority Token American]]: Creator/TerryGilliam, referred to on the back of the first ''Flying Circus'' DVD as the "imported American animator."
124* ViewersAreGeniuses: As mentioned above, the British members were all graduates of UsefulNotes/{{Oxbridge}} (and Gilliam was hardly a dunce, either). As such, many of their skits contain overt references to everything from world politics to classical western philosophy and literature.
125* WholesomeCrossdresser: Oh so very much averted. John Cleese has said that the reason Michael Palin rarely plays a woman in sketches is that [[AttractiveBentGender he actually looks good dressed in women's clothes]], and that's much less funny than obvious men[[note]]especially Cleese, with his great height, square jaw, and five-o'clock shadow[[/note]] [[{{Gonk}} trying to pass for women.]]

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