Dont Panic

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  Life of Brian). At that time the future of Monty Python was

  uncertain, and the members of the team were diversifying and

  experimenting with projects of their own. Chapman liked

  Adams's work, and invited him over for a drink. Douglas came

  for the drink, got chatting, and began a writing partnership that

  was to last for the next eighteen months. It looked like it was

  Adams's big break - at 22 he was working with one of the top

  people in British comedy.

  Unfortunately, very few of the projects that Douglas and

  Graham worked on were to see the light of day.

  One that did - or nearly did - was Out of the Trees, a

  television sketch show that starred Chapman and Simon Jones. It

  was shown once, late at night on BBC 2, with no publicity,

  garnered no reviews, and went no further.

  "My favourite bit from that show was a lovely sketch about

  Genghis Khan; who had become so powerful and important and

  successful as a conqueror he really didn't have any time for

  conquering anymore, because he was constantly off seeing his

  financial advisors and so on - it was partly a reflection of what

  one heard Graham muttering about the other members of Monty

  Python. I was very fond of that sketch.(This sketch, rewritten into a short story, incorporatcd into the Hitchhiker's

  canon and illustrated by Michael Foreman, appeared in The Utterly Utterly

  Merry Comic Relief Christmas Book.)

  "The second episode of Out of the Trees was never even

  made, although there was some nice stuff in it. My favourite

  sketch was called `A Haddock at Eton', about a haddock given a

  place at Eton to show the place was becoming more egalitarian. It

  got terribly bullied. Only it gets a rich guardian anyway, so the

  whole exercise is rather futile."

  While Out of the Trees was not exactly a success, The Ringo

  Starr Show was even less noteworthy. It didn't even get to the

  pilot stage. The show was to be an SF comedy, starring Ringo as a

  chauffeur who carried his boss around on his back, until one day

  a flying saucer landed and mistakenly gave Ringo the powers of

  his ancestral race - the power to travel through space, to do

  flower arranging, and to destroy the universe by waving his hand.

  It would have been an hour-long American television special,

  but the project fell through. Douglas remembers the show with

  affection, and later salvaged one of his ideas from it in

  Hitchhiker's: this was the Golgafrincham B - Ark sequence.

  Other Chapman-connected projects of this time include some

  work on the Holy Grail record, for which a sketch of Douglas's

  was highly rewritten by various hands: in its original form it

  concerned the digging up of Marilyn Monroe s corpse to star in a

  movie...

  Douglas also helped write ("nearly came to blows over")

  parts of Chapman's autobiography, A Liar's Autobiography. He

  co-wrote an episode of Doctor on the Go. It was doubtless his

  (not particularly major) contribution to the record, and his two

  walk-on parts in the last series of Monty Python's Flying Circus

  that caused the original American promotion of Hitchhiker's, five

  years later, to bill him as a member of the Python team. (For

  completists, or people who are interested, Douglas played a

  surgeon in a sketch that never gets started, and later, in a scene

  where a rag-and-bone man is hawking nuclear missiles from a

  horse and cart, Douglas was one of the squeaky-voiced little

  `pepperpot' ladies, as the Pythons call them.)

  It is worth noting at this point that Douglas had not really

  earned much money. His $17-a-week rent was being paid from

  his overdraft. He was not happy. The collaboration with Graham

  Chapman, far from being the break it had seemed, was a failure

  that left Douglas convinced that he was a 24-year-old washout.

  The collaboration's collapse was due to many factors, including

  Chapman's then troubles with alcoholism, Douglas's increaslng

  lack of money, the uncertainties about the future of Monty

  Python's Flying Circus, and just plain bad luck.

  At about the time that Douglas Adams and Chapman finally

  split up, Douglas was invited to Cambridge to direct the 1976

  Footlights revue. In the past, the director s job had been to go to

  Cambridge every weekend for two or three months, take

  whatever show Footlights had roughly worked out so far, pull it

  into shape and stage it professionally.

  Unfortunately for Douglas, in the two years since he had left

  Cambridge, the Footlights clubroom, which was the hub of the

  society, had closed down and been redeveloped into a shopping

  centre. Footlights had become homeless and dispossessed, and

  had almost ceased to exist.

  "Whereas in my year,1974, there were tremendous battles

  and competition to get in, I wound up in 1976 knocking on

  people's doors, saying, `Have you heard of Footlights and would

  you like to be in the May Week Revue?' It was terrible. I got

  some people - Jimmy Mulville and Rory McGrath from Who

  Dares Wins, Charles Shaughnessy, who's now a daytime soap

  heart-throb in America on a show called Days of Our Lives-

  and the final show had some good bits, but they were few and far

  between, and the whole experience was pain and agony. I had to

  conjure something out of nothing. At the end of the show I was

  completely demoralised and exhausted."

  At this point, Douglas went to the Edinburgh Festival, with

  John Lloyd, David Renwick and others, with a fringe show called

  The Unpleasantness of Something Close, for which Andrew

  Marshall was to write some sketches. The show made no money,

  and Douglas's income for the year was now approaching $200.

  His overdraft was nearing $2000.

  With his flatmate, John Lloyd, he worked on a film

  treatment for the Stigwood Organisation - an SF comedy based

  on The Guinness Book of Records - which never got off the

  ground, the attitude being, "Who was John Lloyd, and who was

  Douglas Adams?" Together they also wrote pilots for a television

  situation comedy to be called Snow Seven and the White Dwarfs,

  about two astronomers living in isolation together in a fictitious

  observatory situated on top of Mt. Everest. ("The idea for that

  was minimum casting, minimum set, minimum number of sets,

  and we'd just try to sell the series on cheapness. That failed to

  come to anything.")

  While demoralised and very broke, Douglas answered a

  classified ad in the Evening Standard and found himself a

  bodyguard to an oil-rich Arabian family - a job which involved

  sitting outside hotel rooms for twelve hours a night, wearing a

  suit, and running away if anybody turned up waving a gun or

  grenade. (So far as it can be established, nobody ever did.) The

  family had an income of $20,000,000 a day, which cannot have

  done much for Douglas's morale, although it provided him with

  numerous anecdotes and another profession for the book jacket

  biographies.

  "I remember one group of family members had gone down

&n
bsp; to the restaurant in the Dorchester. The waiter had brought the

  menu and they said, `We'll have it.' It took a while for the penny

  to drop that they actually meant the whole lot, the a la carte,

  which is over a thousand pounds' worth of food. So the waiters

  brought it, the family tried a little bit of all of it, then went back

  up to their room. Then they sent out one of their servants to

  bring back a sackful of hamburgers, which is what their real

  obsession was. "

  All of Douglas's attempts to persuade television producers

  that a comedy science fiction series might not be a bad idea had

  come to nothing. His overdraft was enormous. He couldn't pay

  the rent. He had almost convinced himself that he was not and

  never would be a writer, and that he needed a "proper job". It

  was coming on towards Christmas 1976, and a highly depressed

  Douglas Adams went to his mother's house in Dorset, where he

  did not have to pay any rent, to live for the next six months,

  coming into London as necessary.

  He was a 24-year-old flop.

  4

  Gherkin Swallowing, Walking Backwards

  and All That

  JOHN LLOYD IS PROBABLY the most influential producer in British

  comedy today. His successes include Not the Nine O'Clock

  News, Black Adder, and Spitting Image. He was also associate

  producer of the Hitchhiker's television series, and co-wrote

  Episodes Five and Six of the first radio series with Douglas

  Adams. He also co-wrote The Meaning of Liff with Douglas

  Adams, of which more later.

  Lloyd was a member of Footlights in 1973. He had intended

  to become a barrister, but was infected by show business, and on

  graduating worked as a freelance writer, and as a producer in

  BBC Radio Light Entertainment.

  He is a phenomenally busy man. I wound up interviewing

  him for this book at nine o'clock one Monday morning at the

  Spitting Image studios in London's Limehouse Docks, squeezed

  into a crowded schedule while people with urgent problems

  gestured at him from outside the glass partitions of his office.

  "I knew Douglas, although not very well, at university. I was

  at Trinity, Cambridge, while he was at St John's, which is the

  next college along. Douglas did some of the unfunniest sketches

  ever seen on the Footlights stage - according to the people in

  Footlights. He'd do very long sketches. . . there was one about a

  tree, I remember, and another about a postbox. He'd stand up at

  these Footlights smokers and harangue the audience with these

  long, rather wearisome sketches, which didn't go down at all well

  in Footlights at that time, which was almost all singing and

  dancing. "

  And so he went off with Martin Smith and Will Adams and

  they did two absolutely brilliant college revues, packed out, at the

  same time I was doing the Trinity revues. (Footlights at that time

  was a bunch of nancy boys - they had this awful club where

  they'd all go and pretend to be Noel Coward; but when that got

  knocked down to build a car park, Footlights became more

  peripatetic, and it began to attract a broader spectrum of people.)

  "It was thought - especially by Douglas - that the Adams-

  Smith-Adams's revues were much better than Footlights' - and

  indeed they were. There was one amazingly funny bit in the

  interval where they told jokes very slowly to drive people out of

  the audience into the bar.

  "I'd met Douglas a few times at parties, but it was only when

  I'd left university that I used to go and have lots of hamburgers

  with Douglas in a hamburger bar called Tootsies in Notting Hill,

  and we got to know each other extraordinarily well. We

  eventually wound up sharing a flat.

  "I was working as a radio producer and Douglas was doing

  things like writing with Graham Chapman - an absolutely

  bizarre experience, as they used to get phenomenally drunk.

  Graham had a room in his house entirely devoted to gin: it was

  just gin bottles (he later went on the wagon) that lined the walls,

  and occasionally when I was working in BBC Radio I'd go up

  there at lunchtime. They'd have a few gins before lunch, then

  they'd go to the pub and do all the crosswords in every paper.

  Then they'd, get roaring drunk, and usually Graham would take

  his willy out and put it on the bar... it was quite entertaining.

  "After work, I'd come back from the office, and usually

  Douglas had had a very large number of baths and cups of tea and

  eaten all the food, and we'd sit around and write in the evenings.

  There were three of us sharing a house: my girlfriend, Douglas,

  and me. I was fully employed, but Douglas was struggling rather;

  he was very poor, and getting broker and broker, and his

  overdraft was going up and up, and he was getting more and

  more desperate. We had all these projects: Douglas and Graham

  had written a treatment for a film of the Guinness Book of

  Records, which fell through, so Douglas and I started doing it.

  We did rather well - the Stigwood Organisation liked it, and

  they invited us to come to Bermuda and discuss it, and we were

  incredibly excited. It was dreadfully disappointing. We never

  heard anything more from them, and we never even got paid for it.

  "It would have been a science fiction thing, about a race of

  aliens who were the most aggressive aliens in the whole universe,

  who somehow got hold of a copy of the Guinness Book of

  Records and who immediately came down to challenge the world

  at wrestling and boxing and stamping on people's knuckles, that

  kind of thing. And the United Nations (John Cleese was going to

  be general secretary of the UN, I remember) agreed to compete,

  but they wanted to do all the silly events, like gherkin-

  swallowing, walking backwards and all that. So they had a

  Guinness Book of Records Olympics, and the aliens won all the

  sensible events, but lost at all the silly things.

  "Then we decided to go and live in Roehampton. We were

  very happy, until we started advertising for a fourth person to

  share the house, and we had a succession of weird people.There

  was one very bizarre person - one day we got back from work

  to find he'd ripped up every carpet in the house (the house was

  rented from a little old lady) and he'd thrown them out of the

  window, as he said they were `smelly'. The last straw came when

  we came home to find he'd chain-sawed the front hedge down

  because, he said, it was untidy.

  "At that time I was producing Weekending, and I was always

  trying to get Douglas to produce stuff. At that time, I'd write lots

  of quickies for all sorts of comedy shows, while Douglas

  wouldn't. At the time, I thought he was wrong, I thought you

  had to be able to do everything which I could, and he couldn't, or

  wouldn't. I fitted in quite easily, and I got Douglas to write for

  Weekending. He wrote a very funny sketch about John

  Stonehouse, the idea being that he was pretending to be dead all

  the time, but it just wasn't right for the show. It was very fu
nny

  but wrong.

  "Then we went our separate ways.1 was a radio producer.

  He was an unsuccessful writer. Anyway, we remained good

  friends. But Douglas was at the edge of despair at that time, he

  was absolutely broke (if he wanted a drink I'd have to buy it for

  him). He had started applying for jobs in shipping in Hong Kong

  and so on, as he'd totally given up on being a writer.

  "And then Simon Brett came along..."

  5

  When You Hitch Upon a Star

  "1976 WAS MY WORST YEAR. I'd decided I was hopeless at writing

  and I'd never earn any money at it. I felt hopeless and helpless

  and beached. I was overdrawn and in a bad way.

  "In Hitchhiker's there's an element of writing myself back up

  out of that. I was surprised and delighted to find a lot of letters

  from people in the early days would say, `I was terribly depressed

  and upset until I sat down and read your book. It's really shown

  me the way up again'. I wrote it to do this for myself, and it's

  seemed to have the same effect on a lot of other people. I can't

  explain it. Perhaps I've inadvertently written a self-help book."

  There are a number of people without whom Hitchhiker's,

  at least in the form we know it, would never have appeared.

  John Lloyd is one; Geoffrey Perkins another. But without

  doubt, the most important is Simon Brett, who was, in 1976,

  producer of a Radio 4 comedy programme, The Burkiss Way.

  Simon Brett deserves more space than can conveniently be given

  here: He's been a producer and director on radio and television.

  He has written for radio and television shows as diverse as Frank

  Muir Goes Into... and the cult show After Henry. As an author,

  he is best known for his excellent mysteries, including the series

  of murder mysteries starring Charles Paris (a lousy actor but a

  great detective) which, with their accurate and incisive scrutiny of

  life inside television, radio and theatre in Britain today, should be

  compulsory reading for anyone interested in the environments

  that Hitchhiker's comes out of; he has written a number of

  humour books, and some notable pastiches, including his sequel

  to Geoffrey Willan's and Ronald Searles's Molesworth books.

  Brett had met Adams through John Lloyd, at that time a

 

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