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ETA:A few weeks ago I sent [personal profile] sovay  a link to an article on Henry V (1944), which among other things suggested that Olivier had cast old music-hall song-and-dance man George Robey as Falstaff in order to emphasize that the character was a relic of more playful and happier times. Now I realize that Ken Branagh did exactly the same thing in his movie of Hamlet (1996) by casting Ken Dodd as Yorick. 

An intro to Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, hosted by John Cooper Clarke who is the most appropriate and also hilarious person to do it. Clarke looks like a walking thistle, and I’m sort of charmed by how openly he loathes the Lake District (“No wonder De Quincey took dope!”) I’d call him the missing link between music-hall and punk, but I think that’s Ray Davies. And also neither of them are missing.

Spiderweb top. Very burlesque. 

Yesterday one of my coworkers was talking on the phone, and I heard her saying, in the driest, weariest tone imaginable: “Laugh Out Loud. Laugh Out Loud. Laugh Out Loud.”

ETA-- Today at work:
Salesman: (on the phone) So do you have the copper already or do you still need it? (cackling) I’VE GOT LOTS OF COPPER!

Hey everybody, I think my coworker is Ea-Nasir 

Date: 2024-04-04 11:48 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] sovay
sovay: (Rotwang)
Which also has Stubby Kaye and Hugh Lloyd (oh, and Richard Davies) as cast members, so again, somebody was probably leaning heavily on the nostalgia angle.

I saw Delta and the Bannermen for the first time last fall. I really enjoyed it. Stubby Kaye was more unexpected than the others.

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