Monty Python: the 10 funniest sketches (2024)

It’s nearly 50 years since Monty Python unleashed their Flying Circus on to an unsuspecting public on 5 October 1969. Forty-five episodes and 4series later, the Python phenomenon was well and truly embedded in the public’sconsciousness.

A disparate bunch, Messrs John Cleese, Michael Palin, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle and the sadly departed Graham Chapman brought surrealism, absurdism and razor-sharp, intellectually driven wordplay into the nation’s living rooms on a weekly basis. Largely eschewing punchlines, backed by Gilliam’s instantly recognisable animated sequences and gleefully satirising the idiosyncrasies of British life, Monty Python’s Flying Circus is now widely regarded as seminal television comedy. Live performances, albums and movies followed as Python-mania continued. Each of the troupe’s members went on to forge individual careers (from Gilliam’s rise as an auteur to Palin’s turns as a TV traveller), while their collective influence was felt on each new generation of funny men andwomen.

Get the latest from the BFI

Sign up for BFI news, features, videos and podcasts.

Here are 10 sketches that find the Pythons at theirfunniest.

The Dead ParrotSketch

Monty Python: the 10 funniest sketches (1)

The most famous of Python’s countless routines, the Dead Parrot skit was voted the best alternative comedy sketch in a 2004 poll run by the Radio Times. Appearing in the eighth episode of the first series of Flying Circus, it drew inspiration from an encounter Palin experienced with a car salesman who “had an excuse for everything”. Palin’s pet shop owner becomes the satirical face of dreadful customer service as Cleese’s rightfully disgruntled Mr Praline tries to complain about his deceased NorwegianBlue.

Replete with fourth-wall-breaking asides and exceedingly daft dialogue – including a lengthy outburst from Mr Praline on exactly how ‘ex’ the parrot is – the sketch may revolve around an exaggerated premise, but the customer’s frustrations are entirely relatable. Just as Mr Praline says how things are getting sillier, Graham Chapman’s Colonel marches into the pet shop and commands “Get on with it” to bluntly wrap thingsup.

The LumberjackSong

Reportedly dashed off in a quarter of an hour in lieu of a punchline to the Homicidal Barber sketch, The Lumberjack Song is one of the troupe’s most easily identified skits. Written by Jones, Palin and Fred Tomlinson and performed by Palin with backing singing courtesy of other Pythons together withThe Fred Tomlinson Singers dressed as Canadian mounties, the song would become the bane of lumberjacks the world over due to its unexpectedly confessionallyrics.

Starting as a celebration of a rough, tough and manly lifestyle chopping down trees in the great outdoors, the song soon develops into something completely different as Palin’s lumberjack passionately sings about pressing flowers and wearing high-heels, suspenders and a bra. The nonplussed mounties are joined in their befuddlement by the transvestite lumberjack’s ‘best girlie’ (Connie Booth), who angrily storms off with the image of her ‘butch’ man shattered forever. A gloriously silly and irresistibly catchy upending of machostereotypes.

FourYorkeshiremen

We know that technically the Four Yorkeshiremen isn’t an original Monty Python skit and didn’t feature in Flying Circus, but it’s become so synonymous with the troupe that it warrants inclusion. Written by Tim Brooke-Taylor, Marty Feldman, Cleese and Chapman and first performed in 1967 on their ITV comedy show, At Last the 1948 Show, Four Yorkshiremen is an increasingly absurd parody of nostalgia, oneupmanship and northerngrit.

Including script tweaks each time the sketch was performed live by the Pythons (and other performers), the 4 well-dressed, holidaying Yorkshiremen in question enjoy a bottle of Chateau de Chasselas and try to best each other with outrageously exaggerated yet rose-tinted tales of childhood hardship. With septic tanks and shoeboxes for homes and fathers that would slice them in two with breadknives (if they were lucky), the 4friends are united in agreement that “if you tell that to young people today, they won’t believeyou”.

Buy the new 3-disc set of At Last the 1948 Show on DVD

ArgumentClinic

Apparently popular with philosophy students – who muse on the potential benefits of paying for professional debate – the Argument Clinic sketch is an adroit exploration of the English language and consumer culture. Penned by Cleese and Chapman, it’s a prime example of the intense wordplay that characterised the sketch writers’ work at the time. The quick-fire dialogue is delivered beautifully by Palin and Cleese in a verbal joustingcontest.

Purchasing a 5-minute argument, Palin’s character is caught off guard by the immediacy of Cleese’s character’s argumentative approach, growing ever more frustrated by the latter’s verbal and mental gymnastics. Containing a near-verbatim dictionary definition of the word ‘argument’, Palin’s character tries in vain to get his opponent to admit that contradictions and ad hominem attacks do not make an argument. Storming off, Palin’s angry customer is first verbally abused and then hit over the head in 2more rooms where the public can purchase absurdexperiences.

NudgeNudge

Originally written by Idle as a script for Ronnie Barker that was rejected, Nudge Nudge finally saw the light of day in the third episode of Flying Circus. Performed by its writer and Jones, the skit sees 2strangers in a pub entering into a conversation that one of them finds oddly cryptic and then uncomfortably intrusive. Riffing off British repressiveness and our love for complex double entendres, Nudge Nudge is all about Idle’s hilariously enthusiastic delivery as a sex-obsessedbachelor.

Stuffed with slang references, Nudge Nudge is an exercise in convoluted sexual innuendo as the bachelor’s relentless barrage of wink-wink, say-no-more proclamations drives Jones’ stiff-upper-lipped pub-goer to distraction. Finally getting the single man to speak plainly and ask Jones’ character if he’s slept with a lady, the sketch is one of the few Python routines to end with a clear punchline as the bachelor pauses for a second before asking: “What’s itlike?”

Spam

Monty Python: the 10 funniest sketches (2)

Stupendously daft even by Python standards, Spam somehow combines a greasy spoon café setting, the titular canned meat, Vikings and a British historian into a sketch that shouldn’t work but somehow does. Taking as its cue the ubiquity of spam on the British menu post-Second World War, the Pythons concoct a skit that lodges in the memory banks. Given how often the word is mentioned, it’s unsurprising that the modern, digital meaning of ‘spam’ is indeed derived from thissketch.

Self-reflexive and fourth-wall-smashing, Spam sees 2would-be diners lowered by wires into the Green Midget Café – which is surreally patronised by Vikings – and greeted with a menu dominated by spam. Like a fever dream, the skit sees the Vikings break into a chorus of “spam, spam, spam, spam…spammity spam, wonderful spam” before Palin’s historian first analyses their actions and then is himself drawn into the relentless, ear-wormchorus.

The SpanishInquisition

Split into 3parts that appear in the second episode of series 2– itself titled The Spanish Inquisition – this delightfully absurd sequence of sketches is predicated, as you would expect, by a character exclaiming that they “didn’t expect the Spanish Inquisition”. A parody of the real thing, the Pythons’ Spanish Inquisition is far less savagely repressive and a whole lot sillier. Not shy of lampooning organised religion, and skilled at joining incompatible elements for comedic effect, Palin, Gilliam and Jones respectively perform the troupe’s 3inquisitors – Cardinals Ximénez, Fang and Biggles – as ineffective buffoons whose idea of torture includes exposure to cushions and comfychairs.

The 3less than fearsome inquisitors stumble and bumble their way through unsuccessful attempts to strike terror into those accused of heresy. Managing to turn up late for their final appearance – bursting into the Old Bailey seconds before the episode ends – Cardinal Ximénez lets out an exasperated and deflated “Ohbugger”.

DirtyFork

Monty Python: the 10 funniest sketches (3)

If you’re ever in a restaurant and are faced with some cutlery that could do with another visit to the dishwasher, just remember the Dirty Fork skit and consider what might happen if you take the very un-British stance of highlighting the fact. In this sketch, when a diner politely asks for a dirty fork to be replaced it kick-starts a meltdown of epic proportions among the proud staff of a 3-star Frenchrestaurant.

Existential crises, philosophical despair, violent recriminations and even suicide abound when the titular unclean item of cutlery is flagged up by Chapman’s restaurant goer, as he and his wife ponder over the menu. Presenting the opposite of the customer service experienced in the Dead Parrot sketch, here the staff cannot cope with the inferior quality of the couple’s dining experience and unravel at frighteningly amusing speed. Exaggerated and intense, the skit also marked the first time the troupe responded to the live audience’sreactions.

The Funniest Joke in theWorld

Also known as Killer Joke, this lengthy sketch from series one of Flying Circus revolves around the writing of a gag so powerful that all who read or hear it die laughing. Complete with voiceover narration and shot in a quasi-documentary style reminiscent of Peter Watkins’ films, the sketch evolves into what is in essence a mini-Second World War comedy movie in which the lethal joke is translated and used against the Germanarmy.

Featuring actual footage of Neville Chamberlain and Adolf Hitler, The Funniest Joke in the World is a laudably well-executed routine. In the hands of Monty Python, the premise gives rise to all manner of silliness as the British army take the translated killer joke into combat. Proving to be so fearsome, Joke Warfare is subsequently banned under the Geneva Convention. The translation of the unheard English killer gag is made up of German-soundinggibberish.

The Ministry of SillyWalks

A sketch from the first episode of the second series of Flying Circus, The Ministry of Silly Walks makes hilarious use of Cleese’s then slender and gangly 6ft 5’’ frame. Playing Mr Teabag, a bowler-hatted, be-suited Whitehall civil servant, Cleese’s gift for physical comedy – here inspired by Max Wall’s own similar talents – has never been better exemplified than in this skit. Though the dialogue is intrinsic to the sketch’s success, it’s undoubtedly the silly walks themselves that are the highpoint, despite Cleese himself apparently not being overly fond of theroutine.

Arriving at his place of work – the titular fictional governmental department – and having greeted several of his silly-walking colleagues, Mr Teabag is less than enamoured by the underwhelming efforts at comical bipedal locomotion of one Mr Putey (Palin). Kafkaesque bureaucracy and stuffy self-importance are mercilessly skewered in under 3minutes simply by the act of walking peculiarly in an utterly deadpanmanner.

Monty Python: the 10 funniest sketches (4)

Hand-picked by the BFI exclusively for audiences in the USA.

Try 14 days free

Monty Python: the 10 funniest sketches (2024)

FAQs

What is Monty Python's best sketch in the Flying Circus? ›

The Dead Parrot

The endlessly quotable "Dead Parrot" is widely hailed not only as one of Monty Python's most influential sketches but as one of the most iconic comedy bits of all time.

Who wrote most of the Monty Python sketches? ›

There were essentially four writing groups within the Monty Python team (although strictly speaking, only two were “groups”): Graham Chapman and John Cleese wrote together, as did Michael Palin and Terry Jones, while Eric Idle preferred to write alone.

What episode of Monty Python is the argument sketch? ›

This video excerpts the “Argument Clinic” sketch from the television series Monty Python's Flying Circus, episode 29, “The Money Programme” (1972), providing a rich basis from which to introduce and explore the philosophical conception of argumentation.

What is a Gumby Monty Python? ›

A Gumby is a recurring character from Python sketches who has a small moustache, wears a handkerchief on his head, and spectacles, braces, a knitted tank top and wellington boots.

What is the Monty Python animation style called? ›

If the point here is to work within the Monty Python "tradition", then it might be useful to know that Python's animation director Terry Gilliam chose to work with what is commonly referred to as "Cut Out Animation" because it was already the easiest available way to get things done in the 1970's.

Why is it called Monty Python? ›

The words "Monty Python" were added because they claimed it sounded like a really bad theatrical agent, the sort of person who would have brought them together, with John Cleese suggesting "Python" as something slimy and slithery, and Eric Idle suggesting "Monty".

Who was suing Monty Python? ›

Producer Mark Forstater had brought a High Court lawsuit against the Pythons for a bigger share of royalties from the stage musical Spamalot.

Who was the brains behind Monty Python? ›

Since contracting a rare form of dementia known as FTD four years ago, legendary Monty Python comedian, director and writer Terry Jones had largely been out of the spotlight.

What ended Monty Python? ›

After being repelled by showers of manure, they summon an army of knights and prepare to assault the castle. As the army charges, the police arrive, arrest Arthur and Bedevere on suspicion of the murder of the historian, and break the camera, abruptly ending the film.

What is the disease in Monty Python? ›

Jones was diagnosed in 2015 and, he said, it was called primary progressive aphasia, a form of frontotemporal dementia that impairs the ability to speak and communicate, according to WellMore.com. In 2015, Jones told people: “My frontal lobe has been absconded.”

Why is the language python named after Monty Python not the snake? ›

¶ When he began implementing Python, Guido van Rossum was also reading the published scripts from “Monty Python's Flying Circus”, a BBC comedy series from the 1970s. Van Rossum thought he needed a name that was short, unique, and slightly mysterious, so he decided to call the language Python.

What is a Judas python? ›

Removing large, reproductive females may help slow Burmese python population growth, and that's the focus of what's been nicknamed a “Judas snake” approach. Large male pythons are caught, implanted with radio transmitters, and released back where they were captured.

What type of parrot was in the Monty Python sketch? ›

The "Dead Parrot Sketch", alternatively and originally known as the "Pet Shop Sketch" or "Parrot Sketch", is a sketch from Monty Python's Flying Circus about a non-existent species of parrot, called a "Norwegian Blue".

Who wrote Monty Python argument sketch? ›

"Argument Clinic" is a sketch from Monty Python's Flying Circus, written by John Cleese and Graham Chapman.

What age is Monty Python Flying Circus appropriate for? ›

But with its sexual themes and innuendo (more on that below), cartoonish violence, and cerebral humor, this show is best for teens.

Who did the drawings for Monty Python? ›

Born and raised in Minneapolis and Los Angeles, Terry Gilliam's youthful enthusiasm for drawing cartoons infused his academic life and his streak of anti-authoritarianism.

References

Top Articles
GSM-Forum - Bj Baji Live Login App: Baji 999 Download
Baji Live App download application from Bangladesh
Express Pay Cspire
Bubble Guppies Who's Gonna Play The Big Bad Wolf Dailymotion
Knoxville Tennessee White Pages
jazmen00 x & jazmen00 mega| Discover
O'reilly's Auto Parts Closest To My Location
Nco Leadership Center Of Excellence
Pga Scores Cbs
Craigslist Benton Harbor Michigan
Gabriel Kuhn Y Daniel Perry Video
Nwi Police Blotter
Devotion Showtimes Near Mjr Universal Grand Cinema 16
Craigslist Kennewick Pasco Richland
Nation Hearing Near Me
Lesson 3 Homework Practice Measures Of Variation Answer Key
Phillies Espn Schedule
Ssefth1203
Syracuse Jr High Home Page
Persona 4 Golden Taotie Fusion Calculator
House Party 2023 Showtimes Near Marcus North Shore Cinema
Nalley Tartar Sauce
VMware’s Partner Connect Program: an evolution of opportunities
Crossword Nexus Solver
Louisiana Sportsman Classifieds Guns
Directions To Advance Auto
Fraction Button On Ti-84 Plus Ce
Quest: Broken Home | Sal's Realm of RuneScape
Amazing Lash Studio Casa Linda
Pocono Recird Obits
Slim Thug’s Wealth and Wellness: A Journey Beyond Music
Teekay Vop
Bay Area Craigslist Cars For Sale By Owner
Jeep Cherokee For Sale By Owner Craigslist
42 Manufacturing jobs in Grayling
American Bully Xxl Black Panther
R&J Travel And Tours Calendar
Umiami Sorority Rankings
Wattengel Funeral Home Meadow Drive
South Bend Tribune Online
Cpmc Mission Bernal Campus & Orthopedic Institute Photos
How to Get a Better Signal on Your iPhone or Android Smartphone
COVID-19/Coronavirus Assistance Programs | FindHelp.org
VDJdb in 2019: database extension, new analysis infrastructure and a T-cell receptor motif compendium
Silicone Spray Advance Auto
Walmart 24 Hrs Pharmacy
Ferhnvi
Doe mee met ons loyaliteitsprogramma | Victoria Club
Diccionario De Los Sueños Misabueso
Gainswave Review Forum
Sunset On November 5 2023
Equinox Great Neck Class Schedule
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kimberely Baumbach CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 5412

Rating: 4 / 5 (61 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kimberely Baumbach CPA

Birthday: 1996-01-14

Address: 8381 Boyce Course, Imeldachester, ND 74681

Phone: +3571286597580

Job: Product Banking Analyst

Hobby: Cosplaying, Inline skating, Amateur radio, Baton twirling, Mountaineering, Flying, Archery

Introduction: My name is Kimberely Baumbach CPA, I am a gorgeous, bright, charming, encouraging, zealous, lively, good person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.