nosmoking said: Has a video ever circulated of her pie scene on Mad TV?
Would like to see it as well, if it is out there.
I always love when WAMTEC posts. As a collector of mainstream WAM scenes (particularly pies) I know he is always going to post something rare. Just a great resource for the UMD.
In the U.S. this was on the "Marty Feldman Comedy Machine." It's Barbra Feldon....is it not?
Just a vague recollection because I was always a Feldman fan.
That was the original title. Co-starred Spike Milligan (an anarchic British-Irish writer and comedy legend in Britain but less recognised elsewhere) who inspired Monty Python with his Goon Show radio show (with Peter Sellers) in the '50s but particularly his 'Q' TV series (or, according to Milligan, "ripped it off"). Milligan cameos in 'Life of Brian': "Let us pray"
Feldman shot to fame in the UK writing and performing with John Cleese and others for predecessors to Python like 'Do Not Adjust Your Set' and 'At Last, The 1948 Show' - his distinctive eyes (exploited to comic effect) were the result of a combination of a disorder developed in adulthood and eye surgery after an accident. He looked quite different as a younger man.
In the U.S. this was on the "Marty Feldman Comedy Machine." It's Barbra Feldon....is it not?
Just a vague recollection because I was always a Feldman fan.
That was the original title. Co-starred Spike Milligan (an anarchic British-Irish writer and comedy legend in Britain but less recognised elsewhere) who inspired Monty Python with his Goon Show radio show (with Peter Sellers) in the '50s but particularly his 'Q' TV series (or, according to Milligan, "ripped it off"). Milligan cameos in 'Life of Brian': "Let us pray"
Feldman shot to fame in the UK writing and performing with John Cleese and others for predecessors to Python like 'Do Not Adjust Your Set' and 'At Last, The 1948 Show' - his distinctive eyes (exploited to comic effect) were the result of a combination of a disorder developed in adulthood and eye surgery after an accident. He looked quite different as a younger man.
There are a couple of Stephen King stories (Milkman #1 and #2 in Skeleton Crew) featuring a menacing character by the name of Spike Milligan. King lived in London for a while in the early 80s and must've picked up the name then, guessing nobody back home would know where he'd gotten it from. This is one of the many 'facts' I carry round in my head but rarely get a chance to express.