Is it best to leave classics and their creators in the past?
Elsewhere on here I've read that plans are afoot to remake Reginald Perrin with a different writer and wholesale swerving of the original storylines. Not a fan of an idea like that but…
I was thinking what are the comedy writers of past classics, Clement & LaFrenais, Galton& Simpson etc up to? Do they cringe at some of today's output or are they impressed and amused?
One thing I'd love to see for example would be an updating of the Likely Lads. I think that this could be pulled off with very good results. I mean bringing the story up to date.
The writers and cast are still around and importantly they all pulled this trick off once before when the peerless Whatever Happened...was made.
I know that Mssrs Bolam & Bewes aren't on each other's Christmas list but even back then they weren't either.
Would the Beeb unzip the cash to fund this or a similar venture or would it fall foul of the dreaded focus groups?
I seem to remember Carla Lane on a documentary recently being fairly bitter about how her commissions with the Corp dried up.
So once we reach a certain age do we lose the ability to be as funny as we once were? Or is it simply that a new wave of commissioning editors now hold sway and media studies degrees and want to make their own mark?