Quote: Dave @ March 8 2011, 9:14 PM GMTRigsby mentioned (but was probably lying) when he said a wife comitted suicide on her wedding night, and the husband was in the bar downstairs at the time and saw her flying past the window. Things like that paint a picture in the mind, and it's very clever how Eric Chapell managed to do that so many times.
Yes, he was very good at that. The writers of Porridge and Likely Lads and of course Galton & Simpson were also very good at it. An old technique you don't see much now in sitcoms, I think it's a bit frowned upon by modern producers, who prefer to show rather than anecdotelise.
I'd like to see it more myself, it really lets the colourful main characters express themselves and drive the comedy. Lee Mack almost does it in NGO, I think, yet not in the same way, as he cuts his anecdotes into pithy one liners. Similar characterisation though, leading the comedy with his verbal volleys.