Press clippings Page 9
Eric, Ernie... and Victoria
Victoria Wood has brought the story of the double act's early years to the screen - and she plays Morecambe's mother. Gerard Gilbert meets her.
Gerard Gilbert, The Independent, 29th December 2010Video: Daniel Rigby and Bryan Dick interview
Daniel Rigby and Bryan Dick, who play comic duo Morecambe & Wise in Victoria Wood's drama, say the story of their formative years will surprise audiences.
BBC News, 29th December 2010Video: Behind the scenes of Morecambe and Wise TV drama
Morecambe and Wise are to return to our screens in a TV drama about how the comedians became famous.
Eric and Ernie stars the likes of Victoria Wood and Vic Reeves.
The BBC's David Sillito went behind the scenes to meet some of the cast.
David Sillito, BBC News, 21st December 2010Victoria Wood: Why Eric & Ernie STILL bring me sunshine
Victoria Wood first thought ten years ago of telling the story of Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise before they were famous.
Richard Barber, Daily Mail, 10th December 2010Victoria Wood to star in Morecambe and Wise film
Comedians Victoria Wood and Vic Reeves have signed up to star in a feature-length film about the comic duo Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise.
BBC News, 9th September 2010I'm Rimsky-Korsakov. I've got a brother at home - he's got a cold on his chest. We call him Nasty-Chestikov. Boom-boom. My girlfriend used to be in a circus. She chewed hammers. Was she professional? No, hammer-chewer.
Shall I stop now? In the early 1950s a comedy new wave was breaking on the shores of the Light Programme. Spike Milligan and Michael Bentine were breaking all the rules in Crazy People, later The Goon Show, while the improvised In All Directions featured Peters Ustinov and Jones in a Beckettesque road movie, driving round in a perpetual search for Copthorne Avenue.
But some of the emerging talent cleaved to more traditional comic values, as evidenced in my intro. Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise's idols were Abbott and Costello and the Marx Brothers, and it showed in their rat-a-tat routines. Apart from playing the perfect straight man, Wise took it upon himself to be the duo's archivist, and he recorded a stack of material which lay in suitcases in his garage for decades. "I don't think he ever played them back," his widow, Doreen, told Jon Culshaw in Morecambe and Wise: The Garage Tapes. "He just knew he should keep them." A wise decision, given the BBC's historic penchant for wiping stuff.
The elements we know and love from the TV shows are all there: the bad playlets, the song and dance routines, the guest stars ripe for mickey-taking, though not the stellar names of later shows. Then, it was the likes of Jack Jackson, Brylcreemed trumpeter and Housewives' Choice disc-spinner, or Brian Rees, star of The Adventures of PC 49 ("surely you remember his catchphrase 'Oh, my Sunday helmet!' "). It feels like aeons ago, not just half a century.
When the pair first tried to break into TV, in 1954, it was a disaster. For the rest of his career Eric carried round the Express review: "Is that a television I see in the corner of my living room? No, it's the box the BBC buried Morecambe and Wise in last night."
Chris Maume, The Independent, 9th May 2010Review: Morecambe and Wise The Garage Tapes
Much of the material that Jon Culshaw played in Morecambe and Wise: the Garage Tapes provided ample evidence for an opinion I have held for years - namely, that Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise were of their time because they just weren't very funny.
Chris Campling, The Times, 6th May 2010Victoria Wood set for Morecambe and Wise drama
Comedian and actress Victoria Wood is to star in a TV drama about the early years of Morecambe and Wise, playing Eric Morecambe's mother.
BBC News, 27th April 2010Ernie Wise statue divides opinion in Morley
A statue of funnyman Ernie Wise has been unveiled in his home town, dividing opinion among residents.
BBC News, 4th March 2010