Blackadder: Difference between revisions
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* Prince Ludwig; Lieutenant The Honourable George Colthurst St Bartleigh; Prince George ([[Hugh Laurie]]) |
* Prince Ludwig; Lieutenant The Honourable George Colthurst St Bartleigh; Prince George ([[Hugh Laurie]]) |
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* <nowiki>Lord/General</nowiki> [[Melchett]]; The Duke of Wellington ([[Stephen Fry]]) |
* <nowiki>Lord/General</nowiki> [[Melchett]]; The Duke of Wellington ([[Stephen Fry]]) |
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* Queen Elizabeth I; Amy Hardwood; Nurse Brown ([[Miranda Richardson]]) |
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* Nursie (Patsy Byrne) |
* Nursie (Patsy Byrne) |
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* Lord Flashheart ([[Rick Mayall]]) |
* Lord Flashheart ([[Rick Mayall]]) |
Revision as of 01:05, 18 June 2002
Black Adder (also written Blackadder) is a British television programme from the BBC, a surreal take on British history starring Rowan Atkinson, involving cunning plans, Baldrick's trousers and deceit. Each series tended to feature the same set of actors in different period settings, thus Stephen Fry played Lord Melchett, an advisor to the Queen in Series II, and General Melchett, a blustering buffoon, in Series IV. Anachronistic references were plentiful and mainly humourous.
It popularised the use of similie and associated devices for comic effect in the UK. Examples include:
- "Madder than Mad Jack McMad, winner of last year's Mr Madman competition."
- "I've got a plan so cunning, you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel." or "As cunning as a fox who's just been appointed Professor of Cunning at Oxford University."
- "I'm as happy as a Frenchman who's just invented a pair of self-removing trousers."
- "I'm as weary as a dog with no legs that's just climbed Ben Nevis"
Four series were transmitted:
- The Black Adder (Middle Ages) - The Foretelling, Born to be King, The Archbishop, The Queen of Spain's Beard, Witchsmeller Pursuivant, The Black Seal.
- Blackadder II (Elizabethan) - Bells, Head, Potato, Money, Beer, Chains.
- Blackadder The Third (Regency) - Dish and Dishonesty, Ink and Incapability, Nob and Nobility, Sense and Senility, Amy and Amiability, Duel and Duality.
- Blackadder Goes Forth (World War I) - Captain Cook, Corporal Punishment, Major Star, Private Plane, General Hospital, Goodbyeee.
Specials:
- Christmas Special - (a parody of Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol")
- BlackAdder: The cavalier years - English civil war
- Black Adder: Back and Forth - Time-Travel (a short film commissioned especially for showing at the Millennium Dome in Greenwich, England throughout the year 2000).
Characters:
- Edmund Blackadder (Rowan Atkinson)
- Lord Percy; Capt. Darling; Lord Topper and Lord Frou-Frou (Tim McInnerny)
- Scarlet Pimpernel (Tim McInnerny and Nigel Planer)
- S. Baldrick (a dim and ragged dogsbody) (Tony Robinson)
- Prince Ludwig; Lieutenant The Honourable George Colthurst St Bartleigh; Prince George (Hugh Laurie)
- Lord/General Melchett; The Duke of Wellington (Stephen Fry)
- Queen Elizabeth I; Amy Hardwood; Nurse Brown (Miranda Richardson)
- Nursie (Patsy Byrne)
- Lord Flashheart (Rick Mayall)
- Bob/Kate; Cpl. Parkhurst (Gabrielle Glaister)
- Firing squad - Sgt. Jones and Privates Fraser, Robinson and Tipplewick (Stephen Frost, Lee Cornes, Paul Mark Elliot, Jeremy Gittins)
- Gaoler Ploppy (Bill Wallis)
- Mrs Ploppy (Linda Polan)
- a guest appearance by Samuel Johnson played by Robbie Coltrane
- Mrs. Miggins (Helen Atkinson-Wood)
- Evil Revolutionary (Chris Barrie)
- Wise woman of Putney heath (Barbara Miller)
- Mad Beggar (Tom Aitken)
- Capt. Redbeard Rum (Tom Baker)
- Mr Hardwood (Warren Clarke)
- King George III (Gertan Klauber)
- Sir Walter Raleigh (Simon Jones)
- Witchsmeller persuivant (Frank Finlay)
- Isabella (ugly Spanish infanta), Lady Whiteadder (Miriam Margolyes)
- Lord Whiteadder (Daniel Thorndike)
- Mollie (Cassie Stuart)
Written by Ben Elton and Richard Curtis. (with additional dialogue by Wm. Shakespeare)