For as long as I can remember, I have been a Monty Python fan...actually, no, I can remember at some point in my late childhood/early teens coming across MP (probably Holy Grail) and realizing how silly these five Englishmen and one American truly are. Not silly like "fan favorite character recycled endlessly by SNL for fun and profits" but silly like "groundbreaking comedy and timeless laughs." Anyway, Monty Python kept me from getting laid in high school...I'm sure it had nothing to do with my personality.
"The First 28 Years of Monty Python" is a delightful look at the group's coming together and their most important contribution to the Shakespearean canon, the sketch-comedy show that ran on the BBC from 1969 to 1974. Kim "Howard" Johnson makes the very compelling argument that Python's legacy is dependent on the show, because it was just so damn out-there that nothing before or really since can live up to the legacy of those forty-five shows. Britain, once conqueror of the world in a very nasty, unpleasant way, became the conqueror of comedy through a much more nice, civilized way (chiefly thanks to Michael Palin, but also Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Jones, Eric Idle, and resident American Terry Gilliam).
The Pythons all contribute to the book with long-ranging interviews about the series, the films, and the general coming-together that occurred between them all, working on different shows in the late Sixties but sensing that they really should get together to change the world of comedy forever. Sadly, Chapman and Jones are ex-Pythons, Chapman having passed in 1989 (on the eve of their twentieth anniversary), and Jones in January of last year. But the work that they contributed to the Python legacy will live forever, I think.
Some parts of this book are entertaining and essential, like the story of how the show came to be and all the summaries of each episode (many of which had me chuckling at remembered favorite bits). The profiles of each Python, which follow the discussions of the films, are mostly quotes pulled from old interviews and can be skimmed as the reader sees fit. There is a touching remembrance of Chapman, and I can imagine any future editions of this book will add one on Jones as well, and for any future Pythons who cease to be, and who, if they weren't nailed to the perch, would be pushing up the daisies by now (sorry, couldn't resist).
A nod's as good as a wink to a blind man, but Monty Python is the absolute best in sketch comedy, in my opinion. And this book is a very fun, enjoyable way to waste your time.