
Annons
Annons
The bleakness they sired into British comedy continued in The Comic Strip, especially Four Men in a Car and Four Men in a Plane, which was basically four David Brents trapped in various modes of transport trying desperately to return to the 1980s. Then there was Mayall's portrayal of the insufferable, homicidal Tory MP Alan B’Stard in The New Statesman. Again, Mayall excelled at and revelled in playing a complete and utter prick – somehow, he managed to play this role over and over in his career and still wind up a national treasure.
Annons
I think a massive part of his appeal was that, like many of the best comics, beneath the bluster was a distrust of himself in the world, a belief that he could only deal with it by pretending to be other people. I remember Chris Morris saying somewhere that he stopped making Jam because the real world was much more horrifying than anything he could produce.With Mayall, though, maybe it was this existential angst that made his performances – especially in something as overpoweringly bleak as Bottom – so electrifying. All the jokes and close, suffocating situations (four men in a car, two men in a flat) do the same thing: lampoon male insecurity. Could a man write those lines without carrying it himself?For those who attribute much of their comic DNA to The Young Ones, Mayall's death adds poignancy to one of his greatest monologues. “This house will become a shrine! And punks and skins and Rastas will all gather round and all hold their hands in sorrow for their fallen leader! And all the grown-ups will say, ‘But why are the kids crying?’ And the kids will say, ‘Haven’t you heard? Rick is dead! The People’s Poet is dead!’”Mayall might be dead, but I imagine he’s cackling somewhere over the absurdity of fucking Cliff Richard, currently turning the colour of Ayers Rock in Barbados, outliving him. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go and pound the gasman’s face in with a frying pan.@eleanormorgan
