Radio
1
Series One 1994 (seven programmes)
Series Two 1995 (six programmes)
Series Three 1995 (six programmes)
Four compilations of Series Three material, 1996
This
programme was, along with The Chris Morris Music Show, one of the most
successful results of Radio 1’s move away from half-hour comedy shows
and towards hour-long slots mixing comedy and music. Compared to its
predecessor, Lee and Herring’s Fist
Of Fun (recorded live at student venues), it had a distinctly
relaxed feel: liberated from the demands of the live audience, Richard
Herring and Stewart Lee were free to do what they do best: ramble on
at each other for minutes on end. Technically the show consisted of
a mixture of sketches and music tracks linked by in-Studio chat.
The music was used to extremely good effect: as Lee and Herring never
tired of pointing out, the show was produced by the Light Entertainment
department and they were therefore obliged to bring their own records
in. Lee, who describes himself as “an obsessive music fan since the
age of eleven”, clearly relished the opportunity to give listeners a
quick trip around the dark recesses of his absurdly voluminous record
collection, and the innocuous chart hits woven through most other R1
comedies of the period were eschewed in favour of a dazzlingly diverse
selection, encompassing everything from Scott Walker to Jilted John,
via William Shatner’s startling cover of Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds.
A dedicated musical eclectic would have found reason enough to tune
in on this count alone. The show’s defining feature, however, was the
cheery Studio banter. The distinctive stage personalities usually adopted
by Lee (self-assured, world-weary cynic) and Herring (cheerful, immature
idiot) are based loosely on their real-life attitudes and personalities,
and it was often difficult to detect just how far into or out of character
they were at any point. When not arguing about the music, they would
earnestly introduce features of quite staggering pointlessness (notably
the poll to determine “the nation’s favourite chew bar” and a competition
to find the nation’s dullest tourist attraction).
Because of the format, and the relatively large number of broadcast
hours, it was this show rather than any of its predecessors which clearly
displayed the principles of its stars’ highly theoretical brand of comedy.
Lee and Herring once declared that their ultimate aim was “to be treated
like gods”, and there is a definite cultish aspect to their comedy.
So, while both performers are highly competent writers of conventional
comedy (hence Lee’s work as a script editor on other comedians’ shows),
most of their material ultimately refers back to ideas which have already
been laid down, and which can only be picked out by the devotee: in
place of the running gag, the running sketch-structure. One favourite
ploy, for instance, is to take a fairly cheesy idea gag or a play on
words, and deliberately and protractedly overwork it until it collapses
under its own weight (as in the following sample from a collection of
lame sit-com titles: “The Bent Coppers, which is about two policemen,
one is gay and the other one’s corrupt, and they both suffer from curvature
of the spine… and they’re both made of copper”).
In-jokes, especially, have always been an integral part, rather than
an afterthought: just about every character name the duo have ever used
(from On The Hour onwards)
is taken from a real-life acquaintance. Like the prophets of any major
religion, Lee and Herring laid down various rules and principles: these
ranged from actual commandments addressed to the listener (the most
important of which, apparently, was “Leap nimbly!”), to theoretical
ideas which apparently governed the sketches and features, including
"the celebration of mediocrity" (based on the principle that, although
the good were well rewarded in society and the evil received their due
punishment, not enough was being done to express mild appreciation for
those whose actions were just more-or-less adequate). Just as in previous
series, though, their genuine intellectualism was directed towards reassuringly
pointless targets.
Richard and Stewart’s regular co-stars were Peter Baynham, reprising
his role as the Balham non-viveur from the previous series (now renamed
simply ‘Peter’ to avoid confusion with Baynham himself) and Kevin Eldon,
usually in the guise of the disturbed hobby enthusiast Simon Quinlank,
who made his first-ever apperance in the first series.
Series One also featured a regular internet feature (not overtly sarcastic,
but dwelling on the weirder side of net life) from Danny O’Brien, a
comedian who had recently devised a one-man show on the subject. Also
appearing at different points over the three series were various familiar
faces: Ronnie Ancona, Rebecca Front, Alistair McGowan, Ben Moor, Sally
Phillips and a number of others, all of whom would continue to work
with Lee and Herring in the TV projects which followed.
Lee and Herring is also notable as the show which created a monster,
in the shape of the duo’s unique and complex relationship with their
fans. Series One brought the first trickle of letters (not an unusual
phenomenon in DJ-driven radio), which the presenters began responding
to on air: apparently bemused by, but pleased with, the time and trouble
their listeners were taking, they made a feature of exhorting people
to “send stuff in” along various themes, usually tied in to the terse
phone-in features which were also a feature of the show. The audience
was duly forthcoming with the requested arcane items (drawings of celebrities’
heads grafted onto insects’ bodies, to give but one example), and the
phenomenon began to feed off itself as some of the letters prompted
further comic areas to be explored.
By the end of Series Two, Lee and Herring were openly flaunting the
power of what they dubbed “the child army”, suggesting quite specific
displays of surreal collective action (most notably the innundation
of an innocuous middle-aged local radio presenter with requests for
signed photos from all over the country); by this point they were working
on a television series, which they attempted to publicise by getting
fans to place adverts in newsagents’ windows. This first TV series,
taking the Fist Of Fun title of the original Radio 1 show, had a much
larger cast but retained the same central group of performers (and,
incidentally, elevated Simon Quinlank and Peter-from-Balham to the status
of cultural icons). It was closer in style and presentation to its half-hour
namesake than to the more recent, audience-free show, although for source
material it drew as much on Lee and Herring as any of the earlier projects.
In fact, the duo were keen to keep the radio show going, principally
because of the opportunity it provided to try out new ideas, but also
because of the freedom its format provided.
Series Three went out at the end of 1995, followed by a second TV series
of Fist Of Fun, which suffered in comparison to the first, owing to
rushed production schedules. A while later, Lee and Herring actually
offered to develop a fourth series of the radio show; incredibly, given
their large youth fanbase and established television credentials, they
were actually turned down by Radio 1, which had, for reasons best known
to itself, abandoned comedy and all other features-based programming
early in 1997. The compilation shows of 1996 (which were created without
the stars’ involvement) thus signalled the end of Lee and Herring’s
remarkably prolific five-year radio presence, although they returned
to television in 1998 with a new show entitled This Morning With Richard
Not Judy.