Jump to content

Fawlty Towers: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Add ref for basil fawlty inspiration
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|British TV sitcom (1975–1979)}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2012}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox television|[[Lop]]
{{Infobox television
| show_name = Fawlty Towers
| image = Fawlty Towers title card.jpg
| caption = The "Fawlty Towers" sign in the foreground image varied (usually as an [[anagram]]) between episodes
| image = [[File:Fawlty Towers title card.jpg|250px]]
| genre = {{Plainlist|
| caption = Series title card. The "Fawlty Towers" sign varied between episodes – only one version appeared in two episodes, and one episode did not feature this sign at all.
* [[Sitcom]]
| format = Comedy
* [[Farce]]<ref name="Beeb2FT">{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00kjf2r |title=Fawlty Towers |work=BBC TWO |publisher=BBC |access-date=16 January 2022}}</ref>}}
| runtime = 28–36 minutes
| creator = {{Plainlist|
| company = [[BBC]]
* [[John Cleese]]
| distributor = [[BBC Worldwide]]
| creator = John Cleese<br />Connie Booth
* [[Connie Booth]]
}}
| writer = John Cleese<br />Connie Booth
| writer = {{Plainlist|
| director = [[John Howard Davies]]<br />[[Bob Spiers]]
* John Cleese
| starring = [[John Cleese]]<br />[[Prunella Scales]]<br />[[Andrew Sachs]]<br />[[Connie Booth]]<br />[[Brian Hall (actor)|Brian Hall]]<br />[[Ballard Berkeley]]<br />[[Gilly Flower]]<br />[[Renee Roberts]]
* Connie Booth
| country = United Kingdom
}}
| language(s) = English
| director = {{Plainlist|
| network = [[BBC Two|BBC2]]
* [[John Howard Davies]]
| location = BBC Television Centre
* [[Bob Spiers]]
| first_aired = 19 September 1975
}}
| last_aired = 25 October 1979
| starring = {{Plainlist|
| num_series = 2
* John Cleese
| num_episodes = 12
* [[Prunella Scales]]
| theme_music_composer = Dennis Wilson
* [[Andrew Sachs]]
| opentheme = Fawlty Towers
* Connie Booth
| endtheme = Fawlty Towers
* [[Ballard Berkeley]]
| list_episodes = #Episodes
* [[Brian Hall (actor)|Brian Hall]]
|}}
* [[Renee Roberts]]
'''''Fawlty Towers''''' is<!--TV MOS says to use "is" even for canceled series--> a [[British sitcom]] produced by [[BBC Television]] that was first broadcast on [[BBC Two|BBC2]] in 1975 and 1979. Twelve episodes were made (two series, each of six episodes). The show was written by [[John Cleese]] and his then wife [[Connie Booth]], both of whom also starred in the show.
* [[Gilly Flower]]
}}
| theme_music_composer = [[Dennis Wilson (composer)|Dennis Wilson]]
| opentheme = "Fawlty Towers"
| endtheme = "Fawlty Towers"
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| num_series = 2
| num_episodes = 12
| list_episodes = #Episodes
| producer = {{Plainlist|
* John Howard Davies
* [[Douglas Argent]]
}}
| editor = {{Plainlist|
* Susan Imrie
* Bob Rymer
* Bill Harris
}}
| runtime = 30–35 minutes
| company = BBC
| network = [[BBC Two]]
| first_aired = {{Start date|1975|09|19|df=y}}
| last_aired = {{End date|1979|10|25|df=y}}
}}
'''''Fawlty Towers''''' is<!--TV MOS says to use "is" even for historic series--> a British television [[British sitcom|sitcom]] written by [[John Cleese]] and [[Connie Booth]], originally broadcast on [[BBC Two]] in 1975 and 1979. Two series of six episodes each were made. The series is set in Fawlty Towers, a dysfunctional fictional [[hotel]] in the English seaside town of [[Torquay]] in [[Devon]]. The plots centre on the tense, rude and put-upon owner [[Basil Fawlty]] (Cleese), his bossy wife [[Sybil Fawlty|Sybil]] ([[Prunella Scales]]), the sensible chambermaid [[Polly Sherman (Fawlty Towers)|Polly]] (Booth), and the hapless and English-challenged Spanish waiter [[Manuel (Fawlty Towers)|Manuel]] ([[Andrew Sachs]]). They show their attempts to run the hotel amidst farcical situations and an array of demanding and [[Eccentricity (behavior)|eccentric]] guests and tradespeople.


The idea of ''Fawlty Towers'' came from Cleese after he stayed at the [[Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay|Gleneagles Hotel]] in [[Torquay]], [[Devon]], in 1970 (along with the rest of the [[Monty Python]] troupe), where he encountered the eccentric hotel owner [[Donald Sinclair (hotel owner)|Donald Sinclair]]. Stuffy and snobbish, Sinclair treated guests as though they were a hindrance to his running of the hotel (a waitress who worked for him stated "it was as if he didn't want the guests to be there"). Sinclair was the inspiration for Cleese's character Basil Fawlty.<ref>https://youtube.com/watch?v=utUhu2pUhP4</ref>
The series is set in Fawlty Towers, a fictional hotel in the seaside town of [[Torquay]], on the "[[Torbay|English Riviera]]". The plots centre around tense, rude and put-upon owner [[Basil Fawlty]] (Cleese), his bossy wife [[Sybil Fawlty|Sybil]] ([[Prunella Scales]]), a comparatively normal chambermaid [[Polly Sherman (Fawlty Towers)|Polly]] (Booth), and hapless Spanish waiter [[Manuel (Fawlty Towers)|Manuel]] ([[Andrew Sachs]]) and their attempts to run the hotel amidst [[farce|farcical]] situations and an array of demanding and eccentric guests.


While some critics derided ''Fawlty Towers'' upon release, the series soon received acclaim. In 1976 and 1980, it won the [[British Academy Television Award for Best Scripted Comedy]]. In 1980, Cleese received the [[British Academy Television Award for Best Entertainment Performance]]. The popularity of ''Fawlty Towers'' has endured, and it is often re-broadcast.<ref name="The Guardian"/> The show was ranked first on a list of the [[100 Greatest British Television Programmes]] drawn up by the [[British Film Institute]] in 2000, and in a 2001 poll conducted by [[Channel 4]], Basil Fawlty was ranked second on their list of the [[100 Greatest (TV series)|100 Greatest TV Characters]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.channel4.com/entertainment/tv/microsites/G/greatest/tv_characters/results.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090531160558/http://www.channel4.com/entertainment/tv/microsites/G/greatest/tv_characters/results.html |archive-date=31 May 2009 |title=100 Greatest TV Characters |access-date=26 May 2019 |publisher=[[Channel 4]]}}</ref> In 2019, it was named the greatest ever British TV sitcom by a panel of comedy experts compiled by the ''[[Radio Times]]''.<ref name="The Guardian">{{cite news|first=Mattha|last=Busby|date=9 April 2019|url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2019/apr/09/fawlty-towers-greatest-ever-british-sitcom|title=Fawlty Towers named greatest ever British TV sitcom|newspaper=The Guardian|access-date=24 May 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.itv.com/news/2019-04-09/fawlty-towers-and-father-ted-top-list-of-britains-favourite-sitcoms/|title=Fawlty Towers and Father Ted top list of Britain's favourite sitcoms|work=ITV News| access-date=24 May 2019}}</ref> The BBC profile for the series states that "the British sitcom by which all other British sitcoms must be judged, ''Fawlty Towers'' withstands multiple viewings, is eminently quotable ('don't mention the war') and stands up to this day as a jewel in the BBC's comedy crown."<ref>{{cite news |title=Fawlty Towers |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/fawltytowers/ |access-date=24 May 2019 |agency=BBC}}</ref> In 2023, Cleese suggested that a sequel series was being developed.
In a [[BFI TV 100|list drawn up]] by the [[British Film Institute]] in 2000, voted by industry professionals, ''Fawlty Towers'' was named the best British television series of all time.<ref>[http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/tv/100/ BFI TV100]. Retrieved 4 June 2009.</ref>


==Origins==
==Origins==
[[File:Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay - geograph.org.uk - 1444339.jpg|thumb|left|The Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay, in 2009]]
In May 1971 the [[Monty Python]] team stayed at the Gleneagles Hotel (which is referred to in "[[The Builders]]" episode) in [[Torquay]] whilst filming on location.<ref>Palin, Michael; ''Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years''; p24; 2007, Weidenfeld & Nicholson</ref> John Cleese became fascinated with the behaviour of the owner, [[Donald Sinclair (hotel owner)|Donald Sinclair]], whom Cleese later described as "the rudest man I've ever come across in my life." <ref>In an interview in [[Parkinson (chat show)]], BBC 1 (2001).[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1yKb_77Sf0]</ref> This behaviour included Sinclair throwing a timetable at a guest who asked when the next bus to town would arrive;{{Citation needed|date=December 2010}} and placing [[Eric Idle]]'s briefcase (put to one side by Idle while waiting for a car with Cleese) behind a wall in the garden on the suspicion that it contained a bomb (Sinclair explained his actions, by claiming the hotel had 'staff problems').<ref>Cleese Interview; 'Fawlty Towers: Reopened'; 2009</ref> He also criticised the American-born [[Terry Gilliam]]'s [[table manners]] for not being "British" (that is, he switched hands with his fork whilst eating). Cleese and Booth stayed on at the hotel after filming, furthering their research of the hotel owner. Cleese later played a hotel owner called Donald Sinclair in the 2001 movie ''[[Rat Race (film)|Rat Race]]''.


[[File:Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay - geograph.org.uk - 1444339.jpg|thumb|[[Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay|Gleneagles Hotel]], Torquay, in 2009. Cleese stayed at the hotel with the Monty Python team in 1970, and was inspired to write the series by the eccentric behaviour of the hotel's owner [[Donald Sinclair (hotel owner)|Donald Sinclair]].]]
At the time, Cleese was a writer on the 1970s British TV sitcom ''[[Doctor in the House (TV series)|Doctor in the House]]'' for [[London Weekend Television]]. An early prototype of the character that became known as Basil Fawlty was developed in an episode ("No Ill Feeling") of the third ''Doctor'' series (titled ''[[Doctor at Large (TV series)|Doctor at Large]]''). In this edition, the main character checks into a small town hotel, his very presence seemingly winding up the aggressive and incompetent manager (played by [[Timothy Bateson]]) with a domineering wife. The show was broadcast on 30 May 1971.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/d/doctoratlarge_7772270.shtml ''BBC Comedy Guide Doctor At Large'']. Retrieved 24 February 2007.</ref> Cleese parodied the contrast between organisational dogma and sensitive customer service in many personnel training videotapes issued with a serious purpose by his company, [[Video Arts]].
In May 1970, the [[Monty Python]] comedy group stayed at the now-demolished [[Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay|Gleneagles Hotel]] in [[Torquay]], [[Devon]] while filming on location in [[Paignton]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Palin |first=Michael |author-link=Michael Palin |title=Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years |page=24 |year=2007 |publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson}}</ref> [[John Cleese]] was fascinated with the behaviour of the owner, [[Donald Sinclair (hotel owner)|Donald Sinclair]], later describing him as "the rudest man I've ever come across in my life".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1yKb_77Sf0 | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211103/c1yKb_77Sf0| archive-date=3 November 2021 | url-status=live|title=John Cleese interview – part one |work=Parkinson |publisher=BBC |date=2 August 2007 |access-date=20 September 2016}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Among such behaviour by Sinclair was his criticism of [[Terry Gilliam]]'s "too American" table [[etiquette]] and tossing [[Eric Idle]]'s briefcase out of a window "in case it contained a bomb".<ref name=devon>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/devon/content/articles/2006/08/10/fawlty_towers_relaunch_feature.shtml |title=Sybil back at Fawlty Towers |publisher=BBC |date=18 September 2006 |access-date=6 January 2014}}</ref> Asked why anyone would want to bomb the hotel, Sinclair replied, "We've had a lot of staff problems".<ref name="Real life">{{cite news |title=Real-life Sybil Fawlty dies aged 95 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2010/sep/16/sybil-fawlty-inspiration-dies |access-date=25 July 2019 |newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref> [[Michael Palin]] states Sinclair "seemed to view us as a colossal inconvenience".<ref name="Real life"/> Rosemary Harrison, a waitress at the Gleneagles under Sinclair, described him as "bonkers" and lacking in hospitality, deeming him wholly unsuitable for a hotel proprietor. "It was as if he didn't want the guests to be there."<ref name="bonkers"/> Cleese and his then-wife [[Connie Booth]] stayed on at the hotel after filming, furthering their research of its owner.<ref name="bonkers">{{cite news |last=Savill |first=Richard |date=18 May 2002|title=Fawlty hotelier was bonkers, says waitress |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1394580/Fawlty-hotelier-was-bonkers-says-waitress.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1394580/Fawlty-hotelier-was-bonkers-says-waitress.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |access-date=24 May 2019 |work=The Telegraph}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Demolished in 2015, the building was replaced by a new retirement home named Sachs Lodge in memory of [[Andrew Sachs]] who played Manuel in the sitcom and who died in 2016.<ref>{{cite web
|url=https://www.churchillretirement.co.uk/grand-opening-at-torquay-retirement-development/
|title=Grand opening at Torquay retirement development
|work=Churchill Retirement Living
|date=30 August 2017
|publisher=Churchill Retirement Living Ltd
|access-date=28 December 2021}}</ref>


Cleese was a writer on the 1970s British TV sitcom ''[[Doctor in the House (TV series)|Doctor in the House]]'' for [[London Weekend Television]]. An early prototype of the character that became known as Basil Fawlty was developed in an episode ("No Ill Feeling") of the third ''Doctor'' series (titled ''[[Doctor at Large (TV series)|Doctor at Large]]''). In this edition, the main character checks into a small-town hotel, his very presence seemingly winding up the aggressive and incompetent manager (played by [[Timothy Bateson]]) with a domineering wife. The show was broadcast on 30 May 1971.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/d/doctoratlarge_7772270.shtml ''BBC Comedy Guide Doctor At Large'']. Retrieved 24 February 2007. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060624025257/http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/d/doctoratlarge_7772270.shtml |date=24 June 2006 }}</ref>
Cleese said in 2008 that the first ''Fawlty Towers'' script, written with then wife Connie Booth, was rejected by the BBC. At a 30th-anniversary event honouring the show, Cleese said,
{{blockquote|"Connie and I wrote that first episode and we sent it in to [[James Gilbert (producer)|Jimmy Gilbert]]," the executive "whose job it was to assess the quality of the writing said, and I can quote [his note to me] fairly accurately, 'This is full of clichéd situations and stereotypical characters and I cannot see it as being anything other than a disaster.' And Jimmy himself said, 'You're going to have to get them out of the hotel, John, you can't do the whole thing in the hotel.' Whereas, of course, it's in the hotel that the whole pressure cooker builds up."<ref name=londontimes5-6-09>[http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article6234702.ece "John Cleese: BBC rejected first episode of ''Fawlty Towers''"] ''[[The Times]]'' / TimesOnline, 6 May 2009</ref>}}


Cleese said in 2008 that the first ''Fawlty Towers'' script he and Booth wrote was rejected by the [[BBC]]. At a 30th anniversary event honouring the show, Cleese said,
Cleese was paid £6,000 for 43 weeks' work and supplemented his income by appearing in television advertisements.<ref name=londontimes5-6-09 /><ref name=newsvine5-6-09>[http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2009/05/06/2782020-john-cleese-recalls-golden-age-of-fawlty-towers "John Cleese recalls golden age of 'Fawlty Towers'"] ''[[Newsvine]]'' / Newsvine, 6 May 2009</ref>
{{blockquote|Connie and I wrote that first episode and we sent it in to [[James Gilbert (producer)|Jimmy Gilbert]], [the executive], whose job it was to assess the quality of the writing, said, (and I can quote [his note to me] fairly accurately,) "This is full of clichéd situations and stereotypical characters and I cannot see it as being anything other than a disaster." And Jimmy himself said, "You're going to have to get them out of the hotel, John. You can't do the whole thing in the hotel." Whereas, of course, it's in the hotel that the whole pressure cooker builds up.<ref name="londontimes5 June 2009">[https://web.archive.org/web/20090509074433/http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article6234702.ece "John Cleese: BBC rejected first episode of Fawlty Towers"]. ''The Times''. {{Subscription required|date=September 2016}}</ref>|sign=|source=}}


Cleese was paid [[Pound sterling|£]]6,000 for 43 weeks of work and supplemented his income by appearing in television advertisements.<ref name="londontimes5 June 2009"/><ref name="newsvine5 June 2009">{{cite web|url=http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2009/05/06/2782020-john-cleese-recalls-golden-age-of-fawlty-towers|title=John Cleese recalls golden age of 'Fawlty Towers'|first=Robert|last=Barr|date=6 May 2009|publisher=Newsvine|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120324122331/http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2009/05/06/2782020-john-cleese-recalls-golden-age-of-fawlty-towers|archive-date=24 March 2012|url-status=dead|access-date=20 September 2016}}</ref> He states, "I have to thank the advertising industry for making this possible. Connie and I used to spend six weeks writing each episode and we didn't make a lot of money out of it. If it hadn't been for the commercials I wouldn't have been able to afford to spend so much time on the script."<ref name="londontimes5 June 2009"/>
[[Bill Cotton]], the BBC's Head of Light Entertainment in the mid-1970s, said{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} after the first series was produced that the show was a prime example of the BBC's relaxed attitude to trying new entertainment formats and encouraging new ideas. He said that when he read the first scripts he could see nothing funny in them but trusting that Cleese knew what he was doing, he gave the go-ahead.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} He said that the commercial channels, with their emphasis on audience ratings, would never have let the programme get to the production stage on the basis of the scripts.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}}


==Production==
==Production==
Although the series is set in Torquay in [[Devon]], no part of it was shot in south west England. For the exterior filming, the Wooburn Grange Country Club in [[Buckinghamshire]] was used instead of a hotel.<ref>{{cite book | title=Waldorf hysteria: hotel manners, misbehaviour & minibars | first=Fritz | last=Gubler | publisher=Great, Grand & Famous Hotels | year=2008 | isbn=0-9804667-1-7 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | title=Fawlty Towers: the story of the sitcom | page=84 | first=Graham | last=McCann | publisher=Hodder & Stoughton | year=2007 | isbn=0-340-89811-9 }}</ref> In several episodes of the series (notably "[[The Kipper and the Corpse]]", "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]" and "[[Basil the Rat]]") the entrance gate at the bottom of the drive states the real name of the location. This [[listed building]] later served as a [[nightclub]] named "Basil's" for a short time after the series ended before being destroyed by a fire in March 1991.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/4776013.stm | title=Sybil to return to Fawlty Towers | date=9 August 2006 | journal=BBC News }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/5355146.stm | title=Fawlty star's red carpet welcome | date=18 September 2006 | journal=BBC News }}</ref> The remnants of the building were demolished and a housing estate was built on the site.<ref>[http://www.fawltysite.net/wooburngrange.htm Photographs of fire] at Fawltysite.net. Retrieved 14 June 2006.</ref> Other location filming was done mostly around [[Harrow, London|Harrow]], notably the 'damn good thrashing' scene in "[[Gourmet Night]]" where Basil loses his temper and attacks his car with a tree branch which was filmed at the T-junction of Lapstone Gardens and Mentmore Close ({{Coord|51.581103|N|0.309072|W|display=inline}}).
Although the series is set in Torquay, no part of it was shot in [[South West England]]. For the exterior filming, the Wooburn Grange Country Club in [[Wooburn Green]], Buckinghamshire was used instead of a hotel.<ref>{{cite book | title=Waldorf hysteria: hotel manners, misbehaviour & minibars | first=Fritz | last=Gubler | publisher=Great, Grand & Famous Hotels | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-9804667-1-3 }}</ref><ref name="McCann 2007">{{harvnb|McCann|2007}}</ref> In several episodes of the series (notably "[[The Kipper and the Corpse]]", "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]", and "[[Basil the Rat]]"), the entrance gate at the bottom of the drive states the real name of the location. This [[listed building]] later served for a short time as a [[nightclub]] named "Basil's" after the series ended, before being destroyed by a fire in March 1991.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/4776013.stm | title=Sybil to return to Fawlty Towers | date=9 August 2006 | journal=BBC News }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/5355146.stm | title=Fawlty star's red carpet welcome | date=18 September 2006 | journal=BBC News }}</ref> The remnants of the building were demolished and a [[housing estate]] was built on the site.<ref>[http://www.fawltysite.net/misc/wooburngrange.htm Photographs of fire] at Fawltysite.net. Retrieved 14 June 2006. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060519191450/http://www.fawltysite.net/wooburngrange.htm|date=19 May 2006}}</ref> Few traces of the original site exist today.


In the episode "[[The Germans]]", the opening shot is of [[Northwick Park Hospital]]. In the episode "Gourmet Night", the exterior of Andre's restaurant was filmed on Preston Road in the Harrow area ({{Coord|51.573393|N|0.294411|W|display=inline}}). The launderette next door to the restaurant still exists today and Andre's is now a Chinese restaurant called "Wings".
Other location filming was done mostly around [[Harrow, London|Harrow]]: firstly the 'damn good thrashing' scene in "[[Gourmet Night]]" in which Basil loses his temper and attacks his broken-down car with a tree branch. It was filmed at the T-junction of Lapstone Gardens and Mentmore Close ({{Coord|51.5811|N|0.3091|W|display=inline|scale:2500}}). Secondly the episode "[[The Germans]]", the opening shot is of [[Northwick Park Hospital]]. Thirdly "Gourmet Night"'s exterior of André's restaurant was at Preston Road ({{Coord|51.5734|N|0.2944|W|display=inline|scale:2500}}). It is now a Chinese and Indian restaurant called Wings, next to a [[launderette]].
Both Cleese and Booth were keen on every script being perfect, and some episodes took four months and required as many as ten drafts until they were satisfied.<ref name="museumTV">{{cite web|url=http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/F/htmlF/fawltytowers/fawltytowers.htm|title=FAWLTY TOWERS: British Situation Comedy|last=Goddard|first=Peter|publisher=[[Museum of Broadcast Communications]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130509120451/http://www.museum.tv/eotvsection.php?entrycode=fawltytowers|archive-date=9 May 2013|url-status=dead|access-date=8 August 2009}}</ref>


Cleese said one of the reasons the series worked so well was the quality of the scripts and the care taken over the editing. He told a TV interviewer that while the average BBC half-hour comedy script had 65 pages, the ones for Fawlty Towers had between 135 and 140 pages. "We literally did twice as many camera cuts - average shows got 200, we used to have 400. So there was an enormous amount in there. The other thing is that they were very well constructed," he said. Once an episode was in the can, the editing process started. "We did anything between 20 and 25 hours editing each show. Almost every minute you see up on the screen, we spent one hour editing and it was only by doing that you could just tighten it up, just tighten it there and take out a line of dialogue, sometimes take out a repetition, they'll then lose two lines of dialogue there. That's what really got the pace on it."<ref>{{Citation |title=An Interview With John Cleese | date=31 July 2016 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvtQHdnHqJI |access-date=10 March 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
Cleese and Booth were husband and wife at the time of the first series. By the second, they had been divorced for almost a year, having ended their ten year marriage in 1978.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0532343/ ''Britain's Best Sitcom – The case for Fawlty Towers''], BBC Documentary presented by [[Jack Dee]], broadcast 24 January 2004</ref>


The theme music was composed by [[Dennis Wilson (composer)|Dennis Wilson]]. It was recorded by the highly respected [[Aeolian Quartet]], who were asked by director John Davis to perform the piece badly, although in the end they did not.<ref>McCann (2007)</ref>
Both Cleese and Booth were keen on every script being perfect, and some episodes took four months and required ten drafts until they were satisfied.<ref name=museumTV>{{cite web |first=Peter |last=Goddard |title=FAWLTY TOWERS: British Situation Comedy |url=http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/F/htmlF/fawltytowers/fawltytowers.htm |publisher=[[Museum of Broadcast Communications]] |accessdate=8 August 2009}}</ref>

The names of Basil and Sybil Fawlty are thought to have originated from [[Oscar Wilde]]'s novel ''[[The Picture of Dorian Gray]]''.{{citation needed|date=January 2013}}

The first series was produced and directed by [[John Howard Davies]]; the second was produced by [[Douglas Argent]] and directed by [[Bob Spiers]].

The series theme music was written by [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0933288/ Dennis Wilson] and was inspired by [[Minuet_WoO_10,_No._2_(Beethoven)|Ludwig van Beethoven's Minuet in G major]].


==Plot directions and examples==
==Plot directions and examples==
The series focuses on the exploits and misadventures of short-fused hotelier [[#Basil Fawlty|Basil Fawlty]], his wife [[#Sybil Fawlty|Sybil]] and their employees, [[porter (carrier)|porter]] and waiter [[#Manuel|Manuel]], maid [[#Polly Sherman|Polly]], and (in the second series) chef Terry. The episodes typically revolve around Basil's efforts to succeed in 'raising the tone' of his hotel and his increasing frustration at the numerous complications and mistakes, both his own and those of others, which prevent him from doing so. Much of the humour comes from Basil's overly aggressive manner, engaging in angry but witty arguments with guests, staff and in particular his formidable wife, whom he addresses (in a faux-romantic way) with insults such as "that golfing [[Bitis|puff adder]]", "my little [[piranha]] fish" and "my little nest of [[Viperidae|viper]]s". Despite this, he frequently feels intimidated, she being able to stop him in his tracks at any time, usually with a short, sharp cry of "Basil!" At the end of some episodes, Basil succeeds in annoying (or at least bemusing) the guests and frequently gets his comeuppance.
The series focuses on the exploits and misadventures of short-fused hotelier [[#Basil Fawlty|Basil Fawlty]] and his acerbic wife [[#Sybil Fawlty|Sybil]], as well as their employees: waiter [[#Manuel|Manuel]], [[#Polly Sherman|Polly Sherman]], and, in the second series, chef Terry. The episodes typically revolve around Basil's efforts to "raise the tone" of his hotel and his increasing frustration at numerous complications and mistakes, both his own and those of others, which prevent him from doing so.
Much of the humour comes from Basil's overly aggressive manner, engaging in angry but witty arguments with guests, staff and, in particular, Sybil, whom he addresses (in a faux-romantic way) with insults such as "that golfing [[Bitis|puff adder]]", "my little [[piranha]] fish" and "my little nest of [[Viperidae|vipers]]".<ref name="Independent">{{cite news |title=Fawlty Towers 40th anniversary: Britain's finest sitcom was TV's most perfectly constructed farce |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/features/fawlty-towers-40th-anniversary-britains-finest-sitcom-was-tvs-most-perfectly-constructed-farce-10506552.html |access-date=25 May 2019 |work=The Independent}}</ref> Despite this, Basil frequently feels intimidated, Sybil being able to cow him at any time, usually with a short, sharp cry of "Basil!" At the end of some episodes, Basil succeeds in annoying (or at least bemusing) the guests and frequently gets his comeuppance.


The plots are occasionally intricate and always [[farce|farcical]], involving coincidences, misunderstandings, cross-purposes and meetings both missed and accidental. The [[innuendo]] of the [[bedroom farce]] is sometimes present (often to the disgust of the [[social conservatism|socially conservative]] Basil) but it is his eccentricity, not his lust, that drives the plots. The events test what little patience Basil has to the breaking point, sometimes causing him to have a near total breakdown by the end of the episode.
The plots occasionally are intricate and always [[farce|farcical]], involving [[coincidence]]s, misunderstandings, cross-purposes and meetings both missed and accidental. The [[innuendo]] of the [[bedroom farce]] is sometimes present (often to the disgust of the [[social conservatism|socially conservative]] Basil) but it is his eccentricity, not his lust, that drives the plots. The events test to the breaking point what little patience Basil has, sometimes causing him to have a near breakdown by the end of the episode.


The guests at the hotel are typically [[double act|comic foils]] to Basil's anger and outbursts. Each episode's one-shot guest characters provide a different characteristic that he cannot stand (including promiscuity, or being working class or foreign). Requests both reasonable and impossible test his temper. Even the afflicted seem to annoy him, with the episode "Communication Problems" revolving around the havoc caused by the frequent misunderstandings between the staff and the hard-of-hearing Mrs Richards. By the end, Basil faints just at the mention of her name. This episode is typical of the show's careful weaving of humorous situations through comedy cross-talk. The show also uses mild [[Black comedy|black humour]] at times, notably when Basil is forced to hide a dead body and in Basil's comments about Sybil ("Did you ever see that film, ''[[How to Murder Your Wife]]''? ... Awfully good. I saw it six times.") and to the guests ("May I suggest that you consider moving to a hotel closer to the sea? Or preferably in it.").
The guests at the hotel typically are [[double act|comic foils]] to Basil's anger and outbursts. Guest characters in each episode provide different characteristics (working class, promiscuous, foreign) that he cannot stand. Requests both reasonable and impossible test his temper. Even the afflicted annoy him, for example in the episode "Communication Problems", revolving around the havoc caused by the frequent misunderstandings between the staff and the hard-of-hearing Mrs. Richards. Near the end, Basil pretends to faint just at the mention of her name. This episode is typical of the show's careful weaving of humorous situations through comedy cross-talk. The show also uses mild [[Black comedy|black humour]] at times, notably when Basil is forced to hide a dead body ("2 dead, 25 to go.") and in his comments about Sybil ("Did you ever see that film, ''[[How to Murder Your Wife]]''? ... Awfully good. I saw it six times.") and to Mrs Richards, ("May I suggest that you consider moving to a hotel closer to the sea? Or preferably in it.").<ref>{{cite news |title=Fawlty Towers: 20 of Basil's best rants |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/lists/Fawlty-Towers-20-of-Basils-best-rants/ |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/lists/Fawlty-Towers-20-of-Basils-best-rants/ |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |access-date=31 August 2019 |newspaper=The Telegraph}}{{cbignore}}</ref>


Basil's physical outbursts are primarily directed at the waiter Manuel, an emotional but largely innocent [[Spain|Spaniard]] whose confused English vocabulary causes him to make elementary mistakes. At times, Basil beats Manuel with a frying pan and smacks his forehead with a spoon. (The violence towards Manuel caused rare negative criticism of the show.) Sybil, on the other hand, is always condescending towards Manuel, excusing his behaviour to guests with "He's from Barcelona."
Basil's physical outbursts are primarily directed at Manuel, an emotional but largely innocent [[Spain|Spaniard]] whose confused English vocabulary causes him to make elementary mistakes. At times, Basil beats Manuel with a frying pan and smacks his forehead with a spoon. The violence towards Manuel caused rare negative criticism of the show. Sybil and Polly, on the other hand, are more patient and understanding towards Manuel; everyone's usual excuse to guests for his behaviour is, "He's from [[Barcelona]]"; Manuel even once used the excuse for himself.


Basil often displays blatant snobbishness in order to climb the social ladder, frequently expressing disdain for the "[[hoi polloi|riff-raff]]", "[[wikt:cretin|cretin]]s" and "[[yobbo]]s" that he believes to regularly populate his hotel. His desperation is readily apparent, as he makes increasingly hopeless manoeuvres and painful ''faux pas'' in trying to curry favour with those he perceives having superior social status. Yet, he finds himself forced to serve those individuals that are "beneath" him. As such, Basil's efforts tend to be counter-productive, with guests leaving the hotel in disgust and his marriage (and sanity) stretching to breaking point.
Basil longs for a touch of [[Social class|class]], sometimes playing recordings of classical music. In the first episode he is playing music by [[Johannes Brahms|Brahms]] when Sybil remarks, after pestering him asking to do different tasks: "You could have them both done by now if you hadn't spent the whole morning skulking in there listening to that racket." Basil replies, with exasperation, "Racket?? That's Brahms! [[Symphony No. 3 (Brahms)|Brahms' Third Racket]]!" Basil often displays blatant [[snob]]bishness as he attempts to climb the social ladder, frequently expressing disdain for the "[[hoi polloi|riff-raff]]", "[[wikt:cretin|cretins]]" and "[[yobbo]]s" that he believes regularly populate his hotel.<ref name="Independent"/> His desperation is readily apparent as he makes increasingly hopeless manoeuvres and painful faux pas in trying to [[wikt:curry favor|curry favour]] with those he perceives as having superior social status. Yet he finds himself forced to serve those individuals that are "beneath" him. As such, Basil's efforts tend to be counter-productive, with guests leaving the hotel in disgust and his marriage (and sanity) stretching to breaking point.


==Characters==
==Characters==
[[File:Fawlty Towers cast.jpg|thumb|250px|Cast of ''Fawlty Towers'', ''left to right'': ''(front)'' Prunella Scales, Connie Booth, and Andrew Sachs; ''(back)'' John Cleese]]


===Basil Fawlty===
===Basil Fawlty===
{{main|Basil Fawlty}}


[[File:Fawlty Towers cast.jpg|thumb|250px|Cast of ''Fawlty Towers'', left to right: ''(front)'' [[Prunella Scales]] (Sybil Fawlty), [[Connie Booth]] (Polly) and [[Andrew Sachs]] (Manuel); ''(back)'' [[John Cleese]] (Basil Fawlty)]]
'''[[Basil Fawlty]]''', played by [[John Cleese]], is a snobbish and miserly [[misanthropy|misanthrope]] who is desperate to belong to a higher social class. He sees a successful hotel as a means of achieving this ("turn it into an establishment of class...") yet his job forces him to be pleasant to people he despises.
[[Basil Fawlty]], played by [[John Cleese]], is a [[Cynicism (contemporary)|cynical]] and snobbish [[Misanthropy|misanthrope]] who is desperate to belong to a [[Upper class|higher social class]]. He sees a successful hotel as a means of achieving this, yet his job forces him to be polite to people he despises.


He is terrified of his wife [[Sybil Fawlty]]. He yearns to stand up to her, but his plans frequently conflict with her demands. She is often verbally abusive (memorably describing him as "an ageing, [[brilliantine]]d stick insect") but although he towers over her, he often finds himself on the receiving end of her temper, verbally and physically (as in "[[The Builders]]"). Basil usually turns to Manuel or Polly to help him with his schemes, while trying his best to keep Sybil from discovering them. However, Basil occasionally laments the time when there was passion in their relationship, now seemingly lost. Also, it appears that he still does care for her, and actively resists the flirtations of a French guest in one episode. The penultimate episode, "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]", is about his efforts to put together a surprise anniversary party, involving their closest friends. Things go wrong as Basil pretends the anniversary date doesn't remind him of anything, just to enhance the surprise (even accepting a slap in the process). Sybil believes he really forgot and leaves in a huff. In an interview in the DVD box set, Cleese claims that this episode deliberately takes a slightly different tone from the others, fleshing out their otherwise inexplicable status as a couple (as well as saying that, if a third series had been made, there would have been similar episodes).
He is intimidated by his wife [[Sybil Fawlty]]. He yearns to stand up to her, but his plans frequently conflict with her demands. She is often [[Verbal abuse|verbally abusive]] (describing him as "an ageing, [[brilliantine]]d stick insect") but although he towers over her, he often finds himself on the receiving end of her temper, verbally and physically (as in "[[The Builders]]"), and it is only on one occasion when Sybil mistakenly believes he is stalking an attractive Australian guest that he finally snaps and stands up to her.


Basil usually turns to Manuel or Polly to help him with his schemes, while trying his best to keep Sybil from discovering them. However, Basil occasionally laments the time when there was passion in their relationship, now seemingly lost. Also, it appears he still does care for her and remains loyal to her, and actively resists the flirtations of a French guest in one episode. The penultimate episode, "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]", is about his efforts to put together a surprise anniversary party involving their closest friends.<ref name="Independent"/> Things go wrong as Basil pretends the anniversary date does not remind him of anything though he pretends to have a stab at it by reeling off a list of random anniversaries, starting with the [[Battle of Agincourt]], for which he receives a slap from Sybil, who becomes increasingly frustrated and angry. He continues guessing even after Sybil is out of earshot, and mentions other anniversaries (none of which happened on 17 April), including the [[Battle of Trafalgar]] and [[Yom Kippur]], just to enhance the surprise. Sybil believes he really has forgotten, and leaves in a huff. In an interview in the DVD boxed set, Cleese claims this episode deliberately takes a slightly different tone from the others, fleshing out their otherwise inexplicable status as a couple.
In keeping with the lack of explanation about the marriage, not much is revealed of the characters' back-stories. It is known that Basil served in the [[British Army]] and saw action in the [[Korean War]], possibly as part of his [[Conscription in the United Kingdom|National Service]]. (John Cleese was only 13 when the Korean War ended.) Basil exaggerates this period of his life, proclaiming to strangers: "I killed four men." To this Sybil jokes that "He was in the [[Army Catering Corps|Catering Corps]]. He used to poison them." Basil is often seen wearing a military tie (similar to the East Lancs Regiment and the [[Royal Agricultural College]]), and his moustache seems to betray an Army background. He also claims to have sustained a [[shrapnel shell|shrapnel]] injury to his leg; it tends to flare up at suspiciously convenient times. The only person Basil consistently exhibits patience and decent manners towards is old and senile [[Major Gowen]], a veteran officer of one of the [[World war|World Wars]] (which one is never specified) who permanently resides at the hotel. When interacting with Manuel, Basil displays a rudimentary ability with Spanish (Basil states that he "learned classical Spanish, not the strange dialect he [Manuel] seems to have picked up" (presumably Catalan; Manuel is from Barcelona)); this ability is also ridiculed, as in the first episode where a guest, whom Basil has immediately dismissed as working-class, communicates fluently with Manuel in Spanish after Basil is unable to do so.


In keeping with the lack of explanation about the marriage, not much is revealed of the characters' back-stories. It is known that Basil served in the [[British Army]] and saw action in the [[Korean War]], possibly as part of his [[conscription in the United Kingdom|National Service]].<ref name="Independent"/> ([[John Cleese]] himself was only 13 when the Korean War ended, making the character of Basil at least five or six years older than he.) Basil exaggerates this period of his life, proclaiming to strangers, "I killed four men." To this Sybil jokes that "He was in the [[Army Catering Corps|Catering Corps]]. He used to poison them." Basil is often seen wearing regimental and old-boy style ties, perhaps spuriously, one of which is in the colours of the [[Army Catering Corps]]. He also claims to have sustained a [[shrapnel shell|shrapnel]] injury to his leg; it tends to flare up at suspiciously convenient times. The only person towards whom Basil consistently exhibits tolerance and good manners is the old and senile [[Major Gowen]], a veteran of one of the [[world war]]s (which one is never specified, though he once mentions to Mrs Peignoir that he was in France in 1918) who permanently resides at the hotel.<ref name="Independent"/> When interacting with Manuel, Basil displays a rudimentary knowledge of Spanish (Basil states that he "learned classical Spanish, not the strange dialect he &#91;Manuel&#93; seems to have picked up"); this knowledge is also ridiculed, as in the first episode in which a guest, whom Basil has immediately dismissed as working-class, communicates fluently with Manuel in Spanish after Basil is unable to do so.
Cleese described Basil as thinking that "he could run a first-rate hotel if he didn't have all the guests getting in the way", and as being "an absolutely awful human being", but says that in comedy, if an awful person makes people laugh, people unaccountably feel affectionate toward him.<ref>An Interview with John Cleese, DVD Special Programs, 2001</ref> Indeed, he is not entirely unsympathetic. The "[[The Hotel Inspectors|Hotel Inspectors]]" and "[[Gourmet Night]]" episodes feature guests who are shown to be deeply annoying with constant, and unreasonable demands. In "Gourmet Night", the chef gets drunk and is unable to cook dinner, leaving Basil to scramble in an attempt to salvage the evening. Much of the time, Basil is an unfortunate victim of circumstance.

Cleese described Basil as thinking that "he could run a first-rate hotel if he didn't have all the guests getting in the way" and as being "an absolutely awful human being" but says that in comedy if an awful person makes people laugh they unaccountably feel affectionate towards him.<ref>An Interview with John Cleese, DVD Special Programs, 2001</ref> Indeed, he is not entirely unsympathetic. The "[[The Hotel Inspectors|Hotel Inspectors]]" and "[[Gourmet Night]]" episodes feature guests who are shown to be deeply annoying, with constant and unreasonable demands. In "Gourmet Night" the chef gets drunk and is unable to cook dinner, leaving Basil to scramble in an attempt to salvage the evening. Much of the time, Basil is an unfortunate victim of circumstance.


===Sybil Fawlty===
===Sybil Fawlty===
{{main|Sybil Fawlty}}
[[Sybil Fawlty]], played by [[Prunella Scales]], is Basil's wife. Energetic and petite, she prefers a working wardrobe of tight skirt-suits in shiny fabrics and sports a tower of permed hair augmented with hairpieces and wigs necessitating the use of overnight [[curlers]]. She often is a more effective manager of the hotel, making sure Basil gets certain jobs done or stays out of the way when she is handling difficult guests. Typically when Basil is on the verge of a meltdown due to a crisis (usually of his own making), it is Sybil who steps in to clear up the mess and bring some sense to the situation. Despite this, she rarely participates directly in the running of the hotel. During busy check-in sessions or meal times, while everyone else is busy working, Sybil is frequently talking on the phone to one of her friends with her phrase "Oohhh, I knoooooooow" or chatting to customers. She has a distinctive conversational tone and braying laugh, which Basil compares to "someone machine-gunning a seal". Being his wife, she is the only regular character who refers to Basil by his first name. When she barks his name at him, he flinchingly freezes in his tracks.


Basil refers to her by a number of epithets, occasionally to her face, including "that golfing puff-adder", "the dragon", "toxic midget", "the sabre-toothed tart", "my little kommandant", "my little piranha fish", "my little nest of vipers" and "you rancorous, coiffured old sow".<ref name="Independent"/> Despite these nasty nicknames, Basil is terrified of her. The 1979 episode "[[The Psychiatrist (Fawlty Towers)|The Psychiatrist]]" contains the only time he loses patience and snaps at her (Basil: "Shut up, I'm fed up." Sybil: "Oh, you've done it now.").
'''[[Sybil Fawlty]]''', played by [[Prunella Scales]], is Basil's wife. Energetic and petite, she prefers a working wardrobe of tight skirt suits in shiny fabrics and sports a tower of permed hair necessitating the use of overnight [[curlers]]. She is often a more effective manager of the hotel, making sure Basil gets certain jobs done or stays out of the way when she is handling difficult guests. Despite this, she rarely participates directly in the running of the hotel; during busy check-in sessions or meal-times, while everyone else is busy working, she is frequently talking on the phone to one of her friends with her phrase "Oohhh, I knoooooooow", or chatting to customers. She has a distinctive conversational tone and braying laugh, which her husband compares to "someone machine-gunning a seal". Being his wife, she is the only regular character who refers to Basil by his first name. When she barks his name at him, he flinchingly freezes in his tracks.


Prunella Scales speculated in an interview for ''The Complete Fawlty Towers'' DVD boxed set that Sybil married Basil because his origins were of a higher social class than hers.
Basil refers to her by a number of epithets, occasionally to her face, including "that golfing puff-adder", "the dragon", "toxic midget", "the sabre-toothed tart", "my little kommandant", "my little piranha fish", "my little nest of vipers", and "you rancorous, coiffured old sow". Despite these less than complimentary nicknames, Basil is terrified of her. There is only one time that he loses patience and snaps at her (Basil: "Shut up, I'm fed up." Sybil: "Oh you've done it now.").

Sybil and Basil Fawlty are said{{where?|date=July 2012}} to have married on 17 April 1958 and started their hotel in 1960. Prunella Scales speculated in an interview for ''The Complete Fawlty Towers'' DVD box set that Sybil married Basil because his origins were of a higher social class than hers.


===Polly Sherman===
===Polly Sherman===
{{main|Polly Sherman}}
[[Polly Sherman]], played by [[Connie Booth]], is a [[waitress]] and general assistant at the hotel with artistic aspirations. She is the most competent of the staff and the voice of sanity during chaotic moments, but is frequently embroiled in ridiculous masquerades as she loyally attempts to aid Basil in trying to cover up a mistake or keep something from Sybil.


In "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]" she snaps and refuses to help Basil out when he wants her to impersonate Sybil in the semi-darkness of her bedroom in front of the Fawltys' friends, Basil having dug himself into a hole by claiming Sybil was ill instead of admitting she had stormed out earlier in annoyance with him. Polly finally agrees, but only on condition that Basil lends her money to purchase a car, which he has previously refused to do.
'''Polly Sherman''', played by [[Connie Booth]], is a [[waitress]] and general helper at the hotel. She is the most competent of the hotel's staff and the voice of sanity during chaotic moments, but is frequently embroiled in ridiculous masquerades as she loyally attempts to aid Basil in trying to cover a mistake or keep something from Sybil.


Polly generally is good-natured but sometimes shows her frustration, and has odd moments of malice. In "[[The Kipper and the Corpse]]", the pampered [[shih-tzu|Shih Tzu]] dog of an elderly guest bites Polly and Manuel. As revenge, Polly laces the dog's sausages with black pepper and [[Tabasco sauce]] ("bangers à la bang"), making it ill and eventually killing it.
In "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]" she snaps and refuses to help Basil out when he wants her to impersonate Sybil in semi-darkness in front of the Fawltys' friends, Basil having dug himself into a hole by claiming Sybil was ill instead of admitting that she had stormed out earlier. Polly only finally agrees on condition that he lends her money to purchase a car, which he has previously refused to do.


Despite her part-time employment (during meal times), Polly frequently is saddled with many other duties, including as manager in "[[The Germans]]" when Sybil and Basil are incapacitated. In the first series, Polly is said to be an art student who, according to Basil, has spent three years at college. In "[[Gourmet Night]]", she is seen drawing a sketch (presumably of Manuel), which everyone but Basil immediately recognises and she sells it to the chef for 50p. Polly is not referred to as a student in the second series, although in both series she is shown to have a flair for languages, displaying ability in both Spanish and German. In "The Germans", Basil alludes to Polly's polyglot inclination by saying that she does her work "while learning two Oriental languages". Like Manuel, she has a room of her own at the hotel.
Polly is generally good-natured but sometimes shows her frustration, and has odd moments of malice. In "[[The Kipper and the Corpse]]", the pampered [[shih-tzu]] dog of an elderly guest bites Polly and Manuel. As revenge Polly laces the dog's sausages with hot pepper, [[chilli powder]] and [[Tabasco sauce]] ("bangers a la bang"), making it ill.

Despite her part-time employment (during meal times), Polly is frequently saddled with many other duties, including manager in "[[The Germans]]" when Sybil and Basil are both incapacitated. In the first series Polly is said to be an art student who, according to Basil, has spent three years at university. In one episode, she is seen to draw a sketch (presumably an [[impressionist]]ic [[caricature]]) of Basil, which everyone but Basil immediately recognises. Polly is not referred to as a student in the second series, although in both series she is shown to have a flair for languages, displaying ability in both Spanish and German. In "The Germans" Basil alludes to Polly's polyglot inclination by saying that she does her work "while learning two oriental languages". Like Manuel, she has a room of her own at the hotel.


===Manuel===
===Manuel===
{{main|Manuel (Fawlty Towers)}}
[[Manuel (Fawlty Towers)|Manuel]], a waiter played by [[Andrew Sachs]], is a well-meaning but disorganised and confused [[Spanish people|Spaniard]] from [[Barcelona]] with a poor grasp of the English language and customs. He is verbally and physically abused by his boss. When told what to do, he often responds, "¿Qué?" ("What?"). Manuel's character is used to demonstrate Basil's instinctive lack of sensitivity and tolerance. Every episode involves Basil becoming enraged at Manuel's confusion at his boss's bizarre demands and even basic requests. Manuel is afraid of Fawlty's quick temper and violent assaults, yet often expresses his appreciation for being given employment. He is relentlessly enthusiastic and is proud of what little English he knows.


During the series, Sachs was seriously injured twice. Cleese describes using a real metal pan to knock Manuel unconscious in "[[The Wedding Party (Fawlty Towers)|The Wedding Party]]", although he would have preferred to use a rubber one. The original producer and director, John Howard Davies, said that he made Basil use a metal one and that he was responsible for most of the violence on the show, which he felt was essential to the type of comical farce they were creating. Later, when Sachs's clothes were treated to give off smoke after he escaped the burning kitchen in "[[The Germans]]", the corrosive chemicals ate through them and gave Sachs severe burns.<ref>John Cleese, VHS or DVD cast interview, 1998</ref>
'''[[Manuel (Fawlty Towers)|Manuel]]''', a waiter played by [[Andrew Sachs]], is a well-meaning but disorganised and confused [[Spanish people|Spaniard]] from [[Barcelona]] with a poor grasp of the English language and customs. He is verbally and physically abused by his boss. When told what to do, he often answers, "¿Qué?" ("What?"). Manuel's character is used to demonstrate Basil's instinctive lack of sensitivity and tolerance. Every episode involves Basil becoming enraged at Manuel's confusion at his boss's bizarre demands and even basic requests. Manuel is afraid of Fawlty's quick temper and violent assaults, yet often expresses his appreciation for being given employment. He is relentlessly enthusiastic and is proud of what little English he knows.

During the series, Sachs was twice seriously injured while playing Manuel. Cleese describes using a real metal pan to knock him unconscious in "[[The Wedding Party]]", although he would have preferred to use a rubber one. The original producer/director, John Howard Davies, explains that he made Basil use a metal one and that he was responsible for most of the violence on the show, which he felt was essential to the type of comical farce that they were creating. Later, when his clothes were treated to give off smoke after he escapes the burning kitchen in "[[The Germans]]", the corrosive chemicals ate through them and gave Sachs severe burns.<ref>John Cleese, VHS or DVD cast interview, 1998</ref>


Manuel's exaggerated Spanish accent is part of the humour of the show. The actor Andrew Sachs's original language is German; he immigrated to Britain as a child.<ref>{{cite news | title =Variety Club – Jewish Chronicle colour supplement "350 years"| pages=28–29| publisher =The Jewish Chronicle| date =15 December 2006 | accessdate =24 December 2006 }}</ref>
Manuel's exaggerated Spanish accent is part of the humour of the show. In fact, Sachs's original language was German; he emigrated to Britain as a child.<ref>{{cite news | title =Variety Club – Jewish Chronicle colour supplement "350 years"| pages=28–29| newspaper =The Jewish Chronicle| date =15 December 2006 }}</ref>


The character's nationality was switched to Italian (and the name to Paolo) for the Spanish dub of the show, while in [[Catalonia]] Manuel is a Mexican.<ref>[http://dvdenlared.com/dvd/Fawlty%20Towers:%20Volumen%201/Analisis/20050109015234.html Reviewed by David Gómez Tato, 9 01 2005]. Retrieved 19 June 2008.</ref>
The character's nationality was switched to Italian (and the name to Paolo) for the Spanish dub of the show, while in [[Catalonia]] and [[France]], Manuel is a Mexican.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://dvdenlared.com/dvd/Fawlty%20Towers:%20Volumen%201/Analisis/20050109015234.html|title=Fawlty Towers: Volumen 1|last=Gómez Tato|first=David|date=9 January 2005|website=DVDenlared|publisher=Sync Intertainment S.L.|language=es|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090603104423/http://dvdenlared.com/dvd/Fawlty%20Towers:%20Volumen%201/Analisis/20050109015234.html|archive-date=3 June 2009|url-status=dead|access-date=20 September 2016}}</ref>


===Other regular characters and themes===
===Other regular characters and themes===
'''Terry Hugh''', played by [[Brian Hall (actor)|Brian Hall]], is the sly, somewhat shifty Cockney chef at Fawlty Towers.<ref>McCann (2007) p.204</ref> Terry's cooking methods are somewhat casual, which frustrates and worries the neurotic Basil. He appears in only the second series of episodes. Terry used to work in [[Dorchester, Dorset|Dorchester]] (not at [[Dorchester Hotel|The Dorchester]], as believed by a guest). In "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]" Terry and Manuel come to blows since he doesn't like anyone else cooking in his kitchen, and he proceeds to sabotage the [[paella]] Manuel is making for Sybil, leading to fisticuffs at the end of the episode. Cleese himself told actor Hall to portray Terry as if he were on the run from the police.
* Terry Hughes, played by [[Brian Hall (actor)|Brian Hall]], is the hotel chef throughout the second series. A sly, somewhat shifty [[Cockney]],<ref>{{harvnb|McCann|2007|p=204}}</ref> he is nonetheless a competent chef ("I 'ave been to catering school!"). His cooking methods are occasionally somewhat casual, which frustrates and worries the neurotic Basil; and he also has limited concern for food and kitchen hygiene, claiming that "What the eye don't see, the chef gets away with" and that "the better the kitchen, the filthier it is." He used to work in [[Dorchester, Dorset|Dorchester]] (not at [[The Dorchester]], as a guest wrongly infers). In "[[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]" Terry and Manuel come to blows since Terry doesn't like anyone overshadowing him as a cook, so he proceeds to sabotage the [[paella]] Manuel is making for Basil and Sybil, leading to fisticuffs at the end of the episode. Cleese himself told Hall to portray Terry as if he were on the run from the police.
* Major Gowen, played by [[Ballard Berkeley]], is a slightly senile, amiable old soldier who is a permanent resident of the hotel.<ref name="Slide1996">{{cite book | page=21 | title=Some Joe you don't know: an American biographical guide to 100 British television personalities | first=Anthony | last=Slide | publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group | year=1996 | isbn=978-0-313-29550-8 }}</ref><ref name="Terrace1985">{{cite book | page=141 | title=Encyclopedia of Television Series, Pilots and Specials: 1974–1984 | first=Vincent | last=Terrace | publisher=VNR AG | year=1985 | isbn=0-918432-61-8 }}</ref> He is one of the few guests whom Basil seems to like. This is because he has the [[The Establishment|establishment]] status that Basil craves. He usually wears the [[Royal Artillery]] jagged-striped tie, and once mentions to Mrs. Peignoir being in France in 1918.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} He often is introduced as their "oldest resident" and in the episode "Waldorf Salad" Basil reveals that the Major has lived there for seven years. He enjoys talking about the world outside, especially the cricket scores and workers' strikes (the frequent strikes at [[British Leyland]] during the time of the series' original transmission were often mentioned), and is always on the lookout for the newspaper. In the episode "[[The Germans]]" he shows he has trouble forgiving the Germans because of the wars. The best he can say is that German women make good card players. In the same episode, he also demonstrates his outdated racial attitudes when he comments about the ethnic difference between "[[Wog#British English|wogs]]" and "[[Nigger#British|niggers]]".<ref name="major">{{Cite news |last=Lawson |first=Mark |date=23 January 2013 |title=Fawlty Towers isn't racist. Major Gowen is |work=[[The Guardian]] |url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/tvandradioblog/2013/jan/23/fawlty-towers-isnt-racist-major-gowen-is |access-date=24 December 2020}}</ref> Despite his good intentions, the Major can cause Basil's plans to go awry, notably in the episode "[[Communication Problems]]" in which Basil tries his best to keep secret from Sybil the money he won in a bet.
* Miss Tibbs and Miss Gatsby, played by [[Gilly Flower]] and [[Renee Roberts]], are the other two permanent residents. Seemingly inseparable, these sweet-natured, dotty spinsters appear to have taken a fancy to Basil, feeling that they need to take care of him. In response, Basil vacillates between [[superficial charm]] and blunt rudeness during his conversations with them.<ref name="Slide1996" /><ref name="Terrace1985" /><ref>{{cite book | page=20 | title=Extras und Co- Die Faszination der Groteske: Eine Untersuchung der komödiantischen Sch(m)erzgrenze in der britischen Fernsehserie | first=Marlies | last=Bayha | publisher=GRIN Verlag | year=2009 | isbn=978-3-640-43074-1 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=o21AAAAAIBAJ&pg=4600,3809655&dq=miss-tibbs+miss-gatsby&hl=en | title=The war of the channel chuckles | first=Paul | last=Foster | journal=Evening Times | page=8 | date=19 September 1975 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | title=Monty Python encyclopedia | url=https://archive.org/details/montypythonencyc0000ross_f1a4 | url-access=registration | first=Robert | last=Ross | publisher=TV Books | year=1999 | isbn=978-1-57500-036-7 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/montypythonencyc0000ross_f1a4/page/63 63], 70 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | title="I'm sick to death with you..." or External Character Conflicts in Fawlty Towers | first=Alexander | last=Grewe | isbn=978-3-638-42885-9 | doi=10.3239/9783638428859 | publisher=grin.com | date=17 October 2005 }}</ref>
* Audrey is Sybil's lifelong best friend, and is mostly acknowledged during gossipy telephone calls. Talking with her is a refuge for Sybil. When times get tough for Audrey, who has a dysfunctional relationship with her husband George, Sybil will offer solutions and guidance, often resulting in the catchphrase "Ohhh, I knowwww..." when she tries to commiserate with Audrey's problems. In Audrey's one on-screen appearance, in "The Anniversary", she is played by actress Christine Shaw. Basil tells Major Gowen that he thinks she is a "dreadful woman".
* A [[running gag]] throughout the two series is the rearranged letters of the "Fawlty Towers" hotel sign which is shown at the beginning of every episode except "The Germans", when a hospital exterior is used as an [[establishing shot]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Remember all the variations on the Fawlty Towers hotel sign? Here's a quick reminder… |url=https://metro.co.uk/2015/02/11/remember-all-the-variations-on-the-fawlty-towers-hotel-sign-heres-a-quick-reminder-5058296/ |access-date=26 September 2024 |work=Metro}}</ref> In series one, the letters slowly fall from the sign due to lack of maintenance. In series two, the letters are re-arranged into a series of deliberate anagrams. The paperboy, though rarely seen, is revealed at the beginning of "The Psychiatrist" to be the prankster who rearranges the letters on the sign to sometimes crude phrases.
* Terence Conoley appears in two episodes as entirely different characters. In "A Touch of Class" he plays Mr. Wareing, and in "Waldorf Salad" he portrays Mr. Johnston.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/terence_conoley/| title = Terence Conoley - British Comedy Guide| website = [[British Comedy Guide]]}}</ref>


==Episodes==
'''[[Major Gowen]]''', played by [[Ballard Berkeley]], is a slightly senile, amiable old soldier who is a permanent resident at the hotel.<ref name="Slide1996">{{cite book | page=21 | title=Some Joe you don't know: an American biographical guide to 100 British television personalities | first=Anthony | last=Slide | publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group | year=1996 | isbn=0-313-29550-6 }}</ref><ref name="Terrace1985">{{cite book | page=141 | title=Encyclopedia of Television Series, Pilots and Specials: 1974–1984 | first=Vincent | last=Terrace | publisher=VNR AG | year=1985 | isbn=0-918432-61-8 }}</ref> He is one of the few guests whom Basil seems to like. This is because of his former military status, making him a symbol of the [[The Establishment|establishment]] status that Basil craves. He is often introduced as their "oldest resident". He enjoys talking about the world outside, especially the cricket scores and workers' strikes, and is always on the lookout for the newspaper. In the episode "[[List of Fawlty Towers episodes|The Germans]]", he shows that he has trouble forgiving the Germans because of the wars; the best he can say is that German women make good card players. In the same episode, he also demonstrates his outdated racial attitudes when he comments about the ethnic difference between "[[Wog#British English|wog]]s" and "[[Nigger#British|nigger]]s" — but in a manner innocent of malice or bigotry. Despite his good intentions, the Major can cause Basil's plans to go awry, notably in the episode "[[Communication Problems]]", when Basil tries his best to keep the money he won in a bet a secret from Sybil.


[[File:Fawlty Towers - studio recording ticket - 1975-08-03.jpg|thumb|BBC studio recording ticket for the second episode, "The Builders"]]
'''[[Miss Tibbs & Miss Gatsby]]''', played by [[Gilly Flower]] and [[Renee Roberts]] respectively, are the other two permanent residents. Seemingly inseparable, these sweet-natured, dotty spinsters appear to have taken a fancy to Basil, feeling that they need to take care of him. In response Basil vacillates between [[superficial charm]] and blunt rudeness during his conversations with them.<ref name="Slide1996" /><ref name="Terrace1985" /><ref>{{cite book | page=20 | title=Extras und Co- Die Faszination der Groteske: Eine Untersuchung der komödiantischen Sch(m)erzgrenze in der britischen Fernsehserie | first=Marlies | last=Bayha | publisher=GRIN Verlag | year=2009 | isbn=3-640-43074-3 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=o21AAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wacMAAAAIBAJ&pg=4600,3809655&dq=miss-tibbs+miss-gatsby&hl=en | title=The war of the channel chuckles | first=Paul | last=Foster | journal=Evening Times | page=8 | date=19 September 1975 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | title=Monty Python encyclopedia | first=Robert | last=Ross | publisher=TV Books | year=1999 | isbn=1-57500-036-9 | pages=63, 70 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | title="I'm sick to death with you..." or External Character Conflicts in Fawlty Towers | first=Alexander | last=Grewe | isbn=978-3-638-42885-9 | doi=10.3239/9783638428859 | publisher=grin.com }}</ref>


The first episode of ''Fawlty Towers'' was recorded as a pilot on 24 December 1974, the rest of the series being recorded later in 1975. It was then originally broadcast on 19 September. The 12th and final episode was first shown on 25 October 1979. The first series was directed by [[John Howard Davies]], the second by [[Bob Spiers]]. Both had their premieres on [[BBC Two]].
'''Audrey''' has one on-screen appearance in "The Anniversary". Audrey is Sybil's lifelong best friend, and is mostly acknowledged during gossipy telephone calls to Sybil. Talking with Audrey is a refuge for Sybil. When times get tough (Audrey has a dysfunctional relationship with her husband George), Sybil will offer solutions and guidance, often resulting in the catchphrase "Ohhh, I knowwww..." when she tries to commiserate with Audrey's problems. In Audrey's one on-screen appearance she is played by actress Christine Shaw.


When originally transmitted, the individual episodes had no on-screen titles. The ones in common currency were first used for the VHS release of the series in the 1980s. There were working titles, such as "USA" for "Waldorf Salad", "Death" for "The Kipper and the Corpse" and "Rat" for "Basil the Rat", which have been printed in some programme guides. In addition, some of the early BBC audio releases of episodes on vinyl and cassette included other variations, such as "Mrs. Richards" and "The Rat" for "Communication Problems" and "Basil the Rat" respectively.
'''The Paperboy''', though rarely seen, is revealed to be the prankster who rearranges the letters on the "Fawlty Towers" sign to sometimes crude phrases.<ref>This is revealed at the beginning of "The Psychiatrist" episode in the second series.</ref> The shot of the hotel's sign appears at the beginning of every episode but one, "The Germans", when a hospital is used, since it is the only episode which does not begin at the hotel. During the first series, the sign loses letters each episode; episode five brings the first anagram, "Warty Towels". In the second series, the first episode sign correctly spells 'Fawlty Tower', but changes in each subsequent episode, from the correct spelling to various anagrams. 'Flowery Twats' is the only complete anagram, using all the letters.


In 2022, a "lost" scene cut from the episode "The Anniversary" (that went unfilmed) was uncovered as part of a script copy, featuring Basil climbing out his bedroom window to avoid sex with a drunken Sybil, who had wanted to make up.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/12/16/fawlty-towers-lost-scene-sees-basil-hiding-outside-window-avoid/ | title=Fawlty Towers 'lost scene' sees Basil hiding outside a window to avoid sex with a drunk Sybil | newspaper=The Telegraph | date=17 December 2022 }}</ref>
The sign changes as follows:


It has long been rumoured that a 13th episode of the series was written and filmed, but never progressed further than a rough cut.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fawltysite.net/thirteenth-episode.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070403090421/http://www.fawltysite.net/thirteenth-episode.htm |archive-date=3 April 2007 |title=fawltysite.net – Thirteenth Episode|year=2004}}</ref> Lars Holger Holm, author of the book ''Fawlty Towers: A Worshipper's Companion,'' has made detailed claims about the episode's content, but he provides no concrete evidence of its existence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tellyspotting.kera.org/2005/12/04/13th-episode-of-fawlty-towers-basil-and-numerology-interview-with-lars-holger-holm-author-of-fawlty-towers-a-worshippers-companion/|title=13th Episode Of Fawlty Towers? Basil and Numerology? Interview with Lars Holger Holm – Author of "Fawlty Towers – A Worshipper's Companion"|last=Young|first=Bill|date=4 December 2005|website=tellyspotting.kera.org|language=en-US|access-date=31 January 2018}}</ref>
*Episode 1: "Fawlty Towers" (the letter "S" is askew)
*Episode 2: "Fawlty Tower" (the letter "L" is askew)
*Episode 3: "Fawty Tower" (the letter "W" is askew)
*Episode 4: "Fawty Toer"
*Episode 5: "Warty Towels"
*Episode 7: "Fawlty Tower" (the letter "L" is askew)
*Episode 8: "Watery Fowls"
*Episode 9: "Flay Otters"
*Episode 10: "Fatty Owls"
*Episode 11: "Flowery Twats"
*Episode 12: "Farty Towels"


On the subject of whether more episodes would be produced, Cleese said (in an interview for the complete DVD boxed set, which was republished in the book ''Fawlty Towers Fully Booked'') that he once had the genesis of a feature-length special—possibly sometime during the mid-1990s. The plot, never fleshed out beyond his initial idea, would have revolved around the chaos that a now-retired Basil typically caused as he and Sybil flew to [[Barcelona]] to visit their former employee Manuel and his family. Of the idea, Cleese said:
===Guest characters===


<blockquote>We had an idea for a plot which I loved. Basil was finally invited to Spain to meet Manuel's family. He gets to [[London Heathrow Airport|Heathrow]] and then spends about 14 frustrating hours waiting for the flight. Finally, on the plane, a terrorist pulls a gun and tries to hijack the thing. Basil is so angry he overcomes the terrorist, and when the pilot says, "We have to fly back to Heathrow" Basil says, "No, fly us to Spain or I'll shoot you." He arrives in Spain, is immediately arrested, and spends the entire holiday in a Spanish jail. He is released just in time to go back on the plane with Sybil.
{{Details|List of guest characters in Fawlty Towers|guest characters}}


It was very funny, but I couldn't do it at the time. Making "Fawlty Towers" work at 90 minutes was a very difficult proposition. You can build up the comedy for 30 minutes, but at that length there has to be a trough and another peak. It doesn't interest me. I don't want to do it.<ref>{{cite news |title=Fawlty Towers: 10 things you never knew about the classic British sitcom |url=http://tv.bt.com/tv/tv-from-bt/fawlty-towers-10-things-you-never-knew-about-the-classic-british-sitcom-11364229256131 |access-date=26 May 2019 |agency=BT.com}}</ref></blockquote>
==Episodes==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! style="padding: 0px 8px" colspan="2" rowspan="2"| Series
! style="padding: 0px 8px" rowspan="2"| Episodes
! colspan="2"| Originally aired
! style="padding: 0px 8px" colspan="2" | DVD release date
|-
! [[Season premiere|Series premiere]]
! [[Season finale|Series finale]]
! [[DVD region code|Region 1]]
! [[DVD region code|Region 2]]
|-
|bgcolor="#deaf77"|
|'''[[#Series 1 (1975)|1]]'''
|6
|style="padding: 0px 8px"| {{Start date|1975|9|19|df=y}}
|style="padding: 0px 8px"| {{End date|1975|10|24|df=yes}}
|style="padding: 0px 8px" rowspan="2"| {{Start date|2001|10|16|df=y}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.amazon.com/Fawlty-Towers-Complete-John-Cleese/dp/B00005LC1H |title=Fawlty Towers – The Complete Series (1975) |work=[[Amazon.com]] |accessdate=9 January 2010}}</ref>
|style="padding: 0px 8px" rowspan="2"| {{Start date|2001|10|8|df=y}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.amazon.co.uk/Fawlty-Towers-DVD-John-Cleese/dp/B00005NGUO |title=Fawlty Towers – Series 1 (1975) (DVD) |work=[[Amazon.com{{!}}Amazon.co.uk]] |accessdate=15 September 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.amazon.co.uk/Fawlty-Towers-Series-2-DVD/dp/B00005NGUQ |title=Fawlty Towers – Series 2 (1979) (DVD) (1975) |work=[[Amazon.com{{!}}Amazon.co.uk]] |accessdate=15 September 2012}}</ref>
|-
|bgcolor="#b57cda"|
|'''[[#Series 2 (1979)|2]]'''
|6
|{{Start date|1979|2|19|df=y}}
|{{End date|1979|10|25|df=yes}}
|}


Cleese also may have been reluctant because of [[Connie Booth]]'s unwillingness to be involved. She had practically retreated from public life after the show finished (and had been initially unwilling to collaborate on a second series, which explains the four-year gap between productions).
The first edition of ''Fawlty Towers'' was originally broadcast on 19 September 1975. The 12th and final show was first shown on 25 October 1979. The first series was directed by John Howard Davies, the second by Bob Spiers. Both series had their premieres on [[BBC Two|BBC2]].


The decision by Cleese and Booth to quit before a third series has often been lauded as it ensured the show's successful status would not be weakened with later, lower-quality work. Subsequently, it has inspired the makers of other shows to do likewise. [[Ricky Gervais]] and [[Stephen Merchant]] refused to make a third series of either ''[[The Office (British TV series)|The Office]]'' or ''[[Extras (TV series)|Extras]]'', citing ''Fawlty Towers' '' short lifespan.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Berman |first1=Garry |title=Best of the Britcoms: From Fawlty Towers to The Office |date=2011 |publisher=Taylor Trade Publications |page=19}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=First episode of Fawlty Towers |url=https://www.bbc.com/historyofthebbc/anniversaries/september/fawlty-towers |access-date=29 June 2020|agency=BBC}}</ref> [[Rik Mayall]], [[Ben Elton]] and [[Lise Mayer]], the writers behind ''[[The Young Ones (TV series)|The Young Ones]]'', which also ran for only two series (each with six episodes), used this explanation as well. [[Victoria Wood]] also indicated this influenced her decision to limit ''[[Dinnerladies (TV series)|dinnerladies]]'' to 16 episodes over two series.<ref>{{cite web|last=Rees|first=Jasper|title=Dinnerladies is served|url=http://www2.prestel.co.uk/cello/Dinnerladiesisserved.htm|publisher=Radio Times|access-date=28 August 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110608014242/http://www2.prestel.co.uk/cello/Dinnerladiesisserved.htm|archive-date=8 June 2011}}</ref>
Production of the last two episodes was disrupted by a strike of BBC technical staff, which resulted in the recasting of the role of Roger (the wisecracking friend of Basil and Sybil) in "The Anniversary", and delayed the episode's transmission date by one week. The episode "Basil the Rat" was also delayed, not being screened until the end of a repeat showing six months later.


The origins, background and eventual cancellation of the series were later humorously referenced in 1987's ''[[The Secret Policeman's Third Ball]]'' in a sketch in which [[Hugh Laurie]] and [[Stephen Fry]] present Cleese—whom they comically misname "Jim Cleese"—with a [[Dick Emery]] Lifetime Achievement Award ("Silver Dick") for his contributions to comedy, then launch into a comical series of questions regarding the show, including Cleese's marriage and divorce from Booth, innocently ridiculing Cleese and reducing him to tears, to a point at which he gets on his knees and crawls off the stage while crying.
''[[Not the Nine O'Clock News]]'' was originally scheduled to debut after an episode of ''Fawlty Towers'' and Cleese (in character as Basil Fawlty) was to have introduced ''Not the Nine O'Clock News'' in a sketch referring to the technicians' strike, explaining that there was no show ready that week, so a "tatty revue" would be broadcast instead. However, the [[United Kingdom general election, 1979|1979 general election]] intervened, and ''Not the Nine O'Clock News'' was postponed as being too political. Later that year, Cleese's sketch was broadcast, but its original significance was lost.


===Series overview===
When originally transmitted, the individual episodes had no on-screen titles. The ones in common currency were first used for the VHS release of the series in the 1980s. There were working titles, such as "USA" for "Waldorf Salad", "Death" for "The Kipper and the Corpse", and "Rat" for "Basil the Rat", which have been printed in some programme guides. In addition, some of the early BBC audio releases of episodes on vinyl and cassette included other variations, such as "Mrs. Richards" and "The Rat" for "Communication Problems" and "Basil the Rat" respectively.
{{Series overview
| color1 = #deaf77
| link1 = Fawlty Towers#Series 1 (1975)
| episodes1 = 6
| start1 = {{Start date|1975|9|19|df=y}}
| end1 = {{End date|1975|10|24|df=y}}
| network1 = [[BBC Two]]


| color2 = #B87FDF
It has long been rumoured that a thirteenth episode of the series was written and filmed, but never progressed further than a rough cut.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fawltysite.net/thirteenth-episode.htm |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070403090421/http://www.fawltysite.net/thirteenth-episode.htm |archivedate=3 April 2007 |title=fawltysite.net – Thirteenth Episode|year=2004}}</ref> Lars Holger Holm, author of the book ''Fawlty Towers: A Worshipper's Companion'', has made detailed claims about the episode's content, but he provides no evidence of its existence and it is most likely a hoax or [[fan fiction]].
| link2 = Fawlty Towers#Series 2 (1979)

| episodes2 = 6
On the subject of whether more episodes would be produced, Cleese revealed (in an interview for the complete DVD box set, which was republished in the book, ''Fawlty Towers Fully Booked'') that he once had the genesis of a feature-length special – possibly sometime during the mid-1990s. The plot (which was never fleshed out beyond his initial idea) would have revolved around the chaos that a now-retired Basil typically caused as he and Sybil flew to [[Barcelona]] to visit their former employee Manuel and his family. Of the idea, Cleese said:
| start2 = {{Start date|1979|2|19|df=y}}

| end2 = {{End date|1979|10|25|df=y}}
<blockquote>We had an idea for a plot which I loved. Basil was finally invited to Spain to meet Manuel's family. He gets to [[London Heathrow Airport|Heathrow]] and then spends about 14 frustrating hours waiting for the flight. Finally, on the plane, a terrorist pulls a gun and tries to hijack the thing. Basil is so angry he overcomes the terrorist and when the pilot says, "We have to fly back to Heathrow", Basil says, "No, fly us to Spain or I'll shoot you". He arrives in Spain, immediately arrested and spends the entire holiday in a Spanish jail. He is released just in time to go back on the plane with Sybil.
}}

It was very funny, but I couldn't do it at the time. Making ''Fawlty Towers'' work at 90 minutes was a very difficult proposition. You can build up the comedy for 30 minutes, but at that length there has to be a trough and another peak. It doesn't interest me. I don't want to do it.</blockquote>

Cleese may also have relented because of the lack of Connie Booth's involvement. She had practically retreated from public life after the show finished (and had been initially unwilling to collaborate on a second series, which explains the four-year gap between productions).

The decision by Cleese and Booth to quit before a third series has often been lauded, as it ensured the show's successful status wouldn't be weakened with later, lower-quality work. Subsequently, it has inspired the makers of other shows to do likewise. Most notably, [[Ricky Gervais]] and [[Stephen Merchant]] refused to make a third series of either ''[[The Office (UK TV series)|The Office]]'' or ''[[Extras (TV series)|Extras]]'', citing ''Fawlty Towers''' short lifespan. [[Rik Mayall]], [[Ben Elton]] and [[Lise Mayer]], the writers behind ''[[The Young Ones (TV series)|The Young Ones]]'', which also ran for only two series (each with six episodes), used this explanation too. Elton also took the decision to end his next sitcom, ''[[Filthy Rich & Catflap]]'', after only one series, despite its popularity. [[Victoria Wood]] also indicated this influenced her decision to limit ''[[dinnerladies]]'' to just 16 episodes over two series.


=== Series 1 (1975) ===
===Series 1 (1975)===
{{Episode table |background=#deaf77|overall=4|title=21|aux1=16|aux1T=Sign reads|airdate=14|episodes=
*


{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" width="100%" style="margin-right: 0;"
|-
! style="background-color: #deaf77; color:#ffffff;" | Series No.
! style="background-color: #deaf77; color:#ffffff;" | Episode No.
! style="background-color: #deaf77; color:#ffffff;" | Title
! style="background-color: #deaf77; color:#ffffff;" | Sign reads
! style="background-color: #deaf77; color:#ffffff;" | Original air date
|-
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|Title = {{va|A Touch of Class}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 1
|Title = [[A Touch of Class (Fawlty Towers)|A Touch of Class]]
|Aux1 = FAWLTY TOWER'''''S''''' <small>(Crooked S)</small>
|Aux1 = FAWLTY TOWER'''''S''''' <small>(Crooked S)</small>
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|9|19|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|9|19|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = As Basil tries to raise the tone of the hotel, the aristocratic Lord Melbury comes to stay at the hotel. Basil fawns over him at every opportunity, causing himself to neglect or annoy other guests, until Polly discovers Melbury is actually a confidence trickster. Meanwhile, Sybil orders Basil to hang a picture.
|ShortSummary = As Basil tries to raise the tone of the hotel, the aristocratic Lord Melbury comes to stay at the hotel. Basil fawns over him at every opportunity, causing himself to neglect or annoy other guests, until Polly discovers Melbury is actually a confidence trickster. Meanwhile, Sybil orders Basil to hang a picture.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Michael Gwynn]] as Lord Melbury and [[Robin Ellis]] as Danny Brown.
''Featuring:'' [[Michael Gwynn]] as Lord Melbury, [[Robin Ellis]] as Danny Brown, [[Martin Wyldeck]] as Sir Richard Morris, [[David Simeon]] as Mr. Mackenzie, Terence Conoley as Mr. Wareing and Lionel Wheeler as Mr. Watson.
|LineColor = deaf77
|LineColor = deaf77
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|Title = {{va|The Builders}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 2
|Aux1 = FAW'''''L'''''TY TOWER <small>(Crooked L and missing S)</small>
|Title = [[The Builders]]
|Aux1 = FAW'''''L'''''TY TOWER <small>(Crooked L)</small>
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|9|26|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|9|26|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = Maintenance is made on the lobby while the Fawltys are out, but when a misreading causes the incompetent builders to mess it up spectacularly, Basil must try to remedy the situation before Sybil finds out.
|ShortSummary = Major renovations are made to the lobby while the Fawltys are out, but when a misreading causes the incompetent builders to mess it up spectacularly, Basil must try to remedy the situation before Sybil finds out.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[David Kelly (actor)|David Kelly]] as O'Reilly and [[Michael Cronin (actor)|Michael Cronin]] as Lurphy.
''Featuring:'' [[David Kelly (actor)|David Kelly]] as O'Reilly, James Appleby as Stubbs, George Lee as Delivery Man, [[Michael Cronin (actor)|Michael Cronin]] as Lurphy, Michael Halsey as Jones and Barney Dorman as Kerr.
|LineColor = deaf77
|LineColor = deaf77
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|EpisodeNumber = 3
|Title = {{va|The Wedding Party}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 3
|Aux1 = FAW TY TO'''''W'''''ER <small>(Crooked W, missing L and missing S)</small>
|Title = [[The Wedding Party]]
|Aux1 = FAW TY TO'''''W'''''ER <small>(Crooked W)</small>
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|3|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|3|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = Basil gets annoyed when a young, flirtatious couple start "hanky-pankying" under his nose and tries to avoid the advances of a wealthy French antique dealer. Meanwhile, misfortune conspires to put him in compromising situations whenever the couple are around.
|ShortSummary = Basil gets annoyed when a young, flirtatious couple start "hanky-pankying" under his nose and tries to avoid the advances of a female French antique dealer. Meanwhile, misfortune conspires to put him in compromising situations whenever the couple are around.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Trevor Adams]] as Alan and [[Yvonne Gilan]] as Mrs. Peignoir.
''Featuring:'' [[Yvonne Gilan]] as Mrs. Peignoir, [[Conrad Phillips]] as Mr. Lloyd, [[Diana King (actress)|Diana King]] as Mrs. Lloyd, [[Trevor Adams]] as Alan, [[April Walker]] as Jean and [[Jay Neill (actor)|Jay Neill]] as Bar Guest.
|LineColor = deaf77
|LineColor = deaf77
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|EpisodeNumber = 4
|Title = {{va|[[The Hotel Inspectors]]}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 4
|Aux1 = FAW TY TO ER <small>(Missing L, missing W and missing S)</small>
|Title = [[The Hotel Inspectors]]
|Aux1 = FAW TY TO ER
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|10|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|10|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = When Basil hears of hotel inspectors roaming Torquay incognito, he realises with horror that guests he has been abusing could easily be among them. Basil becomes increasingly obsessed with trying to determine which guests are hotel inspectors, but his suspects turn out not to be, to his frustration.
|ShortSummary = When Basil hears of hotel inspectors roaming Torquay incognito, he realises with horror that guests he has been abusing could easily be among them. Basil becomes increasingly obsessed with trying to determine which guests are hotel inspectors, and gets frustrated when his suspects turn out not to be. But then, without warning, the ''real'' inspectors show up.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Bernard Cribbins]] and [[James Cossins]] play men who Basil thinks at first are hotel inspectors but turn out not to be; respectively, they are Mr. Hutchinson, a cutlery salesman who specializes in spoons, and Mr. Walt, an outboard motor salesman on business with two other outboard motor salesmen.
''Featuring:'' [[Bernard Cribbins]] as Mr. Hutchinson, [[James Cossins]] as Mr. Walt, Geoffrey Morris as John (inspector) and Peter Brett as Brian (inspector).
|LineColor = deaf77
|LineColor = deaf77
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|EpisodeNumber = 5
|Title = {{va|Gourmet Night}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 5
|Aux1 = WARTY TOWELS
|Title = [[Gourmet Night]]
|Aux1 = WA RTY TOWELS
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|17|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|17|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = In an effort to climb another rung in the social ladder, Basil arranges a gourmet night. Unfortunately, thanks to the chef's alcoholism, Basil must try to get hold of a duck from his friend, André. This, combined with the Fawlty's faulty car and his social awkwardness leads Basil ever closer to a nervous breakdown.
|ShortSummary = Basil holds a gourmet night to attract posher guests and climb Torquay's social ladder. Unfortunately, thanks to the chef's alcoholism, Basil must try to get hold of a duck from his friend, André. This, combined with the Fawltys' faulty car and his social awkwardness leads Basil ever closer to a nervous breakdown.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[André Maranne]] as André, [[Allan Cuthbertson]] as Colonel Hall and [[Ann Way]] as Mrs. Hall.
''Featuring:'' [[André Maranne]] as André, [[Steve Plytas]] as Kurt, [[Allan Cuthbertson]] as Colonel Hall, [[Ann Way]] as Mrs. Hall, [[Richard Caldicot]] as Mr. Twitchen, [[Betty Huntley-Wright]] as Mrs. Twitchen, [[Jeffrey Segal]] as Mr. Heath, Elizabeth Benson as Mrs. Heath and Tony Page as Master Heath.
|LineColor = deaf77
|LineColor = deaf77
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 1
|EpisodeNumber = 6
|Title = {{va|[[The Germans]]|The Germans}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 6
|Title = [[The Germans]]
|Aux1 = None<ref group=note>This is the only episode of the twelve that does not feature the hotel as the backdrop for the titles. Footage of the [[Northwick Park Hospital]] in [[London Borough of Brent|Brent]] was used instead, hence the sign is not shown.</ref>
|Aux1 = None<ref group=note>This is the only episode of the twelve that does not feature the hotel as the backdrop for the titles. Footage of the [[Northwick Park Hospital]] in [[London Borough of Brent|Brent]] was used instead, hence the sign is not shown.</ref>
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|24|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1975|10|24|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = With Sybil in the hospital with an ingrowing toenail, a moose's head to hang up and some German guests arriving the next day, Basil has his work cut out for him. After an attempted fire drill goes wrong and Basil lands up in the hospital with concussion, he succeeds causing much offence to the German guests after finally escaping back to the hotel. This episode is the origin of the quote "Don't mention the war."
|ShortSummary = With Sybil in the hospital with an ingrown toenail, a moose's head to hang up and some German guests arriving the next day, Basil has his work cut out for him. After an attempted fire drill goes wrong and Basil lands up in the hospital with concussion, he succeeds in causing much offence to the German guests after finally escaping back to the hotel. This episode is the origin of the quotation "Don't mention the war."
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Claire Davenport]] as Mrs. Wilson, [[Brenda Cowling]] as Sister, [[Louis Mahoney]] as Doctor, John Lawrence as Mr. Sharp, Iris Fry as Mrs. Sharp, Willy Bowman, Nick Kane, Lisa Bergmayr and Dan Gillan as German Guests.
''Featuring:'' [[Brenda Cowling]] as Sister.
|LineColor = deaf77
|LineColor = deaf77
}}
}}
|}
}}

===Series 2 (1979)===
The second series was transmitted three-and-a-half years later, with the first episode being broadcast on 19 February 1979. Due to an industrial dispute at the [[BBC]], which resulted in a strike, the final episode was not completed until well after the others, being finally shown as a one-off instalment on 25 October 1979. The cancelled episode on 19 March was replaced with a repeat of "Gourmet Night" from series 1. In the second series the anagrams were created by Ian McClane, the assistant floor manager. However, the only one which is actually a true anagram for the hotel's name is "Flowery Twats", created for "The Anniversary"

{{Episode table |background=#B87FDF|overall=4|title=21|aux1=16|aux1T=Sign reads|airdate=14|episodes=


=== Series 2 (1979) ===
The second series was transmitted three-and-a-half years later, with the first episode being broadcast on 19 February 1979. Due to an industrial dispute at the [[BBC]], which resulted in a strike, the final episode was not completed until well after the others, being finally shown as a one-off instalment on 25 October 1979. The cancelled episode on 19 March was replaced with a repeat of "Gourmet Night" from series 1. In the second series the anagrams were created by Ian McClane, Bob Spier's assistant floor manager.
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" width="100%" style="margin-right: 0;"
|-
! style="background-color: #b57cda; color:#ffffff;"| Series No.
! style="background-color: #b57cda; color:#ffffff;"| Episode No.
! style="background-color: #b57cda; color:#ffffff;"| Title
! style="background-color: #b57cda; color:#ffffff;"| Sign reads
! style="background-color: #b57cda; color:#ffffff;"| Original air date
|-
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|EpisodeNumber = 7
|Title = {{va|Communication Problems}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 1
|Aux1 = FAW'''''L'''''TY TOWER <small>(Crooked L and missing S)</small><ref group=note>This is the same opening shot as in episode [[#ep2|2]], "''[[The Builders]]''", from Series 1.</ref>
|Title = [[Communication Problems]]
|Aux1 = FAW'''''L'''''TY TOWER <small>(Crooked L)</small><ref group=note>This is the same opening shot as in episode [[#ep2|2]], "''[[The Builders]]''", from Series 1.</ref>
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|2|19|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|2|19|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = The arrival of the "guest from hell" — Mrs. Richards, a rather deaf, dotty and bad-tempered woman — interferes with Basil's attempts to prevent the money he won on a racehorse from being discovered by Sybil, who disapproves of gambling.
|ShortSummary = The arrival of the "guest from hell" — Mrs. Richards, a rather deaf, [[Battle-axe (woman)|domineering]] and bad-tempered woman — interferes with Basil's attempts to prevent the money he won on a racehorse from being discovered by Sybil, who disapproves of gambling.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Joan Sanderson]] as Mrs Richards.
''Featuring:'' [[Joan Sanderson]] as Mrs Richards, [[Robert Lankesheer]] as Mr Thurston, [[Johnny Shannon]] as Mr Firkins, Bill Bradley as Mr Mackintosh, George Lee as Mr Kerr and Mervyn Pascoe as Mr Yardley.
|LineColor = b57cda
|LineColor = B87FDF
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|EpisodeNumber = 8
|Title = {{va|The Psychiatrist}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 2
|Aux1 = WATERY FOWLS
|Title = [[The Psychiatrist]]
|Aux1 = WATERY FOWLS
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|2|26|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|2|26|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = A psychiatrist and his wife — also a doctor — come to the hotel for a weekend break, and cannot help but notice the eccentricities of their host, who is perturbed when he discovers their professions. A very attractive Australian girl (Luan Peters) also visits, who goes on to have certain awkward interactions with Fawlty as he seeks to catch a non-paying guest Mr Johnson (Nicky Henson) has in his bedroom.
|ShortSummary = A psychiatrist and his wife—also a doctor—come to the hotel for a weekend break, and notice all of Basil's odd behaviour. Initially enthused by his guests' class and professions, Basil is later perturbed when he discovers the doctor's specialty is psychiatry. Another guest, Mr Johnson, is secretly sharing his room with a woman and Basil becomes obsessed with catching him out, which leads to several incidents with a buxom Australian female guest, which gets him in trouble with Sybil.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Basil Henson]] and [[Elspet Gray]] as Mr and Mrs Abbott, [[Nicky Henson]] as Mr Johnson and [[Luan Peters]] as Raylene Miles.
''Featuring:'' [[Nicky Henson]] as Mr Johnson, [[Basil Henson]] as Dr Abbott, [[Elspet Gray]] as Mrs Abbott, [[Luan Peters]] as Raylene Miles, [[Aimée Delamain]] as Mrs Johnson and Imogen Bickford-Smith as Girlfriend.
|LineColor = b57cda
|LineColor = B87FDF
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|EpisodeNumber = 9
|Title = {{va|[[Waldorf Salad (Fawlty Towers)|Waldorf Salad]]|Waldorf Salad}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 3
|Aux1 = FLAY OTTERS
|Title = [[Waldorf Salad (Fawlty Towers)|Waldorf Salad]]
|Aux1 = FLAY OTTERS
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|3|5|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|3|5|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = Basil is not altogether keen on a loud and demanding American guest who demands a higher class of service — and food — than Fawlty Towers is accustomed to providing. Basil soon learns that the American guest will not tolerate any shenanigans.
|ShortSummary = Basil is not altogether keen on a loud and demanding American guest who demands a higher class of service—and food—than Fawlty Towers is accustomed to providing. Basil soon learns that the American guest will not tolerate any shenanigans.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Bruce Boa]] and [[Claire Nielson]] as Mr and Mrs Hamilton and [[Norman Bird]] as Mr Arrad.
''Featuring:'' [[Bruce Boa]] as Mr Hamilton, [[Claire Nielson]] as Mrs Hamilton, [[Norman Bird]] as Mr Arrad, [[Stella Tanner]] as Mrs Arrad, Terence Conoley as Mr Johnston, [[June Ellis]] as Mrs Johnston, [[Anthony Dawes]] as Mr Libson, Beatrice Shaw as Miss Gurke and Dorothy Frere as Miss Hare.


|LineColor = b57cda
|LineColor = B87FDF
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|EpisodeNumber = 10
|Title = {{va|The Kipper and the Corpse}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 4
|Title = [[The Kipper and the Corpse]]
|Aux1 = FATTY OWLS
|Aux1 = FATTY OWLS
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|3|12|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|3|12|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = With no regard to Basil's blood pressure, a guest dies at the hotel and Basil and the staff are left with the unpleasant task of removing the body discreetly while the doctor staying at the hotel, Dr. Price, waits for his sausages. Also, Polly and Manuel feed an elderly woman's pampered pet dog some extra spicy sausages after it bites them both.
|ShortSummary = With no regard to Basil's blood pressure, a guest dies at the hotel and Basil and the staff are left with the unpleasant task of removing the body discreetly while the doctor staying at the hotel, Dr. Price, waits for his sausages. Also, Polly and Manuel feed an elderly woman's pampered pet dog some extra spicy sausages after it bites them both.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Geoffrey Palmer (actor)|Geoffrey Palmer]] as Dr Price, [[Derek Royle]] as Mr Leeman and [[Richard Davies (actor)|Richard Davies]] as Mr White.
''Featuring:'' [[Geoffrey Palmer (actor)|Geoffrey Palmer]] as Dr Price, [[Mavis Pugh]] as Mrs Chase, [[Richard Davies (Welsh actor)|Richard Davies]] as Mr White, Elizabeth Benson as Mrs White, [[Derek Royle]] as Mr Leeman, Robert McBain as Mr Xerxes, [[Pamela Buchner]] as Miss Young, Raymond Mason as Mr Zebedee, [[Charles McKeown]] as Mr Ingrams and Len Marten as Guest.
|LineColor = b57cda
|LineColor = B87FDF
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|EpisodeNumber = 11
|Title = {{va|The Anniversary}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 5
|Title = [[The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)|The Anniversary]]
|Aux1 = FLOWERY TWATS
|Aux1 = FLOWERY TWATS
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|3|26|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|3|26|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = Basil invites some friends for a surprise wedding anniversary party, but Sybil assumes he has forgotten their anniversary and storms off, leaving her husband and Polly, in disguise, desperately telling the others she is 'ill'
|ShortSummary = Basil invites some friends for a surprise wedding anniversary party, but Sybil assumes he has forgotten their anniversary and storms off, leaving her husband and Polly, in disguise, desperately telling the others she is 'ill'...
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[Ken Campbell (actor)|Ken Campbell]] as Roger and [[Una Stubbs]] as Alice.
''Featuring:'' [[Ken Campbell]] as Roger, [[Una Stubbs]] as Alice, Robert Arnold as Arthur, [[Pat Keen]] as Virginia, Roger Hume as Reg, [[Denyse Alexander]] as Kitty and Christine Shaw as Audrey.
|LineColor = b57cda
|LineColor = B87FDF
}}
}}
{{Episode list
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber = 2
|EpisodeNumber = 12
|Title = {{va|Basil the Rat}}
|EpisodeNumber2 = 6
|Title = [[Basil the Rat]]
|Aux1 = FARTY TOWELS
|Aux1 = FARTY TOWELS
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|10|25|df=y}}
|OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1979|10|25|df=y}}
|ShortSummary = The local health inspector issues a long list of hygienic aberrations which the staff must immediately sort out, or else face closure. After Manuel's pet rat escapes from his cage and runs loose in the hotel, the staff must catch it before the inspector finds it first. At the same time, they must try and discern which veal cutlets are safe to eat after one covered in rat poison gets mixed up with the others.
|ShortSummary = The local health inspector notes and reads out a long list of hygiene infractions which the staff must rectify before his next visit, or else face closure. After Manuel's pet rat escapes from his cage and runs loose in the hotel, the staff must catch it before the inspector sees it. At the same time, they must discern which veal cutlets are safe to eat after one covered in rat poison gets mixed up with the others.
----
----
''Featuring:'' [[John Quarmby]] as the Health Inspector.
''Featuring:'' [[John Quarmby]] as Mr Carnegie, David Neville as Ronald, [[Sabina Franklyn]] as Quentina, James Taylor as Mr Taylor, Melody Lang as Mrs Taylor and Stuart Sherwin as Guest.
|LineColor = b57cda
|LineColor = B87FDF
}}
}}
}}
|}


==Reception==
==Reception==


===Critical reaction===
===Critical reaction===
====Contemporary====
The series was not held in as high esteem on its original broadcast as it later was. The ''Daily Mirror'' review of the show in 1975 had the headline "Long John Short On Jokes".<ref name="audience">{{cite web
At first, the series was not held in particularly high esteem. ''[[The Daily Mirror]]'''s review of the show in 1975 had the headline "Long John Short On Jokes".<ref name="audience">{{cite web
|title = Awards and audiences for Fawlty Towers
|title=Awards and audiences for Fawlty Towers
| publisher = Fawltysite.net
|publisher=Fawltysite.net
| url= http://www.fawltysite.net/awards.htm |accessdate =29 February 2008 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080211064141/http://www.fawltysite.net/awards.htm <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 11 February 2008}}</ref> Eventually though, as the series began to gain popularity, critical acclaim soon followed. [[Clive James]] writing in ''[[The Observer]]'' said the second episode had him "retching with laughter".<ref>{{cite book
|url=http://www.fawltysite.net/awards.htm
|access-date=29 February 2008
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080211064141/http://www.fawltysite.net/awards.htm
|archive-date=11 February 2008
|url-status=dead
}}</ref> One critic of the show was [[Richard Ingrams]], then television reviewer for ''[[The Spectator]]'', who wrote a caustic piece condemning the programme. Cleese got his revenge by naming one of the guests in the second series "Mr. Ingrams", who is caught in his room with a blow-up doll.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/11/10/bomcc110.xml|title=How they built Fawlty Towers|last=Sinclair|first=McKay|date=10 November 2007|access-date=29 February 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080617181615/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=%2Farts%2F2007%2F11%2F10%2Fbomcc110.xml|archive-date=17 June 2008|url-status=dead|publisher=Fawltysite.net|location=London}}</ref> Eventually, though, as the series began to gain popularity, critical acclaim followed. [[Clive James]] writing in ''[[The Observer]]'' said the second episode had him "retching with laughter."<ref>{{cite book
|last=James
|last=James
|first=Clive
|first=Clive
|author-link=Clive James
|author-link=Clive James
|title=[[Visions Before Midnight]]
|title=Visions Before Midnight
|section=Very Peter Hall
|section=Very Peter Hall
|origyear=12 October 1975
|orig-year=12 October 1975
|publisher=[[Picador (imprint)|Picador]]
|publisher=[[Picador (imprint)|Picador]]
|publication-date=1977
|publication-date=1977
Line 365: Line 349:
|isbn=978-0-330-26464-8
|isbn=978-0-330-26464-8
|year=1981
|year=1981
|title-link=Visions Before Midnight
}}</ref> By the time the series had ended, it was an overwhelming critical success.
}}</ref>
====Retrospective====
On [[Rotten Tomatoes]], Fawlty Towers has an aggregate score of 100% based on 14 critic reviews. The website's consensus reads: "''Fawlty Towers'' looms large over British comedy with John Cleese's impeccably hapless performance and an endless array of exuberant slapstick—making for a supremely stimulating chuckler."<ref>{{Cite web |title=Fawlty Towers |url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/fawlty_towers/s01 |access-date=2 September 2022 |website=Rotten Tomatoes}}</ref>


In an interview for the "TV Characters" edition of [[Channel 4]]'s "talking heads" strand [[100 Greatest / 100 Worst|100 Greatest]] (in which Basil placed second, between [[Homer Simpson]] and [[Edmund Blackadder]]), TV critic [[A. A. Gill]] theorised that the initially muted response may have been caused by Cleese seemingly ditching his label as a comic revolutionary—earned through his years with [[Monty Python]]—to do something more traditional.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.itnsource.com/en/shotlist/ITVProgs/2001/05/05/Y22090001/ |title=100 Greatest ... (100 Greatest TV Characters (Part 1)) |publisher=[[ITN Source]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150221233837/http://www.itnsource.com/en/shotlist/ITVProgs/2001/05/05/Y22090001/ |archive-date=21 February 2015 |access-date=13 June 2014}}</ref>
One critic of the show was [[Richard Ingrams]], then television reviewer for ''[[The Spectator]]''. Cleese got his revenge by naming one of the guests in the second series 'Mr Ingrams', who is caught in his room with a blow-up doll.<ref name="audience">{{cite news
|last=Sinclair | first =McKay | title = How they built Fawlty Towers |publisher=Fawltysite.net
| url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/11/10/bomcc110.xml |accessdate =29 February 2008 | location=London | date=10 November 2007}}</ref>


In a list of the [[100 Greatest British Television Programmes]] drawn up by the [[British Film Institute]] in 2000, voted for by industry professionals, ''Fawlty Towers'' was placed first. It was also voted fifth in the "[[Britain's Best Sitcom]]" poll in 2004,<ref name="pnkssn">{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sitcom/winner.shtml|title=Programmes categorised as Comedy|date=1 January 1970|publisher=BBC|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130430222338/http://www.bbc.co.uk/sitcom/winner.shtml|archive-date=30 April 2013|url-status=dead|access-date=20 September 2016}}</ref> and second only to ''[[Frasier]]'' in The Ultimate Sitcom poll of comedy writers in January 2006. [[Basil Fawlty]] came top of the ''Britain's Funniest Comedy Character'' poll, held by [[Channel 5 (UK)|Five]] on 14 May 2006. In 1997, "[[The Germans]]" was ranked No. 12 on [[TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time]].<ref>{{cite journal |year=1997 |title=Special Collector's Issue: 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time |journal=[[TV Guide]] |issue=28 June – 4 July }}</ref> ''[[Empire (film magazine)|Empire]]'' magazine's 2024 list of the 100 greatest TV shows of all time ranks it at No. 22. The entry states:
In an interview for the "TV Characters" edition of [[Channel 4]]'s 'talking heads' strand [[100 Greatest / 100 Worst|100 Greatest]] (in which Basil placed second, between [[Homer Simpson]] and [[Edmund Blackadder]]), TV critic [[A. A. Gill]] theorised that the initially muted response may have been caused by Cleese seemingly ditching his label as a comic revolutionary – earned through his years with Python – to do something more traditional.


{{blockquote|One of British TV's greatest ever sitcoms, the central question of ''Fawlty Towers'' – why [[Basil Fawlty]], the world's least hospitable man would go into hospitality in the first place – remains tantalisingly unanswered across 12 kipper-serving, Siberian hamster-hunting, German-baiting episodes. A straight zero on TripAdvisor, the very layout of Fawlty Towers itself offers comedy gold as Basil (John Cleese), his wife Sybil (Prunella Scales), waitress Polly (Connie Booth) and poor, benighted Manuel (Andrew Sachs) manoeuvre themselves (and the odd corpse) around its dowdy interior without ruining anyone's stay. Basil, needless to say, fails. Often and hilariously.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.empireonline.com/tv/features/best-tv-shows/ |title=The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time |work=Empire |access-date=5 August 2024 |date=28 June 2024 }}</ref>}}
In a list of the [[100 Greatest British Television Programmes]] drawn up by the [[British Film Institute]] in 2000, voted for by industry professionals, ''Fawlty Towers'' was placed first. It was also voted fifth in the BBC's "[[Britain's Best Sitcom]]" poll in 2004,<ref name = "pnkssn">[http://www.bbc.co.uk/sitcom/winner.shtml Britain's Best Sitcom Top 10]. Retrieved 4 June 2009.</ref> and second only to ''[[Frasier]]'' in The Ultimate Sitcom poll of comedy writers in January 2006. [[Basil Fawlty]] came top of the ''Britain's Funniest Comedy Character'' poll, held by [[Channel 5 (UK)|Five]] on 14 May 2006. In 1997, "[[The Germans]]" was ranked No. 12 on [[TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1= |first1= |last2= |first2= |year=1997 |title=Special Collector's Issue: 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time |journal=[[TV Guide]] |issue=28 June – 4 July |url= |accessdate=5 October 2011 }}</ref>


===Awards===
===Awards and accolades===
Three [[British Academy of Film and Television Arts|BAFTA]]s were awarded to people for their involvement with the series. Each of the two series was awarded the BAFTA in the category for "Best Situation Comedy", the first won by John Howard Davies in 1976, and the second by Douglas Argent and Bob Spiers in 1980. John Cleese won the BAFTA for "Best Light Entertainment Performance" in 1976.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072500/awards List of awards] at IMDb. Retrieved 14 June 2006.</ref>


Three [[British Academy Television Awards]] (BAFTAs) were awarded to people for their involvement with the series. Both of the series were awarded the BAFTA in the category [[British Academy Television Award for Best Scripted Comedy|Best Scripted Comedy]], the first being won by John Howard Davies in 1976, and the second by Douglas Argent and Bob Spiers in 1980. In 1980, Cleese received the BAFTA for [[British Academy Television Award for Best Entertainment Performance|Best Entertainment Performance]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bafta.org/awards-database.html?year=1979&category=Television&award=Light+Entertainment+Performance |title=Awards Database – The BAFTA site |publisher=Bafta.org |access-date=21 June 2012}}</ref>
==Remakes and reunions==
Three attempted [[List of British TV shows remade for the American market|remakes]] of ''Fawlty Towers'' were started for the American market, with two making it into production. The first, ''Chateau Snavely'' starring [[Harvey Korman]] and [[Betty White]], was produced by [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] for a pilot in 1978, but the transfer from coastal hotel to highway motel proved too much and the series was never produced. The second, also by ABC, was ''[[Amanda's]]'' starring [[Bea Arthur]], notable for switching the sexes of its 'Basil' and 'Sybil' equivalents. It also failed to pick up a major audience and was dropped.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/f/fawltytowers_7772600.shtml ''Fawlty Towers'' at the BBC Guide to comedy]. Retrieved 14 June 2006.</ref> A third remake called ''[[Payne (TV series)|Payne]]'' (produced by and starring [[John Larroquette]]) was also produced, but was cancelled shortly after. A German pilot based on the sitcom was made in 2001, named ''Zum letzten Kliff'', but further episodes were not made.


In a [[BFI TV 100|list drawn up]] by the [[British Film Institute]] in 2000, voted by industry professionals, ''Fawlty Towers'' was named the best British television series of all time.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/tv/100/list/prog.php3?id=1 |title=Fawlty Towers |series=The BFI TV 100 |date=c. 2000 |website=[[British Film Institute]] |quote=Number 1 in the TV 100 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031205183739/http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/tv/100/list/prog.php3?id=1 |archive-date=5 December 2003 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/expatpicturegalleries/7406100/The-best-British-TV-ever.html?image=13|title=The best British TV ever|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=10 March 2010|website=[[The Daily Telegraph|The Telegraph]]|publisher=Telegraph Media Group Limited|access-date=21 January 2016|quote=And at number one is, of course, Fawlty Towers.}}</ref><ref name="Screenonline">{{cite web |url= http://www.screenonline.org.uk/tv/id/459034/index.html|title= Fawlty Towers (1975, 79)| last= Duguid| first= Mark|website= screenonline.org.uk |publisher= [[British Film Institute]] | access-date= 25 July 2017}}</ref>
The popular sitcoms ''[[3rd Rock from the Sun]]'' and ''[[Cheers]]'' (in both of which Cleese has appeared) have cited ''Fawlty Towers'' as an inspiration, especially regarding its depiction of a dysfunctional "family" in the workplace. Also [[Arthur Mathews (writer)|Arthur Mathews]] and [[Graham Linehan]] have cited ''Fawlty Towers'' as a major influence on their sitcom ''[[Father Ted]]''. ''[[Guest House (TV series)|Guest House]]'' on Pakistan's [[Pakistan Television Corporation|PTV]] also resembled the series.


===Legacy===
Several of the characters have made other appearances, as spin-offs or in small cameo roles. In 1981, in character as Manuel, Andrew Sachs recorded his own version of the [[Joe Dolce]] cod-Italian song "[[Shaddap You Face]]" (with the B-side "Waiter, There's a Spanish Flea in My Soup"). However, the record was not released after Joe Dolce took out an injunction; he was about to issue his version in Britain.<ref name="manuel">[http://www.fawltysite.net/manuel.htm Fawltysite.net]. Retrieved 13 December 2006. {{Wayback |df=yes| url=http://www.fawltysite.net/manuel.htm <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> | date=20061210143957 }}</ref> Sachs also portrayed Manuel (or a Manuel-like character) in a series of British TV advertisements for life insurance. Gilly Flower and Renee Roberts, who played Miss Tibbs and Miss Gatsby in the series, reprised the roles in a 1983 episode of ''[[Only Fools and Horses]]''.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0666555/ "Homesick" (1983) cast list at IMDb]. Retrieved 1 September 2006.</ref> In 2006, Cleese played Basil Fawlty for the first time in 27 years, for an unofficial England [[2006 FIFA World Cup|2006 World Cup]] song, "Don't Mention the World Cup", named after the phrase "don't mention the war" Basil famously used in "[[The Germans]]".<ref>[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2180817,00.html Article about the song] by Adam Sherwin in ''[[The Times]]'', 15 May 2006</ref><ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tg5tpMm_ruc Music Video on Youtube]</ref> In 2007, Cleese and Sachs reprised their roles for a six-episode corporate video for Norwegian oil company [[Statoil]]. In the video, Fawlty is running a restaurant called "Basil's Brasserie", while Manuel owns a [[Michelin Star]] restaurant in London.<ref>[http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2007/07/12/5522/basils_back Basil's back], Chortle.co.uk. Retrieved 12 July 2007.</ref>
[[File:Andrew Sachs.jpg|thumb|right|Waxwork of hapless waiter Manuel at [[Madame Tussauds]], London]]


[[John Lennon]] was a fan of the show. He said in 1980: "I love ''Fawlty Towers''. I'd like to be in that. [It's] the greatest show I've seen in years... what a masterpiece, a beautiful thing."<ref>''The Lennon Tapes'', John Lennon and Yoko Ono in conversation with Andy Peebles, 6 December 1980, BBC Publications, 1981</ref> [[Kate Bush]] stated, "I still think ''Fawlty Towers'' is the best sitcom ever."<ref>{{cite news |title=Kate Bush once named her favourite TV shows of all time |url=https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/kate-bush-favourite-tv-shows-all-time/ |access-date=12 June 2022 |work=Far Out magazine}}</ref> Filmmaker [[Martin Scorsese]] has remarked he is a great fan of ''Fawlty Towers'' and named "The Germans" as his favourite episode.<ref>Andrew Davidson, 14 May 1995, [https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/arts-to-hell-with-basil-1619527.html "Arts: to hell with Basil"]. ''The Independent''. Retrieved 24 May 2019</ref> He described the scene with Basil impersonating [[Hitler]] as "so tasteless, it's hilarious".<ref name="McCann 2007"/> Naming ''Fawlty Towers'' among the shows he loved growing up, comedy writer [[Graham Linehan]] cited the "farce elements" of the show as an influence for his much acclaimed sitcom ''[[Father Ted]]''.<ref>{{cite news |title=Small, Far Away: The World Of Father Ted Reviews |url=https://www.tvguide.com/movies/small-far-away-the-world-of-father-ted/review/2000287710/ |access-date=26 September 2024 |work=TV Guide}}</ref>
In November 2007, [[Prunella Scales]] returned to the role of [[Sybil Fawlty]] in a series of sketches for the BBC's annual ''[[Children in Need]]'' charity telethon. The character was seen taking over the management of the eponymous hotel from the BBC drama series ''[[Hotel Babylon]]'', interacting with characters from that programme as well as other 1970s sitcom characters. The character of Sybil was used by permission of John Cleese.<ref name="rt01">{{cite journal|title=The Inside Story|journal=[[Radio Times]]|volume=335|issue=4361|date=10–13 November 2007|page=p. 126}}</ref>


==Remakes, adaptations and reunions==
==''Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened''==
Three attempted [[List of British TV shows remade for the American market|remakes]] of ''Fawlty Towers'' were started for the American market, with two making it into production. The first, ''Chateau Snavely'', starring [[Harvey Korman]] and [[Betty White]], was produced by [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] for a pilot in 1978, but the transfer from coastal hotel to highway motel proved too much and the series was never produced. The second, also by ABC, was ''[[Amanda's]]'', starring [[Bea Arthur]], notable for switching the sexes of its Basil and Sybil equivalents. It also failed to attract a major audience and was dropped after ten episodes had been aired, despite 13 completed episodes.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/f/fawltytowers_7772600.shtml |title=Comedy – Fawlty Towers |publisher=BBC |date=24 September 2014 |access-date=20 September 2016}}</ref> A third remake, called ''[[Payne (TV series)|Payne]]'' (produced by and starring [[John Larroquette]]), aired in 1999, but was cancelled shortly afterwards. Nine episodes were produced, of which eight aired on American television (though the complete run was broadcast overseas). A German pilot was made in 2001, named ''Zum letzten Kliff'' (To the last cliff), but no further episodes were made after its first series.
In 2009, [[Tiger Aspect Productions]] produced a two-part documentary for digital comedy channel [[Gold (TV channel)|Gold]], called ''Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened''. The documentary features interviews with all four main cast members, including Connie Booth, who had refused to talk about the series for 30 years.<ref>{{cite news|author=Parker, Robin|date=23 March 2009|url=http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/news/2009/03/gold_to_reopen_fawlty_towers.html|title=Gold to reopen Fawlty Towers|work=Broadcastnow|accessdate=23 March 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1177908/Fawlty-Towers-originally-rejected-BBC-clich-d-reveals-John-Cleese-30th-anniversary-reunion.html|title=Fawlty Towers was originally rejected by the BBC for being clichéd, reveals John Cleese at 30th anniversary reunion|date=6 May 2009|work=Daily Mail |accessdate=6 May 2009}}</ref> John Cleese confirmed at the 30-year reunion in May 2009 that they will never make another episode of the comedy because they are "too old and tired", and expectations would be too high.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8036055.stm|title= Cleese rules out return of Fawlty |date=6 May 2009|work=BBC News|accessdate=6 May 2009}}</ref> In a television interview (shown in Australia on [[Seven Network]] and the [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]]) on 7 May 2009, Cleese also commented that he and Connie Booth took six weeks to write each episode.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/a155249/john-cleese-fawlty-towers-re-opened.html|title=John Cleese ('Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened'|date=8 May 2009|work=Digital Spy|accessdate=9 May 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/5286579/Fawlty-Towers-the-classic-sitcom-the-BBC-didnt-want.html|title=Fawlty Towers: the classic sitcom the BBC didn’t want|date=6 May 2009|work=The Telegraph|accessdate=9 May 2009 | location=London | first=Michael | last=Deacon}}</ref>

Popular American sitcoms ''[[3rd Rock from the Sun]]'' and ''[[Cheers]]'' (in both of which Cleese made guest appearances) have cited ''Fawlty Towers'' as an inspiration, especially regarding its depiction of a dysfunctional workplace "family". [[Arthur Mathews (writer)|Arthur Mathews]] and [[Graham Linehan]] have cited ''Fawlty'' as a major influence on their sitcom ''[[Father Ted]]''. ''[[Guest House (TV series)|Guest House]]'' on Pakistan's [[Pakistan Television Corporation|PTV]] also resembled the series.

Several of the characters have made other appearances, as spinoffs or in small cameo roles. In 1981, in character as Manuel, Sachs recorded his own version of the [[Joe Dolce]] cod-Italian song "[[Shaddap You Face]]" (with the B-side "Waiter, There's a Spanish Flea in My Soup") but the record was not released because Dolce took out an injunction: he was about to issue his version in Britain.<ref name="manuel">{{cite web|url=http://www.fawltysite.net/manuel.htm|title=Manuel the Spanish waiter played by Andrew Sachs in Fawlty Towers|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100612152522/http://fawltysite.net/manuel.htm|archive-date=12 June 2010|url-status=dead|access-date=20 September 2016}}</ref> Sachs also portrayed a Manuel-like character in a series of British TV advertisements for life insurance. [[Gilly Flower]] and [[Renee Roberts]], who played elderly ladies Miss Tibbs and Miss Gatsby in the series, reprised their roles in a 1983 episode of ''[[Only Fools and Horses]]''. In 2006, Cleese played Basil for the first time in 27 years, for an unofficial England [[2006 FIFA World Cup|2006 World Cup]] song, "[[Don't Mention the World Cup]]", taking its name from the phrase, "Don't mention the war," which Basil used in the episode "[[The Germans]]".<ref>{{cite news|last1=Sherwin|first1=Adam|last2=Hoyle|first2=Ben|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2180817,00.html|title=The Don't mention the War, says Cleese in World Cup peace bid |date=15 May 2006|work=The Times|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110809055508/http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/article718221.ece|archive-date=9 August 2011|url-status=dead|access-date=20 September 2016}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> In 2007, Cleese and Sachs reprised their roles for a six-episode corporate business video for the Norwegian oil company [[Statoil]]. In the video, Fawlty is running a restaurant called "Basil's Brasserie" while Manuel owns a [[Michelin Star|Michelin-starred]] restaurant in London.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2007/07/12/5522/basils_back |title=Basil's back : News 2007 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide |publisher=Chortle |date=12 July 2007 |access-date=20 September 2016}}</ref>

In November 2007, Scales returned to play Sybil in a series of sketches for the BBC's annual ''[[Children in Need]]'' charity telethon. The character was seen taking over the management of the eponymous hotel from the BBC drama series ''[[Hotel Babylon (BBC series)|Hotel Babylon]]'', interacting with characters from that programme as well as other 1970s sitcom characters. The character of Sybil was used by Cleese's permission.<ref name="rt01">{{cite magazine|title=The Inside Story|magazine=[[Radio Times]]|volume=335|issue=4361|date=10–13 November 2007|page=126}}</ref> In 2007, the [[Los Angeles Film School]] produced seven episodes of ''Fawlty Tower Oxnard'', starring [[Robert Romanus]] as Basil.{{CN|date=June 2024}}

At a 2009 reunion event for the [[Gold (British TV channel)|Gold]] channel as ''Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened'', Cleese said that the cast would never make another episode of the series because they are "too old and tired" and expectations would be too high.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8036055.stm|title= Cleese rules out return of Fawlty |date=6 May 2009|work=BBC News|access-date=6 May 2009}}</ref>

In 2016, Cleese reprised his role as Basil in a series of TV adverts for [[High Street]] [[optician]] chain [[Specsavers]].<ref>{{cite news|title=John Cleese returns as Basil Fawlty in Specsavers ad|url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2016/jan/06/john-cleese-basil-fawlty-specsavers-ad-break|work=[[The Guardian]]|date=6 January 2016|access-date=12 January 2016}}</ref> The same year, Cleese and Booth reunited to create and co-write the official theatrical adaptation of ''[[Fawlty Towers: The Play|Fawlty Towers]]'', which premiered in [[Melbourne, Australia|Melbourne]] at the [[Comedy Theatre, Melbourne|Comedy Theatre]]. It was critically well received, subsequently embarking on a successful tour of Australia.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://fawltytowerslive.com.au/|title=Official website of the Stage Adaptation|access-date=1 January 2017}}</ref> Cleese was intimately involved in the creation of the stage version from the beginning, including casting. He visited Australia to promote, as well as oversee its success. Melbourne was chosen to premiere the adaptation due to the series' enduring popularity in Australia, and also as it had become a popular international test market for large-scale theatrical productions in recent years, having recently been the city where the revised ''[[Love Never Dies (musical)|Love Never Dies]]'' and the new ''[[King Kong (2013 musical)|King Kong]]'' also premiered. Cleese also noted he did not believe the London press would give the adaptation fair, unbiased reviews, so he deliberately chose to premiere it elsewhere.<ref>{{cite news|title=John Cleese to debut "Fawlty Towers Live" in Australia because Brits don't like him |url=http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/stage/john-cleese-to-debut-fawlty-towers-live-in-australia-because-brits-dont-like-him-20160321-gnng1l.html|work=[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]|date=22 March 2016|access-date=4 January 2017}}</ref> On 2 February 2024, it was announced that the 2016 stage show based on ''Fawlty Towers'' would launch at London's [[Apollo Theatre]] later that year.<ref>{{cite news |last1=McIntosh |first1=Steven |title=Fawlty Towers stage show heads to London's West End |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-68171380 |access-date=2 February 2024 |publisher=[[BBC News]] |date=2 February 2024}}</ref>

Prior to the launch of the official ''Fawlty Towers'' theatrical adaptation in 2016, Cleese contested the legal validity of the Australian touring stage production, ''[[Faulty Towers The Dining Experience]]'', and threatened to sue its creators; this subsequently led to the cancellation of the tribute show's US tour.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Hunt |first=Elle |date=23 March 2016 |title=John Cleese may sue Australian theatre company over Fawlty Towers rip-off |url=https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2016/mar/23/john-cleese-may-sue-australian-theatre-company-over-fawlty-towers-rip-off |access-date=14 August 2024 |work=The Guardian}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=John Cleese may sue Fawlty Towers 'rip-off' |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-35888084 |work=BBC News}}</ref>

Cleese suggested he was producing a sequel series in 2023, along with his daughter Camilla. The show is presumably under development at [[Castle Rock Entertainment]], with [[Matthew George]], [[Rob Reiner]], Michele Reiner and [[Derrick Rossi]] as executive producers. The premise sees Basil (Cleese) trying to operate Fawlty Towers with help from his long-lost daughter (Camilla) and adjusting to the modern world.<ref name="variety sequel">{{cite magazine | url=https://variety.com/2023/global/news/fawlty-towers-revival-castle-rock-john-cleese-1235515583/ | title = 'Fawlty Towers' Set for Revival at Castle Rock, With John Cleese, Camilla Cleese to Write and Star | first = Naman | last = Ramachandran | date = 7 February 2023 | accessdate = 7 February 2023 | magazine = [[Variety Magazine]]}}</ref> Cleese admitted the company was too hasty in announcing the reboot, and that he only had "half an idea" being workshopped as of July 2023. He said that the series would "probably" be set in the Caribbean.<ref>{{Cite news |date=1 July 2023 |title=The 'uncancellable' John Cleese on Polanski, Putin and the coming apocalypse |url=https://www.scmp.com/magazines/style/celebrity/article/3226032/john-cleese-polanski-coronation-rebooting-fawlty-towers-joining-gb-news-putin-impending-apocalypse |access-date=24 August 2023 |work=South China Morning Post}}</ref> Cleese confirmed to [[GB News]] that the sequel series, unlike the original series, would not be broadcast on the BBC, feeling the broadcaster would have limited his creative freedom.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Lewis |first1=Isobel |title=John Cleese on prediction Fawlty Towers revival will be about 'wokery': 'The idea hadn't occurred to me' |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/john-cleese-fawlty-towers-reboot-woke-b2279652.html |newspaper=The Independent |access-date=21 July 2024 |date=10 February 2023}}</ref>


==Overseas==
==Overseas==
In 1977 and 1978 alone, it was sold to 45 stations in 17 countries and was the BBC's best selling overseas programme for that year. Fawlty Towers became a huge success in almost all countries where it was aired. Although it was initially a flop in Spain, because of the portrayal of the Spanish waiter Manuel, it was successfully resold, with Manuel's nationality changed to Italian.<ref name=museumTV/> In the Catalan region of Spain, however, Manuel was Mexican.<ref name="manuel"/> To show how badly it translated, Clive James picked up a clip containing Manuel's "¿Qué?" phrase to show on ''[[Clive James on Television]]'' in 1982. The series was also briefly broadcast in Italy in the 90s on the satellite channel Canal Jimmy, in the original English with Italian subtitles.
In 1977 and 1978 alone, the original TV show was sold to 45 stations in 17 countries and was the BBC's best-selling overseas programme for that year. ''Fawlty Towers'' became a huge success in almost all countries in which it aired. Although it initially was a flop in Spain, largely because of the portrayal of the Spanish waiter Manuel, it was successfully resold with the Manuel character's nationality changed to Italian<ref name=museumTV/> except in Spain's Catalan region where Manuel was Mexican.<ref name="manuel"/> To show how badly it translated, Clive James picked up a clip containing Manuel's "¿Qué?" phrase to show on ''[[Clive James on Television]]'' in 1982. The series also briefly was broadcast in Italy in the 1990s on the satellite channel Canal Jimmy, in the original English with Italian subtitles.


In Australia, the show originally was broadcast on [[ABC Television (Australian TV network)|ABC Television]], the first series in 1976 and the second series in 1980. The show then was sold to the [[Seven Network]] where it has been repeated numerous times.
The series is still shown in the United States on at least one [[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]] member station. [[Maryland Public Television]], which covers [[Maryland|the state of the same name]] and the surrounding area, airs all episodes in order on Tuesday afternoons (4:00&nbsp;pm [[Eastern Time|ET]]) and Saturday nights (11:00&nbsp;pm ET), along with other BBC sitcoms.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mpt.org/schedule/series.cfm?series_id=5520 |title=Fawlty Towers |publisher=MPT |accessdate=30 April 2010}}</ref>


==Home media and merchandise==
'''Overseas titles'''
===Audio releases===
* [[Belgium|Belgium, Flanders]] - "''De zoete inval''" (?)
Four albums were released by [[BBC Records]] on vinyl LP and cassette. These consisted of the original television soundtracks, and from the second album onwards had additional voice-over from Sachs (in character as Manuel) describing scenes which relied on visual humour.
* [[Denmark]] - "''Halløj i badehotellet''" ("Chaos at the Beach Hotel")
* [[Finland]] - "''Pitkän Jussin majatalo''" ("Long John's guest house")
* [[France]] - "''L'Hôtel en folie''" ("Hotel gone mad")
* [[Germany]] ''Original title'' and "''Fawltys Hotel, Zimmer frei, Ein verrücktes Hotel''" ("Fawlty's Hotel, room to let, a crazy Hotel") and "''Das verrückte Hotel – Fawlty Towers''" ("The crazy Hotel - Fawlty Towers")
* [[Netherlands]] - ''Original title'' and "''Hotel op stelten''" (?)
* [[Norway]] - ''"Hotell i særklasse"'' (''Outstanding Hotel'')
* [[Sweden]] - "''Pang i bygget''" ("Smash in the [building] construction")


The first album, simply titled ''Fawlty Towers'', was released in 1979 and contained audio from "Communication Problems" (as "Mrs Richards") and "Hotel Inspectors". The second album, ''Second Sitting'', was released in 1981 and contained audio from "Basil the Rat" (as "The Rat") and "The Builders". Both of these first two albums reached the Top 30 of the [[UK Albums Chart]].


''At Your Service'' was released in 1982, and contained audio from "The Kipper and the Corpse" (as "Death") and "The Germans" (as "Fire Drill"). Finally, ''A La Carte'' was released in 1983, and contained audio from "Waldorf Salad" (as "The Americans") and "Gourmet Night".
sources - local Wikipedias (.de, .dk, .fi, .fr, .nl, .no, .se) through articles of "John Cleese"


The albums were re-released as double-cassette packs under the titles ''Fawlty Towers 1'' and ''Fawlty Towers 2'' in 1988. The remaining four episodes did not get an audio-only release until 1994 on audio cassette as ''Fawlty Towers 3''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Discogs – Fawlty Towers |url=https://www.discogs.com/search/?q=fawlty+towers&type=all |website=Discogs |access-date=11 July 2021}}</ref>
==Home video releases==
''Fawlty Towers'' was originally released by BBC Video in 1984, but was edited with the credits from all three episodes put at the end of the tape.


The first CD release of the audio versions was in a boxed set in 2003, titled ''Fawlty Towers—The Collector's Edition'', which included spoken introductions to each episode by Cleese, and an interview with Scales and Sachs.<ref>{{cite web |title=Discogs – Fawlty Towers |url=https://www.discogs.com/John-Cleese-Connie-Booth-Andrew-Sachs-Prunella-Scales-Fawlty-Towers-Fawlty-Towers-The-Collectors-Edi/release/16986744 |website=Discogs |access-date=20 July 2021}}</ref>
A Laserdisc containing all episodes spliced together as a continuous episode was released in the US on Laserdisc on 23 June 1993.


The four vinyl records were reissued in a limited edition boxed set, along with the remaining four episodes on vinyl for the first time, for Record Store Day in 2021.<ref>{{cite web |title=Fawlty Towers For The Record |url=https://recordstoreday.com/UPC/5014797904286 |website=Record Store Day |access-date=11 July 2021}}</ref>
It was re-released in 1995 unedited and remastered. It was re-released in 1998 with a special interview with John Cleese.
''Fawlty Towers – The complete series'' was released on DVD on 16 October 2001, available in [[DVD region code|regions]] 1, 2 and 4. A "Collector's Edition" is available in region 2.


===Home media===
Series one of the show was released on [[Universal Media Disc|UMD]] Video for [[PlayStation Portable|PSP]].
''Fawlty Towers'' was originally released by BBC Video in 1984, with three episodes on each of four tapes. Each was edited with the credits from all three episodes put at the end of the tape. A [[LaserDisc]] containing all episodes spliced together as a continuous episode was released in the U.S. on 23 June 1993.<ref>{{Citation |title=Fawlty Towers Complete : John Cleese : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive |date=1975 |url=https://archive.org/details/LDFT7579 |access-date=26 December 2023 |language=en}}</ref> It was re-released in 1994, unedited but digitally remastered. It also was re-released in 1997 with a special interview with Cleese. ''Fawlty Towers—The Complete Series'' was released on DVD on 16 October 2001, available in [[DVD region code|regions]] 1, 2 and 4. A "Collector's Edition" is available in region 2.


The original DVD contained a slightly edited version of "The Kipper and the Corpse", in which Basil's line "Is it your legs?" (said to Mr Lehman when asking why he wants breakfast in bed) is missing. This line was restored in subsequent remasters.<ref>{{cite web |title=Fawlty Towers episode guide |url=http://www.fawltysite.net/episodes/the_kipper_and_the_corpse.htm |website=Fawltysite.net |access-date=17 July 2021}}</ref>
In July 2009, BBC America announced a DVD re-release of the ''Fawlty Towers'' series. The DVD set was released on 20 October 2009. The reissue, titled ''Fawlty Towers Remastered: Special Edition'', contains commentary by John Cleese on every episode as well as remastered video and audio.


All episodes were also available as streamed video-on-demand via [[Netflix]] and Amazon Instant Videos. Both series are also available for download on iTunes.
Series one was released on [[Universal Media Disc|UMD]] Video for [[PlayStation Portable|PSP]]. In July 2009, BBC America announced a DVD reissue, released on 20 October 2009. Titled ''Fawlty Towers Remastered: Special Edition'', contains commentary by Cleese on every episode as well as remastered video and audio. All episodes were previously available as streamed video-on-demand via [[Britbox]], [[Netflix]] and [[Amazon Prime Video]]. Additionally, both series were previously available for download on [[iTunes]]. In 2021 all episodes were made available on the [[BBC iPlayer]].


===Australian releases===
===Computer game===
A ''Fawlty Towers'' game was released on PC in 2000 and featured a number of interactive games, desktop-customizing content, and clips from the show.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.pcgamer.com/saturday-crapshoot-fawlty-towers/|title=Saturday Crapshoot: Fawlty Towers|magazine=[[PC Gamer]]|first=Richard|last=Cobbett|date=19 October 2013|access-date=29 June 2016}}</ref>
*''Fawlty Towers: The Complete First Series'' VHS

*''Fawlty Towers: The Complete Second Series'' VHS
===Books===
*''Fawlty Towers: The Complete Third Series'' VHS
The original scripts were released in a hardback book by Methuen, ''The Complete Fawlty Towers'', in 1988.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Complete Fawlty Towers |id={{ASIN|0413183904|country=uk}} }}</ref>
*''Fawlty Towers: The Complete Fourth Series'' VHS
*''The Complete Fawlty Towers'' VHS Box Set
*''The Complete Fawlty Towers'' – 19 November 2001
*''Fawlty Towers Volume 1: Basil The Rat'' (3 episodes, 94 minutes) – 31 July 2007
*''Fawlty Towers Volume 2: The Psychiatrist'' (3 Episodes, 94 minutes) – 6 September 2007
*''Fawlty Towers Volume 3: The Kipper And The Corpse'' (3 Episodes, 93 minutes) – 2 October 2007
*''Fawlty Towers Volume 4: The Germans'' (3 Episodes, 93 minutes) – 7 November 2007
*''Fawlty Towers: The Complete Collection – Remastered'' (3 DVD set, all 12 episodes, 374 minutes) – 3 November 2009
*''Fawlty Towers – Series 1: Episodes 1–3 (Comedy Bites)'' (3 Episodes, 94 minutes) – 4 March 2010


==Notes==
==Notes==
Line 440: Line 424:


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*Apter, Michael J. (1982), first published online in 2004 . "Fawlty Towers: A Reversal Theory Analysis of A Popular Television Comedy Series". ''The Journal of Popular Culture'' (Blackwell Publishing) '''16''' (3): 128–138.
* Apter, Michael J. (1982), first published online in 2004. "Fawlty Towers: A Reversal Theory Analysis of A Popular Television Comedy Series". ''The Journal of Popular Culture'' (Blackwell Publishing) '''16''' (3): 128–138.
*Bright, Morris; Robert Ross (2001). ''Fawlty Towers: Fully Booked''. London: BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-53439-7.
* Bright, Morris; Robert Ross (2001). ''Fawlty Towers: Fully Booked''. London: BBC Books. {{ISBN|0-563-53439-7}}.
*Cleese, John; Connie Booth (1988). ''The Complete Fawlty Towers''. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-413-18390-4.
* Cleese, John; Connie Booth (1988). ''The Complete Fawlty Towers''. London: Methuen. {{ISBN|0-413-18390-4}}.
* Dalla Costa, Dario (2004). ''The Complexities of Farce: With a Case Study on Fawlty Towers ''. Unpublished Master's thesis, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia. Retrieved from http://research-repository.uwa.edu.au/files/3238761/Costa_Dario_Dalla_2004.pdf
*Holm, Lars Holger (2004). ''Fawlty Towers: A Worshipper's Companion''. London: Leo Publishing. ISBN 91-973661-8-8.
*McCann, Graham (2007). ''Fawlty Towers''. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-89811-9.
* Holm, Lars Holger (2004). ''Fawlty Towers: A Worshipper's Companion''. London: Leo Publishing. {{ISBN|91-973661-8-8}}.
* {{Cite book |last=McCann |first=Graham |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/175646271 |title=Fawlty Towers : the story of the sitcom |date=2007 |publisher=Hodder & Stoughton |isbn=978-0-340-89811-6 |location=London |oclc=175646271}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikiquote}}
* {{IMDb title|0072500|Fawlty Towers}}
* {{IMDb title|0072500|Fawlty Towers}}
*{{BBC Online|comedy/guide/articles/f/fawltytowers_7772600.shtml}}
* {{BBC Online|comedy/guide/articles/f/fawltytowers_7772600.shtml}}
*{{BBC programme|id=b006xxvg}}
* {{BBC programme}}
*[http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/series/7506 ''Fawlty Towers''] at the [[British Film Institute]]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080422060339/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/series/7506 ''Fawlty Towers''] at the [[British Film Institute]]
*{{Screenonline TV title|459034|Fawlty Towers}}
* {{Screenonline TV title|459034|Fawlty Towers}}
*[http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/F/htmlF/fawltytowers/fawltytowers.htm ''Fawlty Towers''] at the [[Museum of Broadcast Communications|MBC]]'s Encyclopedia of Television
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060629072455/http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/F/htmlF/fawltytowers/fawltytowers.htm ''Fawlty Towers''] at the [[Museum of Broadcast Communications|MBC]]'s Encyclopedia of Television
*{{British Comedy Guide|tv|fawlty_towers}}
* {{British Comedy Guide|tv|fawlty_towers}}
* {{epguides|FawltyTowers}}
* [https://archive.org/details/LDFT7579 ''Fawlty Towers''] - All Episodes edited together at [[Internet Archive]]
* [http://www.thefawltytowersguide.co.uk/fawltytowerscharacters.htm ''Fawlty Towers'' Guest Characters] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141102175728/http://www.thefawltytowersguide.co.uk/fawltytowerscharacters.htm |date=2 November 2014 }}


{{Fawlty Towers}}
{{Fawlty Towers}}
{{BAFTA TV Award for Best Situation Comedy 1973–1980}}
{{BAFTA TV Award for Best Situation Comedy 1973–1980}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Fawlty Towers| ]]
[[Category:Fawlty Towers| ]]
[[Category:1975 British television programme debuts]]
[[Category:1975 British television series debuts]]
[[Category:1979 British television programme endings]]
[[Category:1979 British television series endings]]
[[Category:1970s British television series]]
[[Category:1970s British sitcoms]]
[[Category:1970s British workplace comedy television series]]
[[Category:BAFTA winners (television series)]]
[[Category:BBC television sitcoms]]
[[Category:BBC television sitcoms]]
[[Category:Television shows set in Devon]]
[[Category:British English-language television shows]]
[[Category:Fictional hotels]]
[[Category:Fictional hotels]]
[[Category:English-language television programming]]
[[Category:Television series by BBC Studios]]
[[Category:Television series about marriage]]
[[Category:Television series set in hotels]]
[[Category:Television shows set in Devon]]
[[Category:Works by John Cleese]]

Latest revision as of 01:00, 27 December 2024

Fawlty Towers
The "Fawlty Towers" sign in the foreground image varied (usually as an anagram) between episodes
Genre
Created by
Written by
  • John Cleese
  • Connie Booth
Directed by
Starring
Theme music composerDennis Wilson
Opening theme"Fawlty Towers"
Ending theme"Fawlty Towers"
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series2
No. of episodes12 (list of episodes)
Production
Producers
Editors
  • Susan Imrie
  • Bob Rymer
  • Bill Harris
Running time30–35 minutes
Production companyBBC
Original release
NetworkBBC Two
Release19 September 1975 (1975-09-19) –
25 October 1979 (1979-10-25)

Fawlty Towers is a British television sitcom written by John Cleese and Connie Booth, originally broadcast on BBC Two in 1975 and 1979. Two series of six episodes each were made. The series is set in Fawlty Towers, a dysfunctional fictional hotel in the English seaside town of Torquay in Devon. The plots centre on the tense, rude and put-upon owner Basil Fawlty (Cleese), his bossy wife Sybil (Prunella Scales), the sensible chambermaid Polly (Booth), and the hapless and English-challenged Spanish waiter Manuel (Andrew Sachs). They show their attempts to run the hotel amidst farcical situations and an array of demanding and eccentric guests and tradespeople.

The idea of Fawlty Towers came from Cleese after he stayed at the Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay, Devon, in 1970 (along with the rest of the Monty Python troupe), where he encountered the eccentric hotel owner Donald Sinclair. Stuffy and snobbish, Sinclair treated guests as though they were a hindrance to his running of the hotel (a waitress who worked for him stated "it was as if he didn't want the guests to be there"). Sinclair was the inspiration for Cleese's character Basil Fawlty.[2]

While some critics derided Fawlty Towers upon release, the series soon received acclaim. In 1976 and 1980, it won the British Academy Television Award for Best Scripted Comedy. In 1980, Cleese received the British Academy Television Award for Best Entertainment Performance. The popularity of Fawlty Towers has endured, and it is often re-broadcast.[3] The show was ranked first on a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, and in a 2001 poll conducted by Channel 4, Basil Fawlty was ranked second on their list of the 100 Greatest TV Characters.[4] In 2019, it was named the greatest ever British TV sitcom by a panel of comedy experts compiled by the Radio Times.[3][5] The BBC profile for the series states that "the British sitcom by which all other British sitcoms must be judged, Fawlty Towers withstands multiple viewings, is eminently quotable ('don't mention the war') and stands up to this day as a jewel in the BBC's comedy crown."[6] In 2023, Cleese suggested that a sequel series was being developed.

Origins

[edit]
Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay, in 2009. Cleese stayed at the hotel with the Monty Python team in 1970, and was inspired to write the series by the eccentric behaviour of the hotel's owner Donald Sinclair.

In May 1970, the Monty Python comedy group stayed at the now-demolished Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay, Devon while filming on location in Paignton.[7] John Cleese was fascinated with the behaviour of the owner, Donald Sinclair, later describing him as "the rudest man I've ever come across in my life".[8] Among such behaviour by Sinclair was his criticism of Terry Gilliam's "too American" table etiquette and tossing Eric Idle's briefcase out of a window "in case it contained a bomb".[9] Asked why anyone would want to bomb the hotel, Sinclair replied, "We've had a lot of staff problems".[10] Michael Palin states Sinclair "seemed to view us as a colossal inconvenience".[10] Rosemary Harrison, a waitress at the Gleneagles under Sinclair, described him as "bonkers" and lacking in hospitality, deeming him wholly unsuitable for a hotel proprietor. "It was as if he didn't want the guests to be there."[11] Cleese and his then-wife Connie Booth stayed on at the hotel after filming, furthering their research of its owner.[11] Demolished in 2015, the building was replaced by a new retirement home named Sachs Lodge in memory of Andrew Sachs who played Manuel in the sitcom and who died in 2016.[12]

Cleese was a writer on the 1970s British TV sitcom Doctor in the House for London Weekend Television. An early prototype of the character that became known as Basil Fawlty was developed in an episode ("No Ill Feeling") of the third Doctor series (titled Doctor at Large). In this edition, the main character checks into a small-town hotel, his very presence seemingly winding up the aggressive and incompetent manager (played by Timothy Bateson) with a domineering wife. The show was broadcast on 30 May 1971.[13]

Cleese said in 2008 that the first Fawlty Towers script he and Booth wrote was rejected by the BBC. At a 30th anniversary event honouring the show, Cleese said,

Connie and I wrote that first episode and we sent it in to Jimmy Gilbert, [the executive], whose job it was to assess the quality of the writing, said, (and I can quote [his note to me] fairly accurately,) "This is full of clichéd situations and stereotypical characters and I cannot see it as being anything other than a disaster." And Jimmy himself said, "You're going to have to get them out of the hotel, John. You can't do the whole thing in the hotel." Whereas, of course, it's in the hotel that the whole pressure cooker builds up.[14]

Cleese was paid £6,000 for 43 weeks of work and supplemented his income by appearing in television advertisements.[14][15] He states, "I have to thank the advertising industry for making this possible. Connie and I used to spend six weeks writing each episode and we didn't make a lot of money out of it. If it hadn't been for the commercials I wouldn't have been able to afford to spend so much time on the script."[14]

Production

[edit]

Although the series is set in Torquay, no part of it was shot in South West England. For the exterior filming, the Wooburn Grange Country Club in Wooburn Green, Buckinghamshire was used instead of a hotel.[16][17] In several episodes of the series (notably "The Kipper and the Corpse", "The Anniversary", and "Basil the Rat"), the entrance gate at the bottom of the drive states the real name of the location. This listed building later served for a short time as a nightclub named "Basil's" after the series ended, before being destroyed by a fire in March 1991.[18][19] The remnants of the building were demolished and a housing estate was built on the site.[20] Few traces of the original site exist today.

Other location filming was done mostly around Harrow: firstly the 'damn good thrashing' scene in "Gourmet Night" in which Basil loses his temper and attacks his broken-down car with a tree branch. It was filmed at the T-junction of Lapstone Gardens and Mentmore Close (51°34′52″N 0°18′33″W / 51.5811°N 0.3091°W / 51.5811; -0.3091). Secondly the episode "The Germans", the opening shot is of Northwick Park Hospital. Thirdly "Gourmet Night"'s exterior of André's restaurant was at Preston Road (51°34′24″N 0°17′40″W / 51.5734°N 0.2944°W / 51.5734; -0.2944). It is now a Chinese and Indian restaurant called Wings, next to a launderette. Both Cleese and Booth were keen on every script being perfect, and some episodes took four months and required as many as ten drafts until they were satisfied.[21]

Cleese said one of the reasons the series worked so well was the quality of the scripts and the care taken over the editing. He told a TV interviewer that while the average BBC half-hour comedy script had 65 pages, the ones for Fawlty Towers had between 135 and 140 pages. "We literally did twice as many camera cuts - average shows got 200, we used to have 400. So there was an enormous amount in there. The other thing is that they were very well constructed," he said. Once an episode was in the can, the editing process started. "We did anything between 20 and 25 hours editing each show. Almost every minute you see up on the screen, we spent one hour editing and it was only by doing that you could just tighten it up, just tighten it there and take out a line of dialogue, sometimes take out a repetition, they'll then lose two lines of dialogue there. That's what really got the pace on it."[22]

The theme music was composed by Dennis Wilson. It was recorded by the highly respected Aeolian Quartet, who were asked by director John Davis to perform the piece badly, although in the end they did not.[23]

Plot directions and examples

[edit]

The series focuses on the exploits and misadventures of short-fused hotelier Basil Fawlty and his acerbic wife Sybil, as well as their employees: waiter Manuel, Polly Sherman, and, in the second series, chef Terry. The episodes typically revolve around Basil's efforts to "raise the tone" of his hotel and his increasing frustration at numerous complications and mistakes, both his own and those of others, which prevent him from doing so.

Much of the humour comes from Basil's overly aggressive manner, engaging in angry but witty arguments with guests, staff and, in particular, Sybil, whom he addresses (in a faux-romantic way) with insults such as "that golfing puff adder", "my little piranha fish" and "my little nest of vipers".[24] Despite this, Basil frequently feels intimidated, Sybil being able to cow him at any time, usually with a short, sharp cry of "Basil!" At the end of some episodes, Basil succeeds in annoying (or at least bemusing) the guests and frequently gets his comeuppance.

The plots occasionally are intricate and always farcical, involving coincidences, misunderstandings, cross-purposes and meetings both missed and accidental. The innuendo of the bedroom farce is sometimes present (often to the disgust of the socially conservative Basil) but it is his eccentricity, not his lust, that drives the plots. The events test to the breaking point what little patience Basil has, sometimes causing him to have a near breakdown by the end of the episode.

The guests at the hotel typically are comic foils to Basil's anger and outbursts. Guest characters in each episode provide different characteristics (working class, promiscuous, foreign) that he cannot stand. Requests both reasonable and impossible test his temper. Even the afflicted annoy him, for example in the episode "Communication Problems", revolving around the havoc caused by the frequent misunderstandings between the staff and the hard-of-hearing Mrs. Richards. Near the end, Basil pretends to faint just at the mention of her name. This episode is typical of the show's careful weaving of humorous situations through comedy cross-talk. The show also uses mild black humour at times, notably when Basil is forced to hide a dead body ("2 dead, 25 to go.") and in his comments about Sybil ("Did you ever see that film, How to Murder Your Wife? ... Awfully good. I saw it six times.") and to Mrs Richards, ("May I suggest that you consider moving to a hotel closer to the sea? Or preferably in it.").[25]

Basil's physical outbursts are primarily directed at Manuel, an emotional but largely innocent Spaniard whose confused English vocabulary causes him to make elementary mistakes. At times, Basil beats Manuel with a frying pan and smacks his forehead with a spoon. The violence towards Manuel caused rare negative criticism of the show. Sybil and Polly, on the other hand, are more patient and understanding towards Manuel; everyone's usual excuse to guests for his behaviour is, "He's from Barcelona"; Manuel even once used the excuse for himself.

Basil longs for a touch of class, sometimes playing recordings of classical music. In the first episode he is playing music by Brahms when Sybil remarks, after pestering him asking to do different tasks: "You could have them both done by now if you hadn't spent the whole morning skulking in there listening to that racket." Basil replies, with exasperation, "Racket?? That's Brahms! Brahms' Third Racket!" Basil often displays blatant snobbishness as he attempts to climb the social ladder, frequently expressing disdain for the "riff-raff", "cretins" and "yobbos" that he believes regularly populate his hotel.[24] His desperation is readily apparent as he makes increasingly hopeless manoeuvres and painful faux pas in trying to curry favour with those he perceives as having superior social status. Yet he finds himself forced to serve those individuals that are "beneath" him. As such, Basil's efforts tend to be counter-productive, with guests leaving the hotel in disgust and his marriage (and sanity) stretching to breaking point.

Characters

[edit]

Basil Fawlty

[edit]
Cast of Fawlty Towers, left to right: (front) Prunella Scales (Sybil Fawlty), Connie Booth (Polly) and Andrew Sachs (Manuel); (back) John Cleese (Basil Fawlty)

Basil Fawlty, played by John Cleese, is a cynical and snobbish misanthrope who is desperate to belong to a higher social class. He sees a successful hotel as a means of achieving this, yet his job forces him to be polite to people he despises.

He is intimidated by his wife Sybil Fawlty. He yearns to stand up to her, but his plans frequently conflict with her demands. She is often verbally abusive (describing him as "an ageing, brilliantined stick insect") but although he towers over her, he often finds himself on the receiving end of her temper, verbally and physically (as in "The Builders"), and it is only on one occasion when Sybil mistakenly believes he is stalking an attractive Australian guest that he finally snaps and stands up to her.

Basil usually turns to Manuel or Polly to help him with his schemes, while trying his best to keep Sybil from discovering them. However, Basil occasionally laments the time when there was passion in their relationship, now seemingly lost. Also, it appears he still does care for her and remains loyal to her, and actively resists the flirtations of a French guest in one episode. The penultimate episode, "The Anniversary", is about his efforts to put together a surprise anniversary party involving their closest friends.[24] Things go wrong as Basil pretends the anniversary date does not remind him of anything though he pretends to have a stab at it by reeling off a list of random anniversaries, starting with the Battle of Agincourt, for which he receives a slap from Sybil, who becomes increasingly frustrated and angry. He continues guessing even after Sybil is out of earshot, and mentions other anniversaries (none of which happened on 17 April), including the Battle of Trafalgar and Yom Kippur, just to enhance the surprise. Sybil believes he really has forgotten, and leaves in a huff. In an interview in the DVD boxed set, Cleese claims this episode deliberately takes a slightly different tone from the others, fleshing out their otherwise inexplicable status as a couple.

In keeping with the lack of explanation about the marriage, not much is revealed of the characters' back-stories. It is known that Basil served in the British Army and saw action in the Korean War, possibly as part of his National Service.[24] (John Cleese himself was only 13 when the Korean War ended, making the character of Basil at least five or six years older than he.) Basil exaggerates this period of his life, proclaiming to strangers, "I killed four men." To this Sybil jokes that "He was in the Catering Corps. He used to poison them." Basil is often seen wearing regimental and old-boy style ties, perhaps spuriously, one of which is in the colours of the Army Catering Corps. He also claims to have sustained a shrapnel injury to his leg; it tends to flare up at suspiciously convenient times. The only person towards whom Basil consistently exhibits tolerance and good manners is the old and senile Major Gowen, a veteran of one of the world wars (which one is never specified, though he once mentions to Mrs Peignoir that he was in France in 1918) who permanently resides at the hotel.[24] When interacting with Manuel, Basil displays a rudimentary knowledge of Spanish (Basil states that he "learned classical Spanish, not the strange dialect he [Manuel] seems to have picked up"); this knowledge is also ridiculed, as in the first episode in which a guest, whom Basil has immediately dismissed as working-class, communicates fluently with Manuel in Spanish after Basil is unable to do so.

Cleese described Basil as thinking that "he could run a first-rate hotel if he didn't have all the guests getting in the way" and as being "an absolutely awful human being" but says that in comedy if an awful person makes people laugh they unaccountably feel affectionate towards him.[26] Indeed, he is not entirely unsympathetic. The "Hotel Inspectors" and "Gourmet Night" episodes feature guests who are shown to be deeply annoying, with constant and unreasonable demands. In "Gourmet Night" the chef gets drunk and is unable to cook dinner, leaving Basil to scramble in an attempt to salvage the evening. Much of the time, Basil is an unfortunate victim of circumstance.

Sybil Fawlty

[edit]

Sybil Fawlty, played by Prunella Scales, is Basil's wife. Energetic and petite, she prefers a working wardrobe of tight skirt-suits in shiny fabrics and sports a tower of permed hair augmented with hairpieces and wigs necessitating the use of overnight curlers. She often is a more effective manager of the hotel, making sure Basil gets certain jobs done or stays out of the way when she is handling difficult guests. Typically when Basil is on the verge of a meltdown due to a crisis (usually of his own making), it is Sybil who steps in to clear up the mess and bring some sense to the situation. Despite this, she rarely participates directly in the running of the hotel. During busy check-in sessions or meal times, while everyone else is busy working, Sybil is frequently talking on the phone to one of her friends with her phrase "Oohhh, I knoooooooow" or chatting to customers. She has a distinctive conversational tone and braying laugh, which Basil compares to "someone machine-gunning a seal". Being his wife, she is the only regular character who refers to Basil by his first name. When she barks his name at him, he flinchingly freezes in his tracks.

Basil refers to her by a number of epithets, occasionally to her face, including "that golfing puff-adder", "the dragon", "toxic midget", "the sabre-toothed tart", "my little kommandant", "my little piranha fish", "my little nest of vipers" and "you rancorous, coiffured old sow".[24] Despite these nasty nicknames, Basil is terrified of her. The 1979 episode "The Psychiatrist" contains the only time he loses patience and snaps at her (Basil: "Shut up, I'm fed up." Sybil: "Oh, you've done it now.").

Prunella Scales speculated in an interview for The Complete Fawlty Towers DVD boxed set that Sybil married Basil because his origins were of a higher social class than hers.

Polly Sherman

[edit]

Polly Sherman, played by Connie Booth, is a waitress and general assistant at the hotel with artistic aspirations. She is the most competent of the staff and the voice of sanity during chaotic moments, but is frequently embroiled in ridiculous masquerades as she loyally attempts to aid Basil in trying to cover up a mistake or keep something from Sybil.

In "The Anniversary" she snaps and refuses to help Basil out when he wants her to impersonate Sybil in the semi-darkness of her bedroom in front of the Fawltys' friends, Basil having dug himself into a hole by claiming Sybil was ill instead of admitting she had stormed out earlier in annoyance with him. Polly finally agrees, but only on condition that Basil lends her money to purchase a car, which he has previously refused to do.

Polly generally is good-natured but sometimes shows her frustration, and has odd moments of malice. In "The Kipper and the Corpse", the pampered Shih Tzu dog of an elderly guest bites Polly and Manuel. As revenge, Polly laces the dog's sausages with black pepper and Tabasco sauce ("bangers à la bang"), making it ill and eventually killing it.

Despite her part-time employment (during meal times), Polly frequently is saddled with many other duties, including as manager in "The Germans" when Sybil and Basil are incapacitated. In the first series, Polly is said to be an art student who, according to Basil, has spent three years at college. In "Gourmet Night", she is seen drawing a sketch (presumably of Manuel), which everyone but Basil immediately recognises and she sells it to the chef for 50p. Polly is not referred to as a student in the second series, although in both series she is shown to have a flair for languages, displaying ability in both Spanish and German. In "The Germans", Basil alludes to Polly's polyglot inclination by saying that she does her work "while learning two Oriental languages". Like Manuel, she has a room of her own at the hotel.

Manuel

[edit]

Manuel, a waiter played by Andrew Sachs, is a well-meaning but disorganised and confused Spaniard from Barcelona with a poor grasp of the English language and customs. He is verbally and physically abused by his boss. When told what to do, he often responds, "¿Qué?" ("What?"). Manuel's character is used to demonstrate Basil's instinctive lack of sensitivity and tolerance. Every episode involves Basil becoming enraged at Manuel's confusion at his boss's bizarre demands and even basic requests. Manuel is afraid of Fawlty's quick temper and violent assaults, yet often expresses his appreciation for being given employment. He is relentlessly enthusiastic and is proud of what little English he knows.

During the series, Sachs was seriously injured twice. Cleese describes using a real metal pan to knock Manuel unconscious in "The Wedding Party", although he would have preferred to use a rubber one. The original producer and director, John Howard Davies, said that he made Basil use a metal one and that he was responsible for most of the violence on the show, which he felt was essential to the type of comical farce they were creating. Later, when Sachs's clothes were treated to give off smoke after he escaped the burning kitchen in "The Germans", the corrosive chemicals ate through them and gave Sachs severe burns.[27]

Manuel's exaggerated Spanish accent is part of the humour of the show. In fact, Sachs's original language was German; he emigrated to Britain as a child.[28]

The character's nationality was switched to Italian (and the name to Paolo) for the Spanish dub of the show, while in Catalonia and France, Manuel is a Mexican.[29]

Other regular characters and themes

[edit]
  • Terry Hughes, played by Brian Hall, is the hotel chef throughout the second series. A sly, somewhat shifty Cockney,[30] he is nonetheless a competent chef ("I 'ave been to catering school!"). His cooking methods are occasionally somewhat casual, which frustrates and worries the neurotic Basil; and he also has limited concern for food and kitchen hygiene, claiming that "What the eye don't see, the chef gets away with" and that "the better the kitchen, the filthier it is." He used to work in Dorchester (not at The Dorchester, as a guest wrongly infers). In "The Anniversary" Terry and Manuel come to blows since Terry doesn't like anyone overshadowing him as a cook, so he proceeds to sabotage the paella Manuel is making for Basil and Sybil, leading to fisticuffs at the end of the episode. Cleese himself told Hall to portray Terry as if he were on the run from the police.
  • Major Gowen, played by Ballard Berkeley, is a slightly senile, amiable old soldier who is a permanent resident of the hotel.[31][32] He is one of the few guests whom Basil seems to like. This is because he has the establishment status that Basil craves. He usually wears the Royal Artillery jagged-striped tie, and once mentions to Mrs. Peignoir being in France in 1918.[citation needed] He often is introduced as their "oldest resident" and in the episode "Waldorf Salad" Basil reveals that the Major has lived there for seven years. He enjoys talking about the world outside, especially the cricket scores and workers' strikes (the frequent strikes at British Leyland during the time of the series' original transmission were often mentioned), and is always on the lookout for the newspaper. In the episode "The Germans" he shows he has trouble forgiving the Germans because of the wars. The best he can say is that German women make good card players. In the same episode, he also demonstrates his outdated racial attitudes when he comments about the ethnic difference between "wogs" and "niggers".[33] Despite his good intentions, the Major can cause Basil's plans to go awry, notably in the episode "Communication Problems" in which Basil tries his best to keep secret from Sybil the money he won in a bet.
  • Miss Tibbs and Miss Gatsby, played by Gilly Flower and Renee Roberts, are the other two permanent residents. Seemingly inseparable, these sweet-natured, dotty spinsters appear to have taken a fancy to Basil, feeling that they need to take care of him. In response, Basil vacillates between superficial charm and blunt rudeness during his conversations with them.[31][32][34][35][36][37]
  • Audrey is Sybil's lifelong best friend, and is mostly acknowledged during gossipy telephone calls. Talking with her is a refuge for Sybil. When times get tough for Audrey, who has a dysfunctional relationship with her husband George, Sybil will offer solutions and guidance, often resulting in the catchphrase "Ohhh, I knowwww..." when she tries to commiserate with Audrey's problems. In Audrey's one on-screen appearance, in "The Anniversary", she is played by actress Christine Shaw. Basil tells Major Gowen that he thinks she is a "dreadful woman".
  • A running gag throughout the two series is the rearranged letters of the "Fawlty Towers" hotel sign which is shown at the beginning of every episode except "The Germans", when a hospital exterior is used as an establishing shot.[38] In series one, the letters slowly fall from the sign due to lack of maintenance. In series two, the letters are re-arranged into a series of deliberate anagrams. The paperboy, though rarely seen, is revealed at the beginning of "The Psychiatrist" to be the prankster who rearranges the letters on the sign to sometimes crude phrases.
  • Terence Conoley appears in two episodes as entirely different characters. In "A Touch of Class" he plays Mr. Wareing, and in "Waldorf Salad" he portrays Mr. Johnston.[39]

Episodes

[edit]
BBC studio recording ticket for the second episode, "The Builders"

The first episode of Fawlty Towers was recorded as a pilot on 24 December 1974, the rest of the series being recorded later in 1975. It was then originally broadcast on 19 September. The 12th and final episode was first shown on 25 October 1979. The first series was directed by John Howard Davies, the second by Bob Spiers. Both had their premieres on BBC Two.

When originally transmitted, the individual episodes had no on-screen titles. The ones in common currency were first used for the VHS release of the series in the 1980s. There were working titles, such as "USA" for "Waldorf Salad", "Death" for "The Kipper and the Corpse" and "Rat" for "Basil the Rat", which have been printed in some programme guides. In addition, some of the early BBC audio releases of episodes on vinyl and cassette included other variations, such as "Mrs. Richards" and "The Rat" for "Communication Problems" and "Basil the Rat" respectively.

In 2022, a "lost" scene cut from the episode "The Anniversary" (that went unfilmed) was uncovered as part of a script copy, featuring Basil climbing out his bedroom window to avoid sex with a drunken Sybil, who had wanted to make up.[40]

It has long been rumoured that a 13th episode of the series was written and filmed, but never progressed further than a rough cut.[41] Lars Holger Holm, author of the book Fawlty Towers: A Worshipper's Companion, has made detailed claims about the episode's content, but he provides no concrete evidence of its existence.[42]

On the subject of whether more episodes would be produced, Cleese said (in an interview for the complete DVD boxed set, which was republished in the book Fawlty Towers Fully Booked) that he once had the genesis of a feature-length special—possibly sometime during the mid-1990s. The plot, never fleshed out beyond his initial idea, would have revolved around the chaos that a now-retired Basil typically caused as he and Sybil flew to Barcelona to visit their former employee Manuel and his family. Of the idea, Cleese said:

We had an idea for a plot which I loved. Basil was finally invited to Spain to meet Manuel's family. He gets to Heathrow and then spends about 14 frustrating hours waiting for the flight. Finally, on the plane, a terrorist pulls a gun and tries to hijack the thing. Basil is so angry he overcomes the terrorist, and when the pilot says, "We have to fly back to Heathrow" Basil says, "No, fly us to Spain or I'll shoot you." He arrives in Spain, is immediately arrested, and spends the entire holiday in a Spanish jail. He is released just in time to go back on the plane with Sybil. It was very funny, but I couldn't do it at the time. Making "Fawlty Towers" work at 90 minutes was a very difficult proposition. You can build up the comedy for 30 minutes, but at that length there has to be a trough and another peak. It doesn't interest me. I don't want to do it.[43]

Cleese also may have been reluctant because of Connie Booth's unwillingness to be involved. She had practically retreated from public life after the show finished (and had been initially unwilling to collaborate on a second series, which explains the four-year gap between productions).

The decision by Cleese and Booth to quit before a third series has often been lauded as it ensured the show's successful status would not be weakened with later, lower-quality work. Subsequently, it has inspired the makers of other shows to do likewise. Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant refused to make a third series of either The Office or Extras, citing Fawlty Towers' short lifespan.[44][45] Rik Mayall, Ben Elton and Lise Mayer, the writers behind The Young Ones, which also ran for only two series (each with six episodes), used this explanation as well. Victoria Wood also indicated this influenced her decision to limit dinnerladies to 16 episodes over two series.[46]

The origins, background and eventual cancellation of the series were later humorously referenced in 1987's The Secret Policeman's Third Ball in a sketch in which Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry present Cleese—whom they comically misname "Jim Cleese"—with a Dick Emery Lifetime Achievement Award ("Silver Dick") for his contributions to comedy, then launch into a comical series of questions regarding the show, including Cleese's marriage and divorce from Booth, innocently ridiculing Cleese and reducing him to tears, to a point at which he gets on his knees and crawls off the stage while crying.

Series overview

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast airedNetwork
1619 September 1975 (1975-09-19)24 October 1975 (1975-10-24)BBC Two
2619 February 1979 (1979-02-19)25 October 1979 (1979-10-25)

Series 1 (1975)

[edit]
No.TitleSign readsOriginal air date
1"A Touch of Class"FAWLTY TOWERS (Crooked S)19 September 1975 (1975-09-19)

As Basil tries to raise the tone of the hotel, the aristocratic Lord Melbury comes to stay at the hotel. Basil fawns over him at every opportunity, causing himself to neglect or annoy other guests, until Polly discovers Melbury is actually a confidence trickster. Meanwhile, Sybil orders Basil to hang a picture.


Featuring: Michael Gwynn as Lord Melbury, Robin Ellis as Danny Brown, Martin Wyldeck as Sir Richard Morris, David Simeon as Mr. Mackenzie, Terence Conoley as Mr. Wareing and Lionel Wheeler as Mr. Watson.
2"The Builders"FAWLTY TOWER (Crooked L and missing S)26 September 1975 (1975-09-26)

Major renovations are made to the lobby while the Fawltys are out, but when a misreading causes the incompetent builders to mess it up spectacularly, Basil must try to remedy the situation before Sybil finds out.


Featuring: David Kelly as O'Reilly, James Appleby as Stubbs, George Lee as Delivery Man, Michael Cronin as Lurphy, Michael Halsey as Jones and Barney Dorman as Kerr.
3"The Wedding Party"FAW TY TOWER (Crooked W, missing L and missing S)3 October 1975 (1975-10-03)

Basil gets annoyed when a young, flirtatious couple start "hanky-pankying" under his nose and tries to avoid the advances of a female French antique dealer. Meanwhile, misfortune conspires to put him in compromising situations whenever the couple are around.


Featuring: Yvonne Gilan as Mrs. Peignoir, Conrad Phillips as Mr. Lloyd, Diana King as Mrs. Lloyd, Trevor Adams as Alan, April Walker as Jean and Jay Neill as Bar Guest.
4"The Hotel Inspectors"FAW TY TO ER (Missing L, missing W and missing S)10 October 1975 (1975-10-10)

When Basil hears of hotel inspectors roaming Torquay incognito, he realises with horror that guests he has been abusing could easily be among them. Basil becomes increasingly obsessed with trying to determine which guests are hotel inspectors, and gets frustrated when his suspects turn out not to be. But then, without warning, the real inspectors show up.


Featuring: Bernard Cribbins as Mr. Hutchinson, James Cossins as Mr. Walt, Geoffrey Morris as John (inspector) and Peter Brett as Brian (inspector).
5"Gourmet Night"WARTY TOWELS17 October 1975 (1975-10-17)

Basil holds a gourmet night to attract posher guests and climb Torquay's social ladder. Unfortunately, thanks to the chef's alcoholism, Basil must try to get hold of a duck from his friend, André. This, combined with the Fawltys' faulty car and his social awkwardness leads Basil ever closer to a nervous breakdown.


Featuring: André Maranne as André, Steve Plytas as Kurt, Allan Cuthbertson as Colonel Hall, Ann Way as Mrs. Hall, Richard Caldicot as Mr. Twitchen, Betty Huntley-Wright as Mrs. Twitchen, Jeffrey Segal as Mr. Heath, Elizabeth Benson as Mrs. Heath and Tony Page as Master Heath.
6"The Germans"None[note 1]24 October 1975 (1975-10-24)

With Sybil in the hospital with an ingrown toenail, a moose's head to hang up and some German guests arriving the next day, Basil has his work cut out for him. After an attempted fire drill goes wrong and Basil lands up in the hospital with concussion, he succeeds in causing much offence to the German guests after finally escaping back to the hotel. This episode is the origin of the quotation "Don't mention the war."


Featuring: Claire Davenport as Mrs. Wilson, Brenda Cowling as Sister, Louis Mahoney as Doctor, John Lawrence as Mr. Sharp, Iris Fry as Mrs. Sharp, Willy Bowman, Nick Kane, Lisa Bergmayr and Dan Gillan as German Guests.

Series 2 (1979)

[edit]

The second series was transmitted three-and-a-half years later, with the first episode being broadcast on 19 February 1979. Due to an industrial dispute at the BBC, which resulted in a strike, the final episode was not completed until well after the others, being finally shown as a one-off instalment on 25 October 1979. The cancelled episode on 19 March was replaced with a repeat of "Gourmet Night" from series 1. In the second series the anagrams were created by Ian McClane, the assistant floor manager. However, the only one which is actually a true anagram for the hotel's name is "Flowery Twats", created for "The Anniversary"

No.TitleSign readsOriginal air date
7"Communication Problems"FAWLTY TOWER (Crooked L and missing S)[note 2]19 February 1979 (1979-02-19)

The arrival of the "guest from hell" — Mrs. Richards, a rather deaf, domineering and bad-tempered woman — interferes with Basil's attempts to prevent the money he won on a racehorse from being discovered by Sybil, who disapproves of gambling.


Featuring: Joan Sanderson as Mrs Richards, Robert Lankesheer as Mr Thurston, Johnny Shannon as Mr Firkins, Bill Bradley as Mr Mackintosh, George Lee as Mr Kerr and Mervyn Pascoe as Mr Yardley.
8"The Psychiatrist"WATERY FOWLS26 February 1979 (1979-02-26)

A psychiatrist and his wife—also a doctor—come to the hotel for a weekend break, and notice all of Basil's odd behaviour. Initially enthused by his guests' class and professions, Basil is later perturbed when he discovers the doctor's specialty is psychiatry. Another guest, Mr Johnson, is secretly sharing his room with a woman and Basil becomes obsessed with catching him out, which leads to several incidents with a buxom Australian female guest, which gets him in trouble with Sybil.


Featuring: Nicky Henson as Mr Johnson, Basil Henson as Dr Abbott, Elspet Gray as Mrs Abbott, Luan Peters as Raylene Miles, Aimée Delamain as Mrs Johnson and Imogen Bickford-Smith as Girlfriend.
9"Waldorf Salad"FLAY OTTERS5 March 1979 (1979-03-05)

Basil is not altogether keen on a loud and demanding American guest who demands a higher class of service—and food—than Fawlty Towers is accustomed to providing. Basil soon learns that the American guest will not tolerate any shenanigans.


Featuring: Bruce Boa as Mr Hamilton, Claire Nielson as Mrs Hamilton, Norman Bird as Mr Arrad, Stella Tanner as Mrs Arrad, Terence Conoley as Mr Johnston, June Ellis as Mrs Johnston, Anthony Dawes as Mr Libson, Beatrice Shaw as Miss Gurke and Dorothy Frere as Miss Hare.
10"The Kipper and the Corpse"FATTY OWLS12 March 1979 (1979-03-12)

With no regard to Basil's blood pressure, a guest dies at the hotel and Basil and the staff are left with the unpleasant task of removing the body discreetly while the doctor staying at the hotel, Dr. Price, waits for his sausages. Also, Polly and Manuel feed an elderly woman's pampered pet dog some extra spicy sausages after it bites them both.


Featuring: Geoffrey Palmer as Dr Price, Mavis Pugh as Mrs Chase, Richard Davies as Mr White, Elizabeth Benson as Mrs White, Derek Royle as Mr Leeman, Robert McBain as Mr Xerxes, Pamela Buchner as Miss Young, Raymond Mason as Mr Zebedee, Charles McKeown as Mr Ingrams and Len Marten as Guest.
11"The Anniversary"FLOWERY TWATS26 March 1979 (1979-03-26)

Basil invites some friends for a surprise wedding anniversary party, but Sybil assumes he has forgotten their anniversary and storms off, leaving her husband and Polly, in disguise, desperately telling the others she is 'ill'...


Featuring: Ken Campbell as Roger, Una Stubbs as Alice, Robert Arnold as Arthur, Pat Keen as Virginia, Roger Hume as Reg, Denyse Alexander as Kitty and Christine Shaw as Audrey.
12"Basil the Rat"FARTY TOWELS25 October 1979 (1979-10-25)

The local health inspector notes and reads out a long list of hygiene infractions which the staff must rectify before his next visit, or else face closure. After Manuel's pet rat escapes from his cage and runs loose in the hotel, the staff must catch it before the inspector sees it. At the same time, they must discern which veal cutlets are safe to eat after one covered in rat poison gets mixed up with the others.


Featuring: John Quarmby as Mr Carnegie, David Neville as Ronald, Sabina Franklyn as Quentina, James Taylor as Mr Taylor, Melody Lang as Mrs Taylor and Stuart Sherwin as Guest.

Reception

[edit]

Critical reaction

[edit]

Contemporary

[edit]

At first, the series was not held in particularly high esteem. The Daily Mirror's review of the show in 1975 had the headline "Long John Short On Jokes".[47] One critic of the show was Richard Ingrams, then television reviewer for The Spectator, who wrote a caustic piece condemning the programme. Cleese got his revenge by naming one of the guests in the second series "Mr. Ingrams", who is caught in his room with a blow-up doll.[48] Eventually, though, as the series began to gain popularity, critical acclaim followed. Clive James writing in The Observer said the second episode had him "retching with laughter."[49]

Retrospective

[edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, Fawlty Towers has an aggregate score of 100% based on 14 critic reviews. The website's consensus reads: "Fawlty Towers looms large over British comedy with John Cleese's impeccably hapless performance and an endless array of exuberant slapstick—making for a supremely stimulating chuckler."[50]

In an interview for the "TV Characters" edition of Channel 4's "talking heads" strand 100 Greatest (in which Basil placed second, between Homer Simpson and Edmund Blackadder), TV critic A. A. Gill theorised that the initially muted response may have been caused by Cleese seemingly ditching his label as a comic revolutionary—earned through his years with Monty Python—to do something more traditional.[51]

In a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, voted for by industry professionals, Fawlty Towers was placed first. It was also voted fifth in the "Britain's Best Sitcom" poll in 2004,[52] and second only to Frasier in The Ultimate Sitcom poll of comedy writers in January 2006. Basil Fawlty came top of the Britain's Funniest Comedy Character poll, held by Five on 14 May 2006. In 1997, "The Germans" was ranked No. 12 on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time.[53] Empire magazine's 2024 list of the 100 greatest TV shows of all time ranks it at No. 22. The entry states:

One of British TV's greatest ever sitcoms, the central question of Fawlty Towers – why Basil Fawlty, the world's least hospitable man would go into hospitality in the first place – remains tantalisingly unanswered across 12 kipper-serving, Siberian hamster-hunting, German-baiting episodes. A straight zero on TripAdvisor, the very layout of Fawlty Towers itself offers comedy gold as Basil (John Cleese), his wife Sybil (Prunella Scales), waitress Polly (Connie Booth) and poor, benighted Manuel (Andrew Sachs) manoeuvre themselves (and the odd corpse) around its dowdy interior without ruining anyone's stay. Basil, needless to say, fails. Often and hilariously.[54]

Awards and accolades

[edit]

Three British Academy Television Awards (BAFTAs) were awarded to people for their involvement with the series. Both of the series were awarded the BAFTA in the category Best Scripted Comedy, the first being won by John Howard Davies in 1976, and the second by Douglas Argent and Bob Spiers in 1980. In 1980, Cleese received the BAFTA for Best Entertainment Performance.[55]

In a list drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, voted by industry professionals, Fawlty Towers was named the best British television series of all time.[56][57][58]

Legacy

[edit]
Waxwork of hapless waiter Manuel at Madame Tussauds, London

John Lennon was a fan of the show. He said in 1980: "I love Fawlty Towers. I'd like to be in that. [It's] the greatest show I've seen in years... what a masterpiece, a beautiful thing."[59] Kate Bush stated, "I still think Fawlty Towers is the best sitcom ever."[60] Filmmaker Martin Scorsese has remarked he is a great fan of Fawlty Towers and named "The Germans" as his favourite episode.[61] He described the scene with Basil impersonating Hitler as "so tasteless, it's hilarious".[17] Naming Fawlty Towers among the shows he loved growing up, comedy writer Graham Linehan cited the "farce elements" of the show as an influence for his much acclaimed sitcom Father Ted.[62]

Remakes, adaptations and reunions

[edit]

Three attempted remakes of Fawlty Towers were started for the American market, with two making it into production. The first, Chateau Snavely, starring Harvey Korman and Betty White, was produced by ABC for a pilot in 1978, but the transfer from coastal hotel to highway motel proved too much and the series was never produced. The second, also by ABC, was Amanda's, starring Bea Arthur, notable for switching the sexes of its Basil and Sybil equivalents. It also failed to attract a major audience and was dropped after ten episodes had been aired, despite 13 completed episodes.[63] A third remake, called Payne (produced by and starring John Larroquette), aired in 1999, but was cancelled shortly afterwards. Nine episodes were produced, of which eight aired on American television (though the complete run was broadcast overseas). A German pilot was made in 2001, named Zum letzten Kliff (To the last cliff), but no further episodes were made after its first series.

Popular American sitcoms 3rd Rock from the Sun and Cheers (in both of which Cleese made guest appearances) have cited Fawlty Towers as an inspiration, especially regarding its depiction of a dysfunctional workplace "family". Arthur Mathews and Graham Linehan have cited Fawlty as a major influence on their sitcom Father Ted. Guest House on Pakistan's PTV also resembled the series.

Several of the characters have made other appearances, as spinoffs or in small cameo roles. In 1981, in character as Manuel, Sachs recorded his own version of the Joe Dolce cod-Italian song "Shaddap You Face" (with the B-side "Waiter, There's a Spanish Flea in My Soup") but the record was not released because Dolce took out an injunction: he was about to issue his version in Britain.[64] Sachs also portrayed a Manuel-like character in a series of British TV advertisements for life insurance. Gilly Flower and Renee Roberts, who played elderly ladies Miss Tibbs and Miss Gatsby in the series, reprised their roles in a 1983 episode of Only Fools and Horses. In 2006, Cleese played Basil for the first time in 27 years, for an unofficial England 2006 World Cup song, "Don't Mention the World Cup", taking its name from the phrase, "Don't mention the war," which Basil used in the episode "The Germans".[65] In 2007, Cleese and Sachs reprised their roles for a six-episode corporate business video for the Norwegian oil company Statoil. In the video, Fawlty is running a restaurant called "Basil's Brasserie" while Manuel owns a Michelin-starred restaurant in London.[66]

In November 2007, Scales returned to play Sybil in a series of sketches for the BBC's annual Children in Need charity telethon. The character was seen taking over the management of the eponymous hotel from the BBC drama series Hotel Babylon, interacting with characters from that programme as well as other 1970s sitcom characters. The character of Sybil was used by Cleese's permission.[67] In 2007, the Los Angeles Film School produced seven episodes of Fawlty Tower Oxnard, starring Robert Romanus as Basil.[citation needed]

At a 2009 reunion event for the Gold channel as Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened, Cleese said that the cast would never make another episode of the series because they are "too old and tired" and expectations would be too high.[68]

In 2016, Cleese reprised his role as Basil in a series of TV adverts for High Street optician chain Specsavers.[69] The same year, Cleese and Booth reunited to create and co-write the official theatrical adaptation of Fawlty Towers, which premiered in Melbourne at the Comedy Theatre. It was critically well received, subsequently embarking on a successful tour of Australia.[70] Cleese was intimately involved in the creation of the stage version from the beginning, including casting. He visited Australia to promote, as well as oversee its success. Melbourne was chosen to premiere the adaptation due to the series' enduring popularity in Australia, and also as it had become a popular international test market for large-scale theatrical productions in recent years, having recently been the city where the revised Love Never Dies and the new King Kong also premiered. Cleese also noted he did not believe the London press would give the adaptation fair, unbiased reviews, so he deliberately chose to premiere it elsewhere.[71] On 2 February 2024, it was announced that the 2016 stage show based on Fawlty Towers would launch at London's Apollo Theatre later that year.[72]

Prior to the launch of the official Fawlty Towers theatrical adaptation in 2016, Cleese contested the legal validity of the Australian touring stage production, Faulty Towers The Dining Experience, and threatened to sue its creators; this subsequently led to the cancellation of the tribute show's US tour.[73][74]

Cleese suggested he was producing a sequel series in 2023, along with his daughter Camilla. The show is presumably under development at Castle Rock Entertainment, with Matthew George, Rob Reiner, Michele Reiner and Derrick Rossi as executive producers. The premise sees Basil (Cleese) trying to operate Fawlty Towers with help from his long-lost daughter (Camilla) and adjusting to the modern world.[75] Cleese admitted the company was too hasty in announcing the reboot, and that he only had "half an idea" being workshopped as of July 2023. He said that the series would "probably" be set in the Caribbean.[76] Cleese confirmed to GB News that the sequel series, unlike the original series, would not be broadcast on the BBC, feeling the broadcaster would have limited his creative freedom.[77]

Overseas

[edit]

In 1977 and 1978 alone, the original TV show was sold to 45 stations in 17 countries and was the BBC's best-selling overseas programme for that year. Fawlty Towers became a huge success in almost all countries in which it aired. Although it initially was a flop in Spain, largely because of the portrayal of the Spanish waiter Manuel, it was successfully resold with the Manuel character's nationality changed to Italian[21] except in Spain's Catalan region where Manuel was Mexican.[64] To show how badly it translated, Clive James picked up a clip containing Manuel's "¿Qué?" phrase to show on Clive James on Television in 1982. The series also briefly was broadcast in Italy in the 1990s on the satellite channel Canal Jimmy, in the original English with Italian subtitles.

In Australia, the show originally was broadcast on ABC Television, the first series in 1976 and the second series in 1980. The show then was sold to the Seven Network where it has been repeated numerous times.

Home media and merchandise

[edit]

Audio releases

[edit]

Four albums were released by BBC Records on vinyl LP and cassette. These consisted of the original television soundtracks, and from the second album onwards had additional voice-over from Sachs (in character as Manuel) describing scenes which relied on visual humour.

The first album, simply titled Fawlty Towers, was released in 1979 and contained audio from "Communication Problems" (as "Mrs Richards") and "Hotel Inspectors". The second album, Second Sitting, was released in 1981 and contained audio from "Basil the Rat" (as "The Rat") and "The Builders". Both of these first two albums reached the Top 30 of the UK Albums Chart.

At Your Service was released in 1982, and contained audio from "The Kipper and the Corpse" (as "Death") and "The Germans" (as "Fire Drill"). Finally, A La Carte was released in 1983, and contained audio from "Waldorf Salad" (as "The Americans") and "Gourmet Night".

The albums were re-released as double-cassette packs under the titles Fawlty Towers 1 and Fawlty Towers 2 in 1988. The remaining four episodes did not get an audio-only release until 1994 on audio cassette as Fawlty Towers 3.[78]

The first CD release of the audio versions was in a boxed set in 2003, titled Fawlty Towers—The Collector's Edition, which included spoken introductions to each episode by Cleese, and an interview with Scales and Sachs.[79]

The four vinyl records were reissued in a limited edition boxed set, along with the remaining four episodes on vinyl for the first time, for Record Store Day in 2021.[80]

Home media

[edit]

Fawlty Towers was originally released by BBC Video in 1984, with three episodes on each of four tapes. Each was edited with the credits from all three episodes put at the end of the tape. A LaserDisc containing all episodes spliced together as a continuous episode was released in the U.S. on 23 June 1993.[81] It was re-released in 1994, unedited but digitally remastered. It also was re-released in 1997 with a special interview with Cleese. Fawlty Towers—The Complete Series was released on DVD on 16 October 2001, available in regions 1, 2 and 4. A "Collector's Edition" is available in region 2.

The original DVD contained a slightly edited version of "The Kipper and the Corpse", in which Basil's line "Is it your legs?" (said to Mr Lehman when asking why he wants breakfast in bed) is missing. This line was restored in subsequent remasters.[82]

Series one was released on UMD Video for PSP. In July 2009, BBC America announced a DVD reissue, released on 20 October 2009. Titled Fawlty Towers Remastered: Special Edition, contains commentary by Cleese on every episode as well as remastered video and audio. All episodes were previously available as streamed video-on-demand via Britbox, Netflix and Amazon Prime Video. Additionally, both series were previously available for download on iTunes. In 2021 all episodes were made available on the BBC iPlayer.

Computer game

[edit]

A Fawlty Towers game was released on PC in 2000 and featured a number of interactive games, desktop-customizing content, and clips from the show.[83]

Books

[edit]

The original scripts were released in a hardback book by Methuen, The Complete Fawlty Towers, in 1988.[84]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This is the only episode of the twelve that does not feature the hotel as the backdrop for the titles. Footage of the Northwick Park Hospital in Brent was used instead, hence the sign is not shown.
  2. ^ This is the same opening shot as in episode 2, "The Builders", from Series 1.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Fawlty Towers". BBC TWO. BBC. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  2. ^ https://youtube.com/watch?v=utUhu2pUhP4
  3. ^ a b Busby, Mattha (9 April 2019). "Fawlty Towers named greatest ever British TV sitcom". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  4. ^ "100 Greatest TV Characters". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 31 May 2009. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  5. ^ "Fawlty Towers and Father Ted top list of Britain's favourite sitcoms". ITV News. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  6. ^ "Fawlty Towers". BBC. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  7. ^ Palin, Michael (2007). Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 24.
  8. ^ "John Cleese interview – part one". Parkinson. BBC. 2 August 2007. Archived from the original on 3 November 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  9. ^ "Sybil back at Fawlty Towers". BBC. 18 September 2006. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
  10. ^ a b "Real-life Sybil Fawlty dies aged 95". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  11. ^ a b Savill, Richard (18 May 2002). "Fawlty hotelier was bonkers, says waitress". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  12. ^ "Grand opening at Torquay retirement development". Churchill Retirement Living. Churchill Retirement Living Ltd. 30 August 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  13. ^ BBC Comedy Guide Doctor At Large. Retrieved 24 February 2007. Archived 24 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ a b c "John Cleese: BBC rejected first episode of Fawlty Towers". The Times. (subscription required)
  15. ^ Barr, Robert (6 May 2009). "John Cleese recalls golden age of 'Fawlty Towers'". Newsvine. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  16. ^ Gubler, Fritz (2008). Waldorf hysteria: hotel manners, misbehaviour & minibars. Great, Grand & Famous Hotels. ISBN 978-0-9804667-1-3.
  17. ^ a b McCann 2007
  18. ^ "Sybil to return to Fawlty Towers". BBC News. 9 August 2006.
  19. ^ "Fawlty star's red carpet welcome". BBC News. 18 September 2006.
  20. ^ Photographs of fire at Fawltysite.net. Retrieved 14 June 2006. Archived 19 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ a b Goddard, Peter. "FAWLTY TOWERS: British Situation Comedy". Museum of Broadcast Communications. Archived from the original on 9 May 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  22. ^ An Interview With John Cleese, 31 July 2016, retrieved 10 March 2023
  23. ^ McCann (2007)
  24. ^ a b c d e f "Fawlty Towers 40th anniversary: Britain's finest sitcom was TV's most perfectly constructed farce". The Independent. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  25. ^ "Fawlty Towers: 20 of Basil's best rants". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  26. ^ An Interview with John Cleese, DVD Special Programs, 2001
  27. ^ John Cleese, VHS or DVD cast interview, 1998
  28. ^ "Variety Club – Jewish Chronicle colour supplement "350 years"". The Jewish Chronicle. 15 December 2006. pp. 28–29.
  29. ^ Gómez Tato, David (9 January 2005). "Fawlty Towers: Volumen 1". DVDenlared (in Spanish). Sync Intertainment S.L. Archived from the original on 3 June 2009. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  30. ^ McCann 2007, p. 204
  31. ^ a b Slide, Anthony (1996). Some Joe you don't know: an American biographical guide to 100 British television personalities. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-313-29550-8.
  32. ^ a b Terrace, Vincent (1985). Encyclopedia of Television Series, Pilots and Specials: 1974–1984. VNR AG. p. 141. ISBN 0-918432-61-8.
  33. ^ Lawson, Mark (23 January 2013). "Fawlty Towers isn't racist. Major Gowen is". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
  34. ^ Bayha, Marlies (2009). Extras und Co- Die Faszination der Groteske: Eine Untersuchung der komödiantischen Sch(m)erzgrenze in der britischen Fernsehserie. GRIN Verlag. p. 20. ISBN 978-3-640-43074-1.
  35. ^ Foster, Paul (19 September 1975). "The war of the channel chuckles". Evening Times. p. 8.
  36. ^ Ross, Robert (1999). Monty Python encyclopedia. TV Books. pp. 63, 70. ISBN 978-1-57500-036-7.
  37. ^ Grewe, Alexander (17 October 2005). "I'm sick to death with you..." or External Character Conflicts in Fawlty Towers. grin.com. doi:10.3239/9783638428859. ISBN 978-3-638-42885-9.
  38. ^ "Remember all the variations on the Fawlty Towers hotel sign? Here's a quick reminder…". Metro. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
  39. ^ "Terence Conoley - British Comedy Guide". British Comedy Guide.
  40. ^ "Fawlty Towers 'lost scene' sees Basil hiding outside a window to avoid sex with a drunk Sybil". The Telegraph. 17 December 2022.
  41. ^ "fawltysite.net – Thirteenth Episode". 2004. Archived from the original on 3 April 2007.
  42. ^ Young, Bill (4 December 2005). "13th Episode Of Fawlty Towers? Basil and Numerology? Interview with Lars Holger Holm – Author of "Fawlty Towers – A Worshipper's Companion"". tellyspotting.kera.org. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
  43. ^ "Fawlty Towers: 10 things you never knew about the classic British sitcom". BT.com. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  44. ^ Berman, Garry (2011). Best of the Britcoms: From Fawlty Towers to The Office. Taylor Trade Publications. p. 19.
  45. ^ "First episode of Fawlty Towers". BBC. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  46. ^ Rees, Jasper. "Dinnerladies is served". Radio Times. Archived from the original on 8 June 2011. Retrieved 28 August 2012.
  47. ^ "Awards and audiences for Fawlty Towers". Fawltysite.net. Archived from the original on 11 February 2008. Retrieved 29 February 2008.
  48. ^ Sinclair, McKay (10 November 2007). "How they built Fawlty Towers". London: Fawltysite.net. Archived from the original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved 29 February 2008.
  49. ^ James, Clive (1981) [12 October 1975]. "Very Peter Hall". Visions Before Midnight (11 September 1981 ed.). Picador (published 1977). ISBN 978-0-330-26464-8.
  50. ^ "Fawlty Towers". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  51. ^ "100 Greatest ... (100 Greatest TV Characters (Part 1))". ITN Source. Archived from the original on 21 February 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
  52. ^ "Programmes categorised as Comedy". BBC. 1 January 1970. Archived from the original on 30 April 2013. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  53. ^ "Special Collector's Issue: 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time". TV Guide (28 June – 4 July). 1997.
  54. ^ "The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time". Empire. 28 June 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
  55. ^ "Awards Database – The BAFTA site". Bafta.org. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  56. ^ "Fawlty Towers". British Film Institute. The BFI TV 100. c. 2000. Archived from the original on 5 December 2003. Number 1 in the TV 100
  57. ^ "The best British TV ever". The Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group Limited. 10 March 2010. Retrieved 21 January 2016. And at number one is, of course, Fawlty Towers.
  58. ^ Duguid, Mark. "Fawlty Towers (1975, 79)". screenonline.org.uk. British Film Institute. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  59. ^ The Lennon Tapes, John Lennon and Yoko Ono in conversation with Andy Peebles, 6 December 1980, BBC Publications, 1981
  60. ^ "Kate Bush once named her favourite TV shows of all time". Far Out magazine. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  61. ^ Andrew Davidson, 14 May 1995, "Arts: to hell with Basil". The Independent. Retrieved 24 May 2019
  62. ^ "Small, Far Away: The World Of Father Ted Reviews". TV Guide. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
  63. ^ "Comedy – Fawlty Towers". BBC. 24 September 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  64. ^ a b "Manuel the Spanish waiter played by Andrew Sachs in Fawlty Towers". Archived from the original on 12 June 2010. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  65. ^ Sherwin, Adam; Hoyle, Ben (15 May 2006). "The Don't mention the War, says Cleese in World Cup peace bid". The Times. Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  66. ^ "Basil's back : News 2007 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". Chortle. 12 July 2007. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  67. ^ "The Inside Story". Radio Times. Vol. 335, no. 4361. 10–13 November 2007. p. 126.
  68. ^ "Cleese rules out return of Fawlty". BBC News. 6 May 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  69. ^ "John Cleese returns as Basil Fawlty in Specsavers ad". The Guardian. 6 January 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  70. ^ "Official website of the Stage Adaptation". Retrieved 1 January 2017.
  71. ^ "John Cleese to debut "Fawlty Towers Live" in Australia because Brits don't like him". The Sydney Morning Herald. 22 March 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
  72. ^ McIntosh, Steven (2 February 2024). "Fawlty Towers stage show heads to London's West End". BBC News. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  73. ^ Hunt, Elle (23 March 2016). "John Cleese may sue Australian theatre company over Fawlty Towers rip-off". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
  74. ^ "John Cleese may sue Fawlty Towers 'rip-off'". BBC News.
  75. ^ Ramachandran, Naman (7 February 2023). "'Fawlty Towers' Set for Revival at Castle Rock, With John Cleese, Camilla Cleese to Write and Star". Variety Magazine. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
  76. ^ "The 'uncancellable' John Cleese on Polanski, Putin and the coming apocalypse". South China Morning Post. 1 July 2023. Retrieved 24 August 2023.
  77. ^ Lewis, Isobel (10 February 2023). "John Cleese on prediction Fawlty Towers revival will be about 'wokery': 'The idea hadn't occurred to me'". The Independent. Retrieved 21 July 2024.
  78. ^ "Discogs – Fawlty Towers". Discogs. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
  79. ^ "Discogs – Fawlty Towers". Discogs. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  80. ^ "Fawlty Towers For The Record". Record Store Day. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
  81. ^ Fawlty Towers Complete : John Cleese : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive, 1975, retrieved 26 December 2023
  82. ^ "Fawlty Towers episode guide". Fawltysite.net. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
  83. ^ Cobbett, Richard (19 October 2013). "Saturday Crapshoot: Fawlty Towers". PC Gamer. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  84. ^ The Complete Fawlty Towers. ASIN 0413183904.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]