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Conceived while Atkinson and Curtis were working on ''[[Not the Nine O'Clock News]]'', the series presents medieval issues in Britain in a humorous and often anachronistic manner—[[witchcraft]], [[Primogeniture|royal succession]], [[List of conflicts in Europe|European relations]], the [[Crusade]]s and the conflict between [[the Crown]] and [[History of the Church of England|the Church]]. The filming of the series was ambitious, as it featured a large cast and required extensive [[location shooting]].<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084988/trivia Trivia] at the [[Internet Movie Database]]. Retrieved 17 April 2008</ref> [[Shakespeare's influence|Shakespearean dialogue]] is sometimes adapted for comic effect.<ref name="Interviews">''I Have a Cunning Plan—20th Anniversary of Blackadder'', [[BBC Radio 4]] documentary broadcast, 23 August 2003. Excerpts available at [https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/blackadder/interviews/ bbc.co.uk] and [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00f4hy2 Blackadder] at [[BBC Two]]. Retrieved 30 July 2016</ref> Despite winning an [[International Emmy]], ''The Black Adder'' is regarded by its creators and most critics as the weakest ''Blackadder'' series.<ref name=ridesagain/> |
Conceived while Atkinson and Curtis were working on ''[[Not the Nine O'Clock News]]'', the series presents medieval issues in Britain in a humorous and often anachronistic manner—[[witchcraft]], [[Primogeniture|royal succession]], [[List of conflicts in Europe|European relations]], the [[Crusade]]s and the conflict between [[the Crown]] and [[History of the Church of England|the Church]]. The filming of the series was ambitious, as it featured a large cast and required extensive [[location shooting]].<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084988/trivia Trivia] at the [[Internet Movie Database]]. Retrieved 17 April 2008</ref> [[Shakespeare's influence|Shakespearean dialogue]] is sometimes adapted for comic effect.<ref name="Interviews">''I Have a Cunning Plan—20th Anniversary of Blackadder'', [[BBC Radio 4]] documentary broadcast, 23 August 2003. Excerpts available at [https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/blackadder/interviews/ bbc.co.uk] and [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00f4hy2 Blackadder] at [[BBC Two]]. Retrieved 30 July 2016</ref> Despite winning an [[International Emmy]], ''The Black Adder'' is regarded by its creators and most critics as the weakest ''Blackadder'' series.<ref name=ridesagain/> |
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A follow-up series, ''[[Blackadder II]]'', was released in 1986. |
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
Revision as of 19:05, 19 January 2024
The Black Adder | |
---|---|
Written by | |
Directed by | Martin Shardlow |
Starring | |
Narrated by | Patrick Allen |
Theme music composer | Howard Goodall |
Country of origin |
|
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Producer | John Lloyd |
Running time | 33 minutes (approx) |
Production companies | |
Original release | |
Network | BBC 1 |
Release | 15 June 20 July 1983 | –
Related | |
Unaired pilot Blackadder II |
The Black Adder is the first series of the BBC sitcom Blackadder, written by Richard Curtis and Rowan Atkinson, directed by Martin Shardlow and produced by John Lloyd. The series was originally aired on BBC 1 from 15 June 1983 to 20 July 1983, and was a joint production with the Australian Seven Network. Set in 1485 at the end of the British Middle Ages, the series is written as a secret history which contends that King Richard III won the Battle of Bosworth Field, only to be unintentionally assassinated by his nephew's son Edmund and succeeded by said nephew, Richard IV, one of the Princes in the Tower. The series follows the exploits of Richard IV's unfavoured second son Edmund (who calls himself "The Black Adder") in his various attempts to increase his standing with his father and, in the final episode, his quest to overthrow him.[1]
Conceived while Atkinson and Curtis were working on Not the Nine O'Clock News, the series presents medieval issues in Britain in a humorous and often anachronistic manner—witchcraft, royal succession, European relations, the Crusades and the conflict between the Crown and the Church. The filming of the series was ambitious, as it featured a large cast and required extensive location shooting.[2] Shakespearean dialogue is sometimes adapted for comic effect.[3] Despite winning an International Emmy, The Black Adder is regarded by its creators and most critics as the weakest Blackadder series.[4]
A follow-up series, Blackadder II, was released in 1986.
Plot
Set in the Middle Ages, the series is written as an alternative history. It opens on 21 August 1485, the eve of the Battle of Bosworth Field, which in the series is won not by Henry Tudor (as in reality) but by Richard III. Richard III, played by Peter Cook, is presented as a good king who doted on his nephews, contrary to the Shakespearean view of him as a hunchbacked, infanticidal monster.
After his victory in the battle, Richard III is unintentionally killed by Lord Edmund Plantagenet; Richard attempts to take Edmund's horse, which he was only borrowing it for losing his steed. Not recognizing the king, Edmund thinks Richard is stealing it and cuts his head off. The late King's nephew, Richard, Duke of York (played by Brian Blessed) who is Lord Edmund Plantagenet's father, is then crowned as Richard IV. Lord Edmund himself did not take part in the battle after arriving late, but later claims to have killed 450 peasants and several nobles, one of whom had actually been killed by his brother in the battle.[5]
King Richard IV of England and XII of Scotland and his Queen Gertrude of Flanders have two sons: Harry, Prince of Wales and his younger brother Prince Edmund. Of the two, Harry is by far his father's favourite, the King barely acknowledging his second son's existence. It is a running gag throughout the series that Edmund's father cannot even remember his name.[6] However, despite his mostly dismissive attitude toward his second son, the King actually loves Edmund very dearly, partially due to their father-son relationship; in the third episode, when Edmund becomes the Archbishop of Canterbury and helps his father to secure some land from a dying noble before the church can, the King proudly acknowledges Edmund as his son, embraces him and even mentions to the Queen that Edmund has "turned out well", and in the series' finale, on Edmund's deathbed, the King does his best to console him, assuring him that his soul will go to Heaven, and has the entire court drink a toast in his honour.
Using this premise, the series follows the fictitious reign of Richard IV (1485–1498) through the experiences of Prince Edmund, who styles himself as "The Black Adder", and his two sidekicks: the imbecilic Lord Percy Percy, the Duke of Northumberland (Tim McInnerny); and Baldrick (Tony Robinson), a more intelligent servant who Edmund takes on as his squire.
By the end of the series, events converge with accepted history, when King Richard IV and his entire family are poisoned, allowing Henry Tudor to come out of hiding and take the throne as King Henry VII. He then rewrites history, presenting Richard III as a monster, and eliminating Richard IV's reign from the history books. In reality, Richard, Duke of York, one of the Princes in the Tower, was only twelve years old (and perhaps two years dead) when the Battle of Bosworth Field took place in 1485, and thus too young to have had two adult sons. Henry Tudor seemingly also falsified the history of Scotland and Ireland: Richard IV is said to be king of England, Scotland and Ireland, and Prince Edmund has the title of Duke of Edinburgh, whereas in reality Ireland was not a kingdom until 1542 and Scotland continued to have a separate royal house until 1603.
Episodes
The episodes in this series, written by Rowan Atkinson and Richard Curtis, were originally shown on BBC 1 on Wednesday evenings, 21:25–22:00.[7] Each episode ran for roughly 33 minutes. The series began on 15 June 1983.
Each of the episodes was based on a medieval theme – the Wars of the Roses, the Crusades and royal succession, the conflict between the Crown and the Church, arranged marriages between monarchies, the Plague and witchcraft, and a planned coup d'état in the final episode.
The series was broadcast shortly after the BBC Television Shakespeare productions of Shakespeare's four plays about the Wars of the Roses: the three-part Henry VI plays, followed by Richard III, which was first shown on 23 January 1983. Some of the same actors were used to enhance the parody of Shakespearean history. Ron Cook, who played Richard III in the Shakespeare productions, is cast as the villainous "Sean the Irish Bastard". Peter Benson, who played Shakespeare's Henry VI, played Henry VII in the first episode.
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "The Foretelling" | Martin Shardlow | Richard Curtis & Rowan Atkinson | 15 June 1983 | |
As the Wars of the Roses reach their climax, Edmund arrives late for battle and accidentally kills the King and becomes a prince when Richard IV becomes king. With the ghost of Richard III haunting Edmund's every waking moment, he must do his best to keep it a secret, until three wise women give Edmund some seemingly fantastic news. Guest starring Peter Cook as King Richard III. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Born to Be King" | Martin Shardlow | Richard Curtis & Rowan Atkinson | 6 July 1983[8] | |
Edmund plots revenge when Dougal McAngus, the King's Supreme Commander, arrives and is given Edmund's lands by Harry acting as Regent. Edmund decides to kill McAngus in a play, but discovers that McAngus has secrets about Edmund's mother which could make Edmund king. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "The Archbishop" | Martin Shardlow | Richard Curtis & Rowan Atkinson | 29 June 1983 | |
King Richard announces that he will make his son Archbishop of Canterbury. Edmund discovers that if his brother Harry becomes the archbishop, he will be killed and Edmund will become king. Unfortunately, the King appoints Edmund as Archbishop, then unintentionally sends two knights to kill him. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "The Queen of Spain's Beard" | Martin Shardlow | Richard Curtis & Rowan Atkinson | 22 June 1983[8] | |
Edmund thinks he is marrying a beautiful princess, but discovers that his future bride is an ugly Spanish Infanta. With the help of Baldrick and Percy, Edmund strives to stop the wedding. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "Witchsmeller Pursuivant" | Martin Shardlow | Richard Curtis & Rowan Atkinson | 13 July 1983 | |
After a witch test goes wrong, Edmund is accused of being a witch, and the witchsmeller does everything to make everyone believe Edmund really is a witch. Guest starring Frank Finlay as The Witchsmeller. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "The Black Seal" | Martin Shardlow | Richard Curtis & Rowan Atkinson | 20 July 1983 | |
When all of Edmund's titles are removed except Warden of the Royal Privies, he is furious and decides to raise an army of six of the most ruthless bandits in all the lands to seize the throne and become king. Featuring Patrick Allen (who also narrated the series) as Phillip of Burgundy. |
Character development
In this series, the character of the Black Adder is somewhat different from later incarnations, being largely unintelligent, naive, and snivelling. The character does evolve through the series, however, and he begins showing signs of what his descendants will be like by the final episode, where he begins insulting everyone around him and making his own plans. This evolution follows naturally from the character's situation. "The Black Adder" is the title that Edmund adopts during the first episode (after first considering "The Black Vegetable").[5] Presumably one of his descendants adopted it as a surname before Blackadder II, in which the title character becomes "Edmund Blackadder". Furthermore, Baldrick is shown in more favourable and intelligent light here than in subsequent series – his 'cunning plans' are typically superior to and more workable than Edmund's own. Starting from the second series, the characters' relative intelligence and naiveté clearly switch.
Production
Development
Rowan Atkinson and Richard Curtis developed the idea for the sitcom while working on Not the Nine O'Clock News. Eager to avoid comparisons to the critically acclaimed Fawlty Towers, they proposed the idea of a historical sitcom.[3][9] An unaired pilot episode was made in 1982, and a six-episode series was commissioned.
In the unaired pilot episode, covering the basic plot of "Born to Be King", Rowan Atkinson speaks, dresses and generally looks and acts like the later Blackadder descendants of the second series onwards, but no reason is given as to why he was instead changed to a snivelling wretch for the first series. Richard Curtis has stated he cannot remember the exact reason, but has suggested it was because they wanted to have a more complicated character (implying that the change was driven by the writing) instead of a swaggering lead from the pilot.[9]
Curtis admitted in a 2004 documentary that just before recording began, producer John Lloyd came up to him with Atkinson and asked what Edmund's character was. Curtis then realised that, despite writing some funny lines, he had no idea how Rowan Atkinson was supposed to play his part.[10] On the 25th anniversary documentary Blackadder Rides Again, Atkinson added that as the cameras were about to roll for the first time, he suddenly realised he wasn't even sure what voice to use for the character.[4]
Filming
The budget for the series was considerable, with much location shooting particularly at Alnwick Castle in Northumberland and the surrounding countryside in February 1983.[11][12] Brinkburn Priory, an authentic reconstruction of a medieval monastery church, was used for the episode "The Archbishop".[13] The series also used large casts of extras, as well as horses and expensive medieval-style costumes. Filming at the castle was hindered by bad weather – snow is visible in many of the outdoor location shots.[4]
For the duration of the production, Atkinson endured having his hair trimmed in an unflattering medieval style and wearing a selection of "priapic codpieces".[3] Atkinson has said about the making of the first series:
The first series was odd, it was very extravagant. It cost a million pounds for the six programmes ... [which] was a lot of money to spend ... It looked great, but it wasn't as consistently funny as we would have liked.[3]
Cast
Robinson said in 2003 that he was originally flattered to be offered a part and it was only later he found that other small-part actors had also been offered the role and turned it down.[3] The series guest-starred noted actors including Peter Cook and Peter Benson in "The Foretelling"; Miriam Margolyes and Jim Broadbent in "The Queen of Spain's Beard"; Frank Finlay in "Witchsmeller Pursuivant"; and Rik Mayall and Patrick Allen (who also narrated the series) in "The Black Seal".[14]
Title sequence and music
The title sequence included stock shots of Edmund riding his horse on location, interspersed with shots of him doing silly things (and, usually, a shot of King Richard IV to go with Brian Blessed's credit). The closing titles were a similar sequence of Edmund riding, eventually falling off his horse, after which the camera continues following the horse as it goes on running. All the credits of the first series featured eccentric orderings of the cast list (such as "order of precedence", "order of witchiness" and "order of disappearance") and included "with additional dialogue by William Shakespeare" and "made in glorious television".[15]
The series used the first incarnation of the Blackadder theme by Howard Goodall (with the exception of the unaired pilot, which featured a different arrangement).[16] For the opening theme, a trumpet solo accompanied by an orchestra was used. For the end titles, the theme gained mock-heroic lyrics sung by a baritone (Simon Carrington, a member of the King's Singers). In the final episode, the theme was sung with altered lyrics by a treble, in a more reflective style. The series' incidental music was unusually performed by pipe organ and percussion.[17]
Awards and criticism
The series won an International Emmy award in the popular arts category in 1983.[18] The four series of Blackadder were voted into second place in the BBC's Britain's Best Sitcom in 2004 with 282,106 votes, although the series' advocate, John Sergeant, was not complimentary of the first series, suggesting it was "grandiose, confused and expensive".[19][20]
Members of the cast and crew, looking back for the documentary Blackadder Rides Again, are also not particularly complimentary of the first series. John Lloyd recalls that a colleague commented at the time that the series "looks a million dollars, but cost a million pounds", although he admits that they were proud of the result at the time.[4] Due to the high cost of the first series, the controller of BBC1 when the second series was commissioned, Michael Grade, was reluctant to authorise a second series without major improvements and cost-cutting, leaving a gap of three years before Blackadder II was broadcast, on the condition that it remained largely studio-bound.[18]
Releases
The complete series of The Black Adder is available as a Region 2 DVD from BBC Worldwide, as well as in a complete box set with the other series. The series is also available in Region 1 DVD in a box set of the complete series. "The Complete Collected Series 1, 2, 3, 4 and Specials", a 15-disc complete set of audiobooks published by BBC Audiobooks Ltd, was released in 2009. A selection of one-off episodes, documentaries and other appearances by "Blackadder" are featured, with some of this extra material being released on audio for the first time.
VHS releases
On 5 February 1990, BBC Enterprises Ltd released all 6 episodes of The Black Adder on two single videos and on 7 September 1992 all 6 episodes of The Blackadder were re-released on 'Complete' double VHS releases. All 6 episodes were re-released on a single video release on 2 October 1995.
References
- ^ The Black Adder at the BBC Comedy Guide. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ Trivia at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ a b c d e I Have a Cunning Plan—20th Anniversary of Blackadder, BBC Radio 4 documentary broadcast, 23 August 2003. Excerpts available at bbc.co.uk and Blackadder at BBC Two. Retrieved 30 July 2016
- ^ a b c d Blackadder Rides Again, 2009 BBC Television/Tiger Aspect documentary
- ^ a b M.Shardlow (1 November 1999). The Black Adder episode 1 "The Foretelling" (DVD). United Kingdom: BBC Worldwide.
- ^ M.Shardlow (1 November 1999). The Black Adder episode 6 'The Black Seal' (DVD). United Kingdom: BBC Worldwide.
- ^ "The Black Adder", bbc.co.uk minisite. Retrieved 17 April 2008.
- ^ a b The True History of the Black Adder, ISBN 978-1-8480-9346-1, pp. 125, p 419-420
- ^ a b Interview at Blackadder Hall. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ Britain's Best Sitcom – Blackadder, 2004 BBC Television documentary, presented by John Sergeant
- ^ Alnwick Castle official website Archived 17 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 2 June 2008
- ^ Locations at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ Brinkburn Priory, retrieved 9 August 2010
- ^ Cast at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 19 April 2008
- ^ Credits at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ The Black Adder theme Archived 4 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine at Howard Goodall's official website. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ Howard Goodall official website Archived 4 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ a b Lewisohn, Mark, The Black Adder at the former BBC Guide to Comedy. Retrieved 17 April 2008
- ^ "The final top-ten of Britain’s Best Sitcom", retrieved 4 April 2008
- ^ Britain's Best Sitcom – Blackadder. Retrieved 25 April 2008
External links
- The Black Adder (1983) at IMDb
- The Black Adder at the BBC Comedy Guide
- 1980s British sitcoms
- 1983 British television series debuts
- 1983 British television series endings
- Alternate history television series
- BBC black comedy television shows
- BBC television sitcoms
- Blackadder
- British parody television series
- English-language television shows
- Fiction set in the 1480s
- Cultural depictions of Henry VII of England
- House of York
- Cultural depictions of Richard III of England
- Television series set in the 15th century
- Television series created by Rowan Atkinson
- Television series created by Richard Curtis
- Television shows set in England
- Television series set in castles