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Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge

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Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge
GenreComedy
(spoof chat show)
Created bySteve Coogan
Armando Iannucci
Patrick Marber
StarringSteve Coogan
Steve Brown
Rebecca Front
Patrick Marber
David Schneider
Doon Mackichan
Theme music composerABBA
Opening theme"Knowing Me, Knowing You" by the Steve Brown Band
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes7 including one Christmas special (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerPeter Fincham
ProducerArmando Iannucci
Running time28-32 minutes. Christmas Special 46 min.
Original release
NetworkBBC2
Release16 September –
21 October 1994
(Christmas Special shown on 29 December 1995)

Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge (also known as Knowing Me Knowing You or abbreviated to KMKYWAP) is a British comedy show first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 as a six-episode series, which subsequently transferred to BBC Television with a series of six episodes (beginning 16 September 1994), and a Christmas special (Knowing Me Knowing Yule) in 1995. It is named after the song "Knowing Me, Knowing You" by ABBA (Alan Partridge's favourite band), which was used as the show's title music.

The show was a parody of a chat show, and both the radio and television versions were so embarrassingly accurate that listeners and viewers often thought they were the real thing. Many wrote in to complain, for example, at Partridge slapping a child prodigy in an episode of the radio series. The series did feature an audience who clearly knew the show was a parody, but apparently this wasn't enough to persuade some listeners that it wasn't real.

Steve Coogan played the incompetent and annoying but self-satisfied Norwich-based host, Alan Partridge. Alan was a spin-off character from the spoof radio show On the Hour (which later transferred to TV as The Day Today).

Knowing Me Knowing You was written by Coogan, Armando Iannucci (who produced the radio version) and Patrick Marber (who also starred), with contributions from the regular supporting cast of Doon Mackichan, Rebecca Front and David Schneider, who made up Alan's weekly onslaught of annoying and inane guests. Steve Brown also appeared as the man in charge of the house band, Glenn Ponder, and provided the show's music and arrangements for real.

Some of the more notable ‘guests’ parodied real life appearances by guests on chat shows. For example, the medical fashion parade by ‘Mrs Whippy Head’ is clearly a reference to Vivienne Westwood's infamous appearance on Wogan, and the child prodigy Simon Fisher's appearance in the radio series was seemingly inspired by James Harries' (now Lauren Harries) appearance on the same show. Adam Wells' fictional pop single "The Smiling Bicycle Of Amsterdam" utilised as its backing track John Baker's (BBC Radiophonic Workshop) 1968 station ID for BBC Radio Nottingham. The theme was also used in On The Hour.

Alan went on to appear in two series of the sitcom I'm Alan Partridge, following Alan's life after his sacking from TV after punching the commissioning editor of BBC2 (David Schneider) on his Christmas special, shortly after his wife left him.

In total there have been three 'official' versions of the television series prepared by producer Armando Iannucci - the originally transmitted half-hour version (also used in most repeats and abroad), a version extended by roughly five minutes per episode for the VHS and subsequent DVD release, and a version - presumably definitive - prepared for BBC2's 2002 Partridge repeat season, again in a thirty minute slot but now featuring reinstated material from the video version (such as Partridge's promotion of the Sprunt drink) and a generally tighter edit to compensate for the running time, in addition to the Partridge web address being added to the end credits. This version has not been utilised since.

Radio episodes

Transmission date Rebecca Front David Schneider Patrick Marber Doon Mackichan Other guests Notes
1 1 December 1992 Ally Tennant, feminist and therapist Peter, therapy patient; "Vegina" voice-actor Adam Wells, Sixties figure and businessman; Lawrence Camley, highbrow novelist Linda, therapy patient
2 8 December 1992 Janey Katz, hypnotherapist Simon Fisher's father, John Nick Ford, "queer" lawyer Simon Fisher, child prodigy
3 15 December 1992 Shirley Dee, showbiz Cockney Chris Lester, former hostage Michel Lambert, racing driver; Phil Collins, Lester's fellow hostage
4 22 December 1992 The Duchess of Stranraer, member of the royal family Matt Bradley, gigolo Steve Thompson, impressionist and comedian; Craig Bradley, gigolo Sandra Peaks, Junior Minister for Housing
5 29 December 1992 Sally Hoff, actress/singer Bernie Rosen, Jewish comedian Conrad Knight, actor and Sally's husband; Jack 'the Black Cat' Calson, professional gambler Kendall Ball, Supermodel and episode co-host Live from Las Vegas
6 5 January 1993 Yvonne Boyd, fashion designer Tony Hayers, Commissioning Director of BBC Television Lord Morgan of Glossop, irascible peer Trudy Sky, host of The Show on Def Two
7 3 July 1993 Documentary-style programme called Knowing Knowing Me, Knowing You

Characters carried over into the TV series

Several characters from the radio series are similar to ones used in the TV series; several jokes are even reused. Doon MacKichan's character Kendall Ball did not make it into the eventual TV series but did appear in The Day Today, made between the two incarnations.

Radio TV
Bernie Rosen Joe Beasley
Tony Hayers Tony Hayers
Sally Hoff Tania Beaumont
Conrad Knight Gary Barker
Lord Morgan of Glossop Forbes McAllister
Yvonne Boyd Yvonne Boyd

Television episodes

Subject House band Rebecca Front Patrick Marber David Schneider Doon Mackichan Other guests Another Alan
1 ‘Roger Moore’ Glenn Ponder and Chalet Sue Lewis, a dull showjumper Keith Hunt, new host of This Is Your Life Big Red Book on This Is Your Life (untransmitted sequence) Shona McGough, an abrasive punk singer Keith's son, Shona's band, Roger Moore (voice; performed by Steve Coogan) -
2 ‘Moribund’ Glenn Ponder and Debonair Tania Beaumont, actress Gary Barker, washed-up actor and Tania's husband Tony LeMesmer, magician - Daniella Forrest, transsexual Playboy columnist (Minnie Driver) A sailor with a facial tic (John Thomson)
3 ‘Hot’ Glenn Ponder and Ferrari Gina Langland, singer Lawrence Knowles, sleazy promoter Clive Sealy, Lawrence's dermatologist - The Olympic Golden Girls of 1936; Hot Pants, an all-male strip troupe -
4 ‘A Partridge in Paris’ Glenn Ponder and Savoir Faire Yvonne Boyd, fashion designer with odd ideas Philippe Lambert, famous chef Head of Cirque des Clunes - Nina Vanier, Alan's French co-host (Melanie Hudson) Alain Perdrix, who couldn't speak English
5 ‘Partridge Over Britain’ Glenn Ponder and Lazarus Charlotte Fraser (Lab) Martin Dwyer, alias Lt. Col. Kojak Slaphead III (Bald Brummies Against The Big-Footed Conspiracy Party) Adrian Finch (Con) - Terry Norton, dodgy boxing promoter (Alan Ford); Five Miss Norwich contestants (Barbara Durkin, plus four uncredited); Ronald Biggs (Lib Dem) (Felix Dexter) Dead, but appeared anyway
6 ‘It Is a Live Show’ Glenn Ponder and Bangkok Bridie McMahon, lesbian host of the show to take Alan's place Forbes McAllister, cynical restaurant critic for The Spectator - Wanda Harvey, Bridie's lesbian co-host The Alan Partridge Playmates; the Maclean brothers, irritating child film-makers; Joe Beazley and Cheeky Monkey, awful ventriloquist act (John Thomson) -
7 ‘Knowing Me, Knowing Yule’ Glenn Ponder and his "friend" Andy Mary, a bellringer and devout Christian Gordon Heron, a paralysed former golfer Tony Hayers, Chief Commissioning Editor of BBC Television Liz Heron, Gordon's wife and also a golfer Fanny Thomas, innuendo-using transvestite (Kevin Eldon), Mick Hucknall -

References