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Why Bother?: Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling in Conversation with Chris Morris (BBC Radio Collection) | 
enlarge | Creators: Peter Cook, Chris Morris Publisher: BBC Audiobooks Ltd Category: Book
List Price: £8.80 Buy New: £4.88 You Save: £3.92 (45%)
New (9) Used (5) from £3.99
Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 31651
Format: Audiobook Media: Audio CD Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.5
ISBN: 0563558601 Dewey Decimal Number: 817 EAN: 9780563558606 ASIN: 0563558601
Publication Date: March 1, 1999 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New. Shipped from UK Mainland. Delivery is usually 2 - 3 working days from order by Royal Mail, International Delivery is by Airmail.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Why bother indeed? January 6, 2009 Crookedmouth (Farnborough) I'm sorry, but I hated it! I've heard and read snippets of Sir Arthur's interviews with Dudley Moore over the years and in particular I found the "Frog a la Peche" routine side-achingly funny. As this CD seemed to be the only way of getting more, I bought it in keen anticipation of a hilarious hour or so of Peter Cook at his best. I even bought a towel to sit on to keep the sofa dry. How wrong I was. It turned out to be as much about Chris Morris as anything else. Never my favourite comedian, I found his bullying approach to be totally overwhelming and I began to feel a bit sorry for Cook and resentful of how Morris appeared to be trying to take over the routine. Admittedly there remain flashes of Cook's talent (hence the two stars) but they are largely lost in Morris' "how silly & surreal can I make this?" hounding, hectoring. If only he could have let Sir Arthur follow his own course, perhaps guiding rather than dragging, then this would have been a fitting record for posterity of an outstanding comic genius.
Inconceivably hilarious September 10, 2006 C. Mcsloy (Nowhere in particular today) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is by far the funniest cd I have ever had the pleasure to hear , and certainly the best thing either Morris or Cooke have ever done. It is made up of five ten-minute mock interviews with Morris playing the role of a brusque journalist getting perhaps the last interview with an aging Sir Arthur Street-Greebling. After all Sir Arthur is to "anyone who can see him quite clearly nearing death". Morris is a perfect foil for Cooke, never letting him take the easy route, forcing him to come up with killer one-liner after killer one-liner, and just when Peter is getting comfortable with the way the interview is going, Morris ask's him a question that you are sure is going to make the whole improvisation collapse but Cooke manages to keep it on the tracks, sending it careering up some surreal junction. The funniest track is the one about Sir Arthur Street-Greeblings discovery of the fosilised remains of the infant Christ-child. When asked why he hasn't told the Vatican about his discovery he replies "It's none of their business... and it is a business". He then goes on to describe his plans to market minature clones of Jesus in "the usual manner". Morris then asks if he fears that Christ will try to remonstrate in some way, to which Arthur counters "well he can try, but he'll be pretty lost without the batteries". Anyway just buy the damn thing. It's not as funny in type, you just have to hear it.
Less than the sum of its parts September 12, 2003 10 out of 27 found this review helpful
Peter Cook and Chris Morris are two of my favorite performers. So I was delighted at the prospect of their collaboration. Unfortunately it doesn't get close to Derek and Clive or Jam or Brass Eye in the humour stakes. It isn't bad but these are two great satirists who didn't quite have the right chemistry together.
Definately DO bother. April 25, 2003 11 out of 15 found this review helpful
This is a sublime piece of improvisation from two of the greatest talents in modern comedy.
Sublime July 29, 2002 Mr. John Phillips (West Midlands, UK) 77 out of 83 found this review helpful
I've lent this tape to several people and not a single one realised that Cook improvised the whole thing. That is a mark of genius. Cook's character, Sir Arthur Streeb-Greeblng (not to be confused with his nemesis, Sir Arthur Greeb-Streebling), is a comic gold mine, and having aged a lot since his appearances on Not Only ... But Also, has become something not entirely dissimilar to the Fast Show's Rowley Birkin, but far funnier. It's truly wonderful that that the careers of Peter Cook and Chris Morris, in many ways Cook's obvious successor, overlapped enough for us to hear them work together. Morris has a frustrating habit of trying too hard to be contraversial (the awful Brass Eye special springs to mind), but he can be a truly brilliant surrealist when he's not trying to upset people. Morris doesn't say much on "Why Bother", but does a great job of forcing Cook into improvising. It's obvious at times that Cook has a routine in mind, but Morris refuses to let him take over, instead forcing the conversation into truly surreal directions. When you think of some of the pretentious "artists" who appeared on early editions of "Whose Line Is It Anyway", it's hard to imagine that they could cope with being asked for info regarding their plan to revive the infant Christ and exhibit him around the world. Although there is a sense of Cook squirming to come up with material,he never drops out of character or (crucially) stops being funny. VERY funny. The highlight for me must be Sir Arthur's story about bee-keeping, which makes me laugh out loud every single time I hear it. Similarly, the tales of Sir Arthur's father's attempts to make a man of him are priceless, and his attempts to convince Morris to let have a haircut during the interview. Actually, 99% of the tape could actually be listed as highlights, as there are very few dead spots. As with most of Cook's work, what lifts Why Bother above lesser forms of surreal comedy (including Python), is the way that Cook manages to remain completely deadpan throughout. The fact that he never once lets the mask slip is astounding. For anyone who wants to hear a comic mastermind at work, battling against a mastermind of the future, this tape is essential. Oh, and if you're wondering why they stuck a picture of E.L. Wisty on the cover, rather than Sir Arthur, don't ask me!!
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