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Topic History of: watching Sir Michael Parkinson's speech tonight
Max. showing the last 5 posts - (Last post first)
Author Message
Prunella Minge Parkinson is one of the few people who, when he laughs, actually says 'He he he'. Maybe he's a robot. Or an alien.
veritas in the press conference Parky gave a year ago he actually said he was pals with Kenneth Williams and told some amusing stories of their times together...as well as saying Kenneth and Dame Edna were his two all time favourite subjects as they did all the work.

also said he knows he will never live down the Emu show..which I think was superb TV.

Wonderful tale in the new book about Spike Milligan...telling Harry Secombe "I hope you die before me, I don't want you singing at my funeral"
Foz Actually looking back on the old interviews, he didn't do an awful lot of interviewing. The likes of Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan and (sadly underrated) Bryan Forbes would just come on and perform an act or tell tall stories for 25 minutes - Parkinson sporadically muttering 'extraordinary' or 'fascinating' every now and again. Billy Connolly used to be on every other week doing a variation of his stage act.
In what seemed like a rather spiteful episode, he once got into an argument with Kenneth Williams about union politics which he was unable to counter. To get his own back he invited Kenneth Williams a few weeks later and got him head to head with an old union grandee called Jimmy Reed. You had to feel sorry for Williams as he was totally flummoxed by Reed's obviously more insightful rebuttal - Parkinson just acted as chairman for the episode.
Rod Hull and Emu were probably his best interviewees - notice how he gets visably annoyed because the violent 'goosing' he gets was obviously not on the script.
Prunella Minge I agree about him slagging off other chat show hosts - particularly because he seemed to think the fact he used to be a journalist was such a trump card. In fact, for a journalist he was lousy at research. There's a recording of him interviewing Orson Welles, and he gets an amazing range of facts wrong, from where the man lived to what project he'd just completed. Poor Welles looked utterly bemused. Those 70s shows were great because the stars were so happy to tell stories and be charming. Once he got to the 90s and he was required to work hard to make his guests seem interesting he was poor. Dick Cavett was far better, IMHO - there's a DVD set of his interviews with the likes of Hendrix, Lennon, Sly Stone, Janis Joplin, etc etc - so much wittier and versatile than Parky ever was.
Foz I think Peter Cook joked that he could never go through and interview without mentioning 'Barnsley' at some point.
I lost a bit of respect for him when he began slating every other interviewer for being rubbish and yet one week sycophantically sat mesmorised allowing Tom Cruise to spout scientology rhetoric without really interjecting or questioning him. It was during his final days on ITV when he was obviously bolstering his pension and blatantly selling out to the demands of his guests.