Spam (Monty Python)

From Free net encyclopedia

Image:MontySpam.jpg "Spam" is a popular Monty Python sketch, first broadcast in 1970. In the sketch, two customers are trying to order a breakfast from a menu that includes the processed meat product in almost every item. The term spam (in electronic communication) is derived from this sketch.

It features Terry Jones as The Waitress, Eric Idle as Mr. Bun and Graham Chapman as Mrs. Bun. The televised skit also featured John Cleese as The Hungarian, but this part was left out of audio recordings of the sketch.

Only three and a half minutes long, it builds up into a semi-argument between the waitress who has a menu limited to have SPAM in about everything("SPAM, SPAM, SPAM, SPAM, sausage, eggs and SPAM"), and Mrs Bun who is the only one in the room who does not want it. The last minute begins with some surrealism and then it goes out of the restaurant scene with a teacher trying to explain the relation between vikings and Spam. The vikings almost don't stop singing and all that can be heard has almost no word said without "Spam" in between.

At several points yet in the restaurant, a group of Vikings in the Green Midget Cafe drown out all conversation by jumping up and loudly singing a song about "Spam, lovely Spam, wonderful Spam." They are interrupted by the waitress many times, but they resume singing more and more loudly until at last the song reaches an operatic climax. The waitress manages to shut them up again, but a Hungarian man from earlier in the show enters, and his badly translated attempt at ordering food manages to set the Vikings off again.

It actually ends with the credits being presented with changed names for the crew, adding either Spam to their names, or some other food from the menu.

The sketch was the final sketch of the 25th show of Monty Python's Flying Circus, and was first aired December 15, 1970. Despite its shortness, the sketch became immensely popular. The word "Spam" is mentioned at least 132 times.


The Menu

Trivia

SPAM was one of the few meats excluded from the British food rationing that began in World War II and continued for a number of years after the war, and the British grew heartily tired of it, hence the sketch.

The phenomenon, some years later, of marketers drowning out discourse by flooding Usenet newsgroups and individuals' email with junk mail advertising messages was named spamming recounting the repetitive and unwanted presence of SPAM in the sketch.

The Hormel company, the makers of the meat product SPAM, while never quite happy with the use of the word spam for junk email, have always seemed supportive of Monty Python and their skit. Hormel issued a special tin of SPAM for the Broadway premiere of Eric Idle's hit musical Spamalot. Also, the sketch is performed every day by local actors at the company's Minnesotan SPAM museum.

Comedy rap act Sudden Death incorporated the Monty Python SPAM chant (albeit sung by the band, not sampled from the skit) into the chorus of their song Spam, though the song is about the junk-e-mail spam and not the lunchmeat SPAM. Sudden Death's song also includes parts that parody two other songs about the lunchmeat originally recorded by "Weird Al" Yankovic and The Great Luke Ski, both also called Spam.

The DVD release of the series contains a bizarre and possibly deliberate subtitling error. When the Hungarian tries to order food, his words are "My lower intestine is full of Spam, Egg, Spam, Bacon, Spam, Tomatoes, Spam." Yet the subtitles read "Your intestine is full of Sperm."

External links

Monty Python Image:MontyPythonFootLeftSmall.jpg
Members Graham ChapmanJohn CleeseTerry GilliamEric IdleTerry JonesMichael Palin
Other Contributors Douglas AdamsConnie BoothCarol ClevelandNeil Innes
Films & TV Series Monty Python's Flying CircusMonty Python's Fliegender ZirkusAnd Now For Something Completely DifferentMonty Python and the Holy GrailMonty Python's Life of BrianMonty Python Live at the Hollywood BowlMonty Python's The Meaning of LifeMonty Python's Personal Best
es:spam (Monty Python)