A Great, Silly Grin: The British Satire Boom Of The 1960s

A Great, Silly Grin: The British Satire Boom Of The 1960s

by HumphreyCarpenter (Author)

Synopsis

A Great, Silly Grin opens at the 1960 Edinburgh Festival, where a staggeringly inspired satirical revue called Beyond the Fringe startled a public steeped in the polite, bland banality of the 1950s. From there it is a short trip to the coffee bars of London, where the appearance of a scruffy yellow pamphlet calling itself Private Eye overturned the way Britons looked at their world. The apotheosis of the satire boom, and the progenitor of so many American comedy acts, was the groundbreaking BBC television program That Was the Week That Was, which combined elements of sketch comedy and evening-news broadcast to produce something essential, hilarious, and, on occasion, scandalous. Humphrey Carpenter's history of this tumultuous and exciting era introduces us not only to the people involved in its creation--Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Michael Frayn, Jonathan Miller, Alan Bennett, and David Frost--but also their routines and sketches.

$25.33

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 414
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Published: 29 May 2003

ISBN 10: 0306812053
ISBN 13: 9780306812057

Media Reviews
Carpenter has pulled off a rare feat, writing serious history with a lot of laughs.
Will be the standard work for years to come.
Author Bio
Humphrey Carpenter is the award-winning biographer of Dennis Potter, J. R. R. Tolkien, W. H. Auden, and Ezra Pound. He broadcasts regularly on BBC Radio. Carpenter is married with two children and lives in Oxford, England.