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Peter Cook

 
Peter Cook

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Peter Cook



 
 
Peter Edward Cook (17 November 1937 – 9 January 1995) was an English
English people

The English are a nation and ethnic group native to England who speak English language in England. The English identity as a people is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Anglecynn....
 satirist, writer and comedian
Comedian

A comedian or comic is a person who seeks to entertain members of an audience, primarily by making them laughter. This might be through jokes or amusing situations, or acting a fool, as in slapstick, or employing prop comedy....
. He is widely regarded as the leading figure in the British satire boom
Satire boom

The satire boom is a general term to describe the emergence of a generation of English satirical writers, journalists and performers at the end of the 1950s....
 of the 1960s. He has been described by Stephen Fry
Stephen Fry

Stephen John Fry is an England actor, comedian, author and television presenter. With Hugh Laurie, as the comedy double act Fry and Laurie, he co-wrote and co-starred in A Bit of Fry and Laurie, and the duo also played the title roles in Jeeves and Wooster....
 as 'the funniest man who ever drew breath'.

Cook is closely associated with the anti-establishment
Anti-establishment

An anti-establishment view or belief is one which stands in opposition to the conventional social, political, and economic principles of a society....
 style of comedy that first emerged in the late 1950s.

was born at Shearbridge, Middle Warberry Road, Torquay
Torquay

Torquay is a town in the unitary authority of Torbay and ceremonial county of Devon, England. It lies 16 miles south of Exeter along the A380 road on the north of Torbay, 38 miles north-east of Plymouth and adjoins the neighbouring town of Paignton on the west of the bay....
, Devon
Devon

Devon is a large Counties of England in South West England. The county is also referred to as Devonshire, but that is an entirely unofficial name, rarely used inside of the county but often indicating a shire....
, the only son and eldest of the three children of Alexander Edward (Alec) Cook (d.






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Quotations


Job was what you'd technically describe as a loony.

Just putting a tiny little ventilation hole in this oil tanker.

Mawwage. Mawwage is what bwings us togethew today. Mawwage, that bwessed awwangement, that dweam within a dweam.

Tell God not to go away. I'll be back in a minute.

The garden of Eden was a boggy swamp just south of Croydon. You can see it over there.

What terrible sins I have working for me. I suppose it's the wages.






Encyclopedia


Peter Edward Cook (17 November 1937 – 9 January 1995) was an English
English people

The English are a nation and ethnic group native to England who speak English language in England. The English identity as a people is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Anglecynn....
 satirist, writer and comedian
Comedian

A comedian or comic is a person who seeks to entertain members of an audience, primarily by making them laughter. This might be through jokes or amusing situations, or acting a fool, as in slapstick, or employing prop comedy....
. He is widely regarded as the leading figure in the British satire boom
Satire boom

The satire boom is a general term to describe the emergence of a generation of English satirical writers, journalists and performers at the end of the 1950s....
 of the 1960s. He has been described by Stephen Fry
Stephen Fry

Stephen John Fry is an England actor, comedian, author and television presenter. With Hugh Laurie, as the comedy double act Fry and Laurie, he co-wrote and co-starred in A Bit of Fry and Laurie, and the duo also played the title roles in Jeeves and Wooster....
 as 'the funniest man who ever drew breath'.

Cook is closely associated with the anti-establishment
Anti-establishment

An anti-establishment view or belief is one which stands in opposition to the conventional social, political, and economic principles of a society....
 style of comedy that first emerged in the late 1950s.

Life

Cook was born at Shearbridge, Middle Warberry Road, Torquay
Torquay

Torquay is a town in the unitary authority of Torbay and ceremonial county of Devon, England. It lies 16 miles south of Exeter along the A380 road on the north of Torbay, 38 miles north-east of Plymouth and adjoins the neighbouring town of Paignton on the west of the bay....
, Devon
Devon

Devon is a large Counties of England in South West England. The county is also referred to as Devonshire, but that is an entirely unofficial name, rarely used inside of the county but often indicating a shire....
, the only son and eldest of the three children of Alexander Edward (Alec) Cook (d. 1984), a colonial civil servant, and his wife (Ethel Catherine) Margaret, née Mayo (d. 1994). He was educated at Radley College
Radley College

Radley College is a famous England Public school #Terminology situated on the edge of the village of Radley near Abingdon, England in Oxfordshire....
 and later Pembroke College, Cambridge
Pembroke College, Cambridge

Pembroke College is a college of the University of Cambridge, home to over six hundred students and fellow, and is the third oldest of the colleges....
, where he read French and German. Cook meant to become a career diplomat, but unfortunately Britain "had run out of colonies", as he put it. It was at Pembroke that he performed and wrote comedy sketches as a member of the prestigious Cambridge Footlights Club
Footlights

Cambridge University Footlights Dramatic Club, commonly referred to simply as the Footlights, is an amateur theatrical club in Cambridge, England, run by the students of University of Cambridge and now also the Anglia Ruskin University....
, of which he became President in 1960.

While still at university, Cook wrote professionally for Kenneth Williams
Kenneth Williams

Kenneth Charles Williams was a United Kingdom Comedy actor, star of 26 Carry On films and radio comedies with Tony Hancock and Kenneth Horne, as well as being a witty raconteur....
, for whom he created a successful West End
West End theatre

West End theatre is a popular term for mainstream professional theatre staged in the large theatres of London's "Theatreland". Along with New York City's Broadway theatre, West End theatre is usually considered to represent the highest level of commercial theatre in the English language world....
 revue show called One Over the Eight, before finding prominence in his own right as a star of the satirical stage show, Beyond the Fringe
Beyond the Fringe

Beyond the Fringe was a United Kingdom comedy stage revue written and performed by Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Alan Bennett, and Jonathan Miller....
, together with Jonathan Miller
Jonathan Miller

Sir Jonathan Wolfe Miller, Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom comedian, neurologist, theatre and opera director, author, television presenter, humorist and sculptor....
, Alan Bennett
Alan Bennett

Alan Bennett is an English author, actor, humorist and playwright....
 and Dudley Moore
Dudley Moore

Dudley Stuart John Moore Order of the British Empire was an English people actor, comedian and musician.Moore first came to prominence as one of the four writer-performers in Beyond the Fringe in the early 1960s and became famous as half of the hugely popular television double-act he formed with Peter Cook....
.

The show included Cook impersonating the then Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
Harold Macmillan

Harold Macmillan, 1st Earl of Stockton, Order of Merit, Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council was a British Conservative Party politician and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 10 January 1957 to 18 October 1963....
: this was one of the first occasions that political mimicry had been done in live theatre, and caused some shock amongst audiences. During one performance, Macmillan himself was in the theatre, and having spotted him Cook departed from his script and directly attacked him verbally.

With his star in the ascendant, he opened the The Establishment Club
The Establishment (club)

The Establishment was a London nightclub which opened in October 1961, at 18 Greek Street, Soho and was famous in retrospect for satire although actually more notable at the time for jazz and other events....
 at 18 Greek Street in Soho
Soho

Soho is an area in the centre of the West End of London of London, England, in the City of Westminster. It is an entertainment district which for much of the later part of the 20th century had a reputation for its sex shops as well as its night life and film industry....
 which gave him the opportunity to present fellow comedians in a nightclub setting, including the highly controversial American Lenny Bruce
Lenny Bruce

Lenny Bruce , born Leonard Alfred Schneider, was an United States stand-up comedian, writer, Cultural critic and satire of the 1950s and 1960s....
. Cook befriended and supported Australian comedian and actor Barry Humphries
Barry Humphries

John Barry Humphries, Order of Australia, Order of the British Empire is an Australian comedian, satirist and character actor perhaps best known for his on-stage and television alter egos Dame Edna Everage, a Melbourne housewife, and Sir Les Patterson, Australia's foul-mouthed cultural attach? to United Kingdom....
, who began his British solo career at the club. Humphries would comment in his autobiography My Life As Me that he found Cook's lack of interest in art and literature rather off-putting. Cook's chiselled looks and languid manner led Humphries to observe that whereas most people take after their father or mother, Cook reminded one of one's auntie. Dudley Moore's jazz trio (which included Australian-born drummer Chris Karan) played at the club regularly for many years during the early 1960s.

1960s

In 1962, the BBC commissioned a pilot for a television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
 series of satirical sketches based on The Establishment Club, but it was not picked up straightaway and Cook and the other regulars went to New York for a year. When he returned, Cook discovered that the pilot had been refashioned in his absence as That Was The Week That Was
That Was The Week That Was

That Was The Week That Was, also known as TW3, was a satirical television comedy programme on BBC Television in 1962 and 1963. It was devised, produced and directed by Ned Sherrin and presented by David Frost ....
 and had made a star out of David Frost
David Frost (broadcaster)

Sir David Paradine Frost, Order of the British Empire is a British satirist, writer, journalist and television presenter, best known as a pioneer of political satire on television and for his serious interviews of political figures, the most notable being The Nixon Interviews with Richard Nixon....
, something that Cook later admitted resenting. The 1960s satire boom
Satire boom

The satire boom is a general term to describe the emergence of a generation of English satirical writers, journalists and performers at the end of the 1950s....
 was coming to a close and Cook quipped that Britain would "sink into the sea under the weight of its own giggling". He later complained that David Frost's success was largely based on copying Cook's stage persona and remarked that his only regret in life had been once saving Frost from drowning (an actual event). He married the socially well-connected Wendy Snowden in 1963, with whom he had two daughters, Lucy and Daisy (now working as an abstract painter) The marriage ended in divorce in 1970, due in part to Cook having various affairs.

Cook expanded the scope of television comedy with associates such as Eleanor Bron
Eleanor Bron

Eleanor Bron is a United Kingdom stage, film and television actor and author....
, John Bird
John Bird (actor)

John Bird is an England satirist, actor and comedian....
, and John Fortune
John Fortune

John Fortune is a United Kingdom satirist, comedian writer and actor, best known for his work with John Bird and Rory Bremner on the TV series Bremner, Bird and Fortune....
, and pushed the previously restricted boundaries of the BBC. Cook's first regular television spot was on Granada Television
Granada Television

Granada Television is the United Kingdom ITV contractor for North West England. It previously held the "North of England" weekday franchise, which also covered most of Yorkshire, from 1954 until 1968 when its broadcast area was divided into two franchises....
's Braden Beat with Bernard Braden
Bernard Braden

Bernard Chastey Braden was a Canada-born England actor and comedian.Braden was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and educated at Magee Secondary School, Kerrisdale, Vancouver....
, where he featured his most enduring comic character: the static, dour, and monotonal E.L. Wisty, whom Cook had originally conceived for Radley College's Marionette Society.

His comedy partnership
Double act

A double act, also known as a comedy duo, is a comic device in which humor is derived from the uneven relationship between two partners, usually of the same gender, age, ethnic origin, and profession, but drastically different personalities....
 with Dudley Moore
Dudley Moore

Dudley Stuart John Moore Order of the British Empire was an English people actor, comedian and musician.Moore first came to prominence as one of the four writer-performers in Beyond the Fringe in the early 1960s and became famous as half of the hugely popular television double-act he formed with Peter Cook....
 led to the popular and critically feted television show Not Only... But Also
Not Only... But Also

Not Only... But Also was a popular 1960s BBC United Kingdom television series starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore.The show was originally intended as a solo project for Moore, called Not Only Dudley Moore, But Also His Guests....
. This was initially intended by the BBC as a vehicle for Dudley Moore's musical talents, but when Moore invited Cook to write sketches and appear with him, the show suddenly became hugely popular. Using few props, they created a unique style of dry and absurd television which was immediately successful and found a place in the mainstream, ultimately lasting for three seasons. Here Cook showcased his characters, such as Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling

Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling was a fictional character played by British comedian Peter Cook throughout his career. Streeb-Greebling was a stereotype of the upper class England duffer....
 and the pair's Pete and Dud
Pete and Dud

Pete and Dud were characters played by the comedians and entertainers Peter Cook and Dudley Moore.The dialogue format originated in 1964 when Dudley Moore invited Peter Cook to appear in a television performance, whereupon Peter Cook scripted a conversation between two men from Dagenham in flat caps....
. Other memorable sketches include "Superthunderstingcar", a send-up of the Gerry Anderson
Gerry Anderson

Gerry Anderson Member of the Order of the British Empire, born , is a United Kingdom producer, director and writer, famous for his futuristic television programmes, particularly those involving specially modified marionettes, a process called "Supermarionation"....
 marionette TV shows and Cook's pastiche of 1960s trendy arts documentaries — satirised in a parodic TV segment on Greta Garbo
Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo was a Swedish-American actor during Hollywood's silent film period and part of its Golden Age of Hollywood.Regarded as one of the greatest and most inscrutable movie stars ever produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the Hollywood studio system, Garbo received a 1954 Academy Honorary Award "for her unforgettable screen performances...
.

Despite the show's cult status, by the early 1970s the BBC had decided to erase most of the master videotapes of the series, with a view to reusing the tapes due to the expense of the format. This was common UK television practice at the time, when agreements with actors' and musicians' unions limited the number of repeats. (The policy of wiping
Wiping

Wiping or junking is an action by radio and television companies in which old audiotapes, videotapes and telerecordings , are erased, reused or destroyed after several uses....
 recordings ceased in 1978.) When Cook learned the series was to be destroyed, he offered to buy the tapes from the BBC but was refused due to copyright issues. He then suggested that he purchase new tapes, so that the BBC would have no need to erase the originals, but inexplicably this was also turned down.

Of the original programmes, only eight of the twenty-two complete episodes survive complete. These comprise the entire first series with the exception of the fifth and seventh episodes, the first and last episodes of the second series, and the Christmas special. Of the 1970 third series, only the various film inserts (usually of outdoor scenes) still survive. The BBC later recovered some of the shows by approaching overseas television networks and buying back copies that had not yet been destroyed. A compilation of six half-hour programmes, The Best of What's Left of Not Only...But Also was shown on television in 1990, and was released on VHS
VHS

The Video Home System, better known by its abbreviation VHS, is a recording and playing standard developed by JVC and launched in Europe and Asia in September 1976, and the United States in June 1977....
 and DVD
DVD

DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
.

In 1968, Cook and Moore briefly switched to the commercial channel ATV
Associated TeleVision

Associated Television, often referred to as ATV, was a United Kingdom television company, holder of various licenses to broadcast on the ITV network from 1955 until 31 December 1981....
 to produce a series of four one-hour programmes entitled Goodbye Again
Goodbye Again (TV)

'Goodbye Again' was a series of four hour-long television programmes made by the United Kingdom TV network ITV to re-unite Peter Cook and Dudley Moore and recreate their very successful BBC comedy series Not Only......
, based on the "Pete and Dud" characters. The duo knew they were the rationale for the series and as a result, ignored suggestions from the director and other cast. Sketches were therefore often drawn out to fill the running time. With no real interest in the show and a developing problem with alcohol, Cook would also rely on cue cards and ended up garbling parts of the script, forcing Moore to ad-lib. Nonetheless, the series does contain some notable items, including a reprise of the Pete and Dud 'Greta Garbo' routine and a sketch in which the pair mostly play themselves, discussing the breakdowns of their respective marriages. The show was not a popular success due in part to the publication of the ITV listings magazine
Listings magazine

A listings magazine is a magazine which contains information about the upcoming weeks events such as TV Listings, Music, Clubs, Theatre and Film information, examples include Time Out magazine in the UK....
, TV Times
TV Times

TVTimes is a television listings magazine published in the United Kingdom by IPC Media, a subsidiary of TimeWarner. It is known for its access to television actors and their programmes....
, being suspended due to a strike. John Cleese
John Cleese

'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
 was a supporting cast member and elements of the series can be seen in the early Monty Python
Monty Python

Monty Python is a group of six comedians who created Monty Python's Flying Circus, a British television comedy sketch show that first aired on the BBC on October 5, 1969....
 programmes of the following year.

Peter Cook and Dudley Moore acted in film
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
s together, beginning with The Wrong Box
The Wrong Box

The Wrong Box is a British comedy film made by Salamander Film Productions and distributed by Columbia Pictures. It was produced and directed by Bryan Forbes from a screenplay by Larry Gelbart and Burt Shevelove, based on the The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne....
 in 1966. Their best work in the medium was the cult comedy Bedazzled
Bedazzled (1967 film)

Bedazzled is a 1967 in film film written by and starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, retelling the Faust legend in the Swinging London of the 1960s....
 (1967), now widely regarded as a classic. Directed by Stanley Donen
Stanley Donen

Stanley Donen is an American film director and choreographer hailed by David Quinlan as "the King of the Hollywood musicals". His most famous work is Singin' in the Rain , which he co-directed with Gene Kelly....
, the film's story is credited to Cook and Moore jointly, and its screenplay to Cook alone. A comic parody of the Faust
Faust

Faust or Faustus is the protagonist of a classic German folklore who makes a pact with the Devil in exchange for knowledge. Faust's tale is the basis for many literary, artistic, cinematic, and musical works, such as those by Christopher Marlowe, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Thomas Mann, Hector Berlioz, Franz Liszt, Charles Gounod, Gu...
 story, it starred Cook as George Spigott (The Devil) who tempts a frustrated, short-order chef called Stanley Moon (Moore) with the promise of gaining his heart's desire — the love of the unattainable beauty Margaret Spencer (Eleanor Bron
Eleanor Bron

Eleanor Bron is a United Kingdom stage, film and television actor and author....
) — in exchange for his soul, but repeatedly tricks him in a variety of ways. The film features cameo appearances by Barry Humphries
Barry Humphries

John Barry Humphries, Order of Australia, Order of the British Empire is an Australian comedian, satirist and character actor perhaps best known for his on-stage and television alter egos Dame Edna Everage, a Melbourne housewife, and Sir Les Patterson, Australia's foul-mouthed cultural attach? to United Kingdom....
 ('Envy') and Raquel Welch
Raquel Welch

Raquel Welch is a Golden Globe winning, American actress....
 ('Lust'). Moore's jazz trio backed Cook on the theme, a parodic anti-love song, which Cook delivers in a monotonous, deadpan voice, and which includes his now classic put-down, "You fill me with inertia". Moore's Hollywood stardom in the 1970s and 1980s prompted occasional barbed comments from his former comedy partner.

1970s

In 1970, Cook took over a project initiated by David Frost
David Frost (broadcaster)

Sir David Paradine Frost, Order of the British Empire is a British satirist, writer, journalist and television presenter, best known as a pioneer of political satire on television and for his serious interviews of political figures, the most notable being The Nixon Interviews with Richard Nixon....
 for a satirical film about an opinion pollster who rises to become President of Great Britain. Under Cook's guidance, the character became modelled on Frost himself. The resulting film, The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer
The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer

The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer is a United Kingdom 1970 in film cult satire film written by and starring Peter Cook....
, was not a great commercial success, although the cast contained many notable names of the period.

Though he was eventually to become a favourite on the British chat show circuit, his own effort at hosting one in 1971, entitled Where Do I Sit? was generally agreed by the critics to have been a disappointment. The BBC seem to have agreed: he was replaced after two episodes by Michael Parkinson
Michael Parkinson

Sir Michael Parkinson, Order of the British Empire is an English people broadcaster and journalist. He presented his interview programme, Parkinson , from 1971 to 1982 and from 1998 to 2007....
 (for the next series the show bore Parkinson's name, and was the beginning of his career as a chat show host). Cook would take sweet revenge when Parkinson asked him what his ambitions were (schoolboyishly inquiring whether he had any "large ones") by replying "[...] in fact, my ambition is to shut you up altogether".

Cook provided financial backing for the satirical magazine Private Eye, supporting the publication through a number of difficult periods, particularly when the magazine was punished financially in the wake of a number of high-profile libel trials. Cook both invested his own money and solicited for investment from his showbusiness friends and colleagues. For a time, the magazine was produced from the premises of The Establishment Club. Towards the end of the 1960s, Cook's developing alcoholism
Alcoholism

Alcoholism is a term with multiple and sometimes conflicting definitions to describe the detrimental effects of alcohol intake.In common and historic usage, alcoholism refers to any condition that results in the continued consumption of alcoholic beverages despite health problems and negative social consequences....
 placed a strain on his personal and professional relationships. He and Moore fashioned sketches from Not Only....But Also and Goodbye Again with new material into the stage revue Behind the Fridge. This toured Australia in 1972 before transferring to New York in 1973 as Good Evening. In front of audiences during the extended stage runs, Cook frequently appeared drunk and incapable, to the consternation of Dudley Moore. However, Good Evening won the pair Tony and Grammy Awards. When its run finished, Moore announced he was staying in the U.S. to pursue a solo career. In 1973, Cook married the actress Judy Huxtable.

Later, the more risqué humour of the Pete and Dud characters was taken to its furthest extent on long-playing records
Gramophone record

A gramophone record is an analog signal sound storage medium consisting of a flat disc with an inscribed modulated spiral groove usually starting near the periphery and ending near the centre of the disc....
 under the names "Derek and Clive
Derek and Clive

Derek and Clive are controversial cult characters created by double act Dudley Moore and Peter Cook respectively on the records Derek and Clive , 1976; Derek and Clive Come Again, 1977 and Derek and Clive Ad Nauseam, 1978 and a film documentary, Derek and Clive Get the Horn, 1979....
". The first such recording was initiated by Cook to alleviate the boredom of a long Broadway run of Good Evening, and used material that was conceived years before for the two characters but was then considered far too outrageous. One of these audio recordings was also filmed, and the long-running tensions between the duo are seen to rise to the surface. Originally intended for their own amusement, Chris Blackwell
Chris Blackwell

Chris Blackwell is the founder of Island Records. Born in London to an Ireland father and a Costa Rican-born Sephardic Jewish mother, Blackwell spent his childhood in Jamaica....
 circulated bootleg
Bootleg recording

A bootleg recording is an sound recording and/or video recording of a performance that was not officially released by the artist, or under other legal authority....
 copies to friends, and they soon gained a cult following. The popularity of the bootleg recording convinced Cook that it would be profitable to release it commercially, although Moore was initially reluctant to agree to this, fearing that his recently achieved fame as a Hollywood movie star would be undermined by the tape's outrageous content. Two further Derek and Clive albums were released, the last accompanied by a film.

In 1979, Cook recorded comedy-segments which were released as b-sides to the Sparks
Sparks (band)

Sparks is an American rock music and pop music band formed in Los Angeles in 1970 by brothers Ron Mael and Russell Mael , initially under the name Halfnelson ....
 12" singles "Number One In Heaven" and "Tryouts For The Human Race". The combination was not so surprising, for the latter's main songwriter Ron Mael
Ron Mael

Ron Mael , is an United States musician and songwriter. He and his younger brother Russell Mael, make up the pop duet Sparks . Ron plays Electronic keyboard and songwriter most of the songs....
 would often start off with a banal situation in his lyrics, and then go off at surreal tangents a la Cook and the even zanier S.J. Perelman.

Performances for Amnesty International

Cook made noteworthy appearances at the first three of the fund-raising galas staged by humourists John Cleese
John Cleese

'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
 and Martin Lewis
Martin Lewis

Martin Neil Lewis is a United States-based England humorist, writer, radio/TV host, producer and Marketing strategy. He is known for his participation in a variety of projects in the arts and entertainment worlds including his work as the co-creator and co-producer of the The Secret Policeman's Balls benefit shows for Amnesty Internatio...
 on behalf of Amnesty International
Amnesty International

Amnesty International is an international non-governmental organization which defines its mission as "to conduct research and generate action to prevent and end grave abuses of human rights and to demand justice for those whose rights have been violated." Founded in London, England in 1961, AI draws its attention to human rights abuses and...
. The series of benefits were retrospectively dubbed The Secret Policeman's Balls
The Secret Policeman's Balls

The shows have yielded movies, TV specials, home-videos, albums and books that have been distributed worldwide and had a considerable international impact....
 though it wasn't until the third show in 1979 that the Secret Policeman's Ball title was used. He performed on all three nights of the first show in April 1976, A Poke in the Eye (with a Sharp Stick), both as an individual performer and as a member of the cast of Beyond The Fringe, which reunited for the first time since the 1960s. He also appeared in a Monty Python
Monty Python

Monty Python is a group of six comedians who created Monty Python's Flying Circus, a British television comedy sketch show that first aired on the BBC on October 5, 1969....
 sketch taking the place of Eric Idle
Eric Idle

Eric Idle is an England comedian, actor, author, singer and composer of comic songs. He wrote and performed as a member of the internationally renowned British comedy group Monty Python....
 who did not partake in the performances. Cook was prominently featured on the cast album of the show (which carried the same title) and in the film of the event, which was titled Pleasure At Her Majesty's
Pleasure At Her Majesty's

Pleasure At Her Majesty's was the name given to the filmed release of A Poke In The Eye , the first of the Amnesty International comedy benefit galas....
. He was similarly prominent in the second Amnesty gala held in May 1977, An Evening Without Sir Bernard Miles. (It was retitled The Mermaid Frolics for the cast album and TV special.) Cook performed monologues and skits with Terry Jones
Terry Jones

Terence Graham Parry Jones is a Wales comedian, screenwriter and actor, film director, children's author, popular historian, political commentator and TV documentary host....
.

In June 1979, Cook performed on all four nights of The Secret Policeman's Ball
The Secret Policeman's Ball (1979)

The Secret Policeman's Ball took place over four consecutive nights in London in June 1979. It was a successor to the 1976 show A Poke In The Eye and the 1977 show The Mermaid Frolics....
 - memorably teaming for a skit with John Cleese
John Cleese

'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
. Cleese was quoted as saying that he was thrilled to be working with someone he admired so much, and can be seen nearly "corpsing
Corpsing

Corpsing is a British theatrical slang term used to describe when an actor breaking character during a scene by laughing or by causing another cast member to laugh....
" at Cook during much of the "Interesting Facts" sketch, which opened both the stage show and the resulting film. Cook performed a couple of solo pieces and a skit with old friend Eleanor Bron
Eleanor Bron

Eleanor Bron is a United Kingdom stage, film and television actor and author....
. He also led the ensemble in the grand finale - the "End Of The World" sketch from Beyond The Fringe.

In response to a critical barb in The Daily Telegraph
The Daily Telegraph

The Daily Telegraph is a British broadsheet newspaper, founded in 1855. Excepting the Financial Times and The Herald , it is the only remaining national daily newspaper printed on traditional newsprint in the broadsheet format in the United Kingdom, as most other broadsheet publications have converted to the smaller tabloid/Compa...
's
review of the show's first night - complaining that the show consisted mostly of recycled material, Cook wrote a savage satire of the summing-up by the Judge (Mr Justice Cantley) in the just-concluded trial of former Liberal Party leader, Jeremy Thorpe
Jeremy Thorpe

John Jeremy Thorpe is a British politician, who was leader of the Liberal Party from 1967 to 1976. He lost his position, as well as his seat in British House of Commons, after he was accused of conspiring to murder a man who claimed to be a former lover, charges on which he was acquitted....
 — a summary that had attracted almost universal condemnation for its blatant bias in favour of Thorpe. Cook performed it for the first time that same night (Friday 29th June - the third of the four nights) and reprised it the following night. The nine-minute opus — "Entirely a Matter for You" — is considered by many fans and critics to be one of the finest works of Cook's career. Cook and show producer Martin Lewis rushed out a 12" mini-album on Virgin Records
Virgin Records

Virgin Records is a United Kingdom record label founded by England entrepreneur Richard Branson, Simon Draper, and Nik Powell in 1972 in music. It was later sold to Thorn EMI, and then, in the US, merged with Capitol Records in 2007 to create the Capitol Music Group....
 titled Here Comes the Judge: Live of the live performance together with three specially-recorded studio tracks that further lampooned the Thorpe trial.

Although unable to take part in the 1981 gala, Cook supplied the narration used over the animated opening title sequence of the 1982 film of the show. With Martin Lewis, he co-wrote and voiced a series of radio commercials used to advertise the film in the UK. He also hosted a spoof film awards ceremony that was part of the World Première of the film in London in March 1982.

Following Cook's successful 1987 stage reunion with Dudley Moore
Dudley Moore

Dudley Stuart John Moore Order of the British Empire was an English people actor, comedian and musician.Moore first came to prominence as one of the four writer-performers in Beyond the Fringe in the early 1960s and became famous as half of the hugely popular television double-act he formed with Peter Cook....
 for the annual U.S. benefit for the homeless, Comic Relief (not related to the UK Comic Relief benefits), Cook repeated the reunion for a British audience by performing with Moore at the 1989 Amnesty benefit The Secret Policeman's Biggest Ball. The crowd's positive reaction to seeing Cook and Moore reunited was evident in each of their appearances together during the show.

Consequences album

There is a cult following among some Cook fans for a little-remembered project that he was involved with in the 1970s. This was his participation – playing multiple roles – on the 1977 concept album
Concept album

In popular music, a concept album is an album that is "unified by a theme, which can be instrumental, compositional, narrative, or lyrical". Commonly, concept albums tend to incorporate preconceived musical or lyrical ideas rather than being musical improvisation or composed in the studio, with all songs contributing to narrative....
 Consequences
Consequences (album)

Consequences is the debut album by England pop music artists Godley & Creme. It was released in 1977 as a boxed Triple album-Gramophone record....
, written and produced by former 10cc
10cc

10cc were an England art rock rock band who achieved their greatest commercial success in the 1970s. Initially comprising four musicians ? Graham Gouldman, Eric Stewart, Kevin Godley and Lol Creme ? who had written and recorded together for some three years, before assuming the ?10cc? name in 1972....
 members Kevin Godley
Kevin Godley

Kevin Godley is a United Kingdom musician and music video director.He was born in a family of Jewish descent, and went to North Cestrian Grammar School in Altrincham....
 and Lol Creme
Lol Crème

Lol Creme is an England musician and music video director. He plays guitar and keyboard instrument.He was born Lawrence Neil Creme to a family of Jewish descent, and later took up the nickname Lolagon....
. A mixture of spoken-word comedy and progressive rock
Progressive rock

Progressive rock is a form of rock music that evolved in the late 1960s and early 1970s as part of a "mostly British attempt to elevate rock music to new levels of artistic credibility." The term "art rock" is often used interchangeably with "progressive rock", but while there are crossovers between the two genres, they are not identical....
 music with an environment
Environment (biophysical)

The biophysical environment is the symbiosis between the physics environment and the biological life forms within the environment, and include all variables that comprise the Earth's biosphere....
al subtext, Consequences started out as a single that Godley and Creme planned to make to demonstrate their new invention, an electric guitar
Electric guitar

An electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses pickup to convert the vibration of its steel-cored strings into an electrical current, which is made louder with an instrument amplifier and a speaker....
 effect called The Gizmo
The Gizmo

The Gizmo was an effects device for the electric guitar, invented ca. 1975 by the English people rock music musicians Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, whilst they were members of the United Kingdom rock group 10cc....
. The project gradually grew into a triple LP boxed set. The comedy sections of the album were originally intended to be performed by an all-star cast including Spike Milligan
Spike Milligan

Terence Alan Patrick Se?n Milligan KBE , known as Spike Milligan, was an England-Ireland comedian, writer, musician, poet and playwright....
 and Peter Ustinov
Peter Ustinov

Sir Peter Alexander Ustinov CBE or ;, born Peter Alexander Baron von Ustinow, was a British actor, writer and dramatist.Ustinov was also renowned as a filmmaker, theatre director and opera director, film director, stage designer, screenwriter, comedian, humorist, newspaper and magazine columnist, radio broadcaster and television pres...
, but after meeting Peter Cook, Godley and Creme realised that he could perform most of the parts himself. The storyline centres on the impending divorce of ineffectual Englishman Walter Stapleton (Cook) and his French wife Lulu (Judy Huxtable). While meeting with their respective lawyers — the bibulous Mr Haig and overbearing Mr Pepperman (also both played by Cook) — the proceedings are interrupted by a series of bizarre and mysterious happenings that are somehow connected with Mr Blint (Cook), a musician and composer living in the apartment below Haig's office, both of which are connected by a large hole in the floor.

Released just as punk
Punk rock

Punk rock is a rock music genre that developed between 1974 and 1976 in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia. Rooted in garage rock and other forms of what is now known as protopunk music, punk rock bands eschewed the perceived excesses of mainstream 1970s rock....
 was sweeping the UK, the hugely ambitious concept album was a total commercial failure and was savaged by critics, but it gathered (and retains) a small but dedicated cult following. Interestingly, the script and storyline contain many elements that appear to be drawn from Cook's own life – his second wife, actress Judy Huxtable
Judy Huxtable

Judy Huxtable is a UK actress.Her film appearances include Les Bicyclettes de Belsize, the cult movie The Touchables and several horror films in the 1970s....
, plays Walter's wife, Lulu. Cook's own problems with alcohol are comically mirrored in Haig's constant drinking, and there is a clear parallel between the fictional divorce of Walter and Lulu and Cook's own messy divorce from his first wife, Wendy. The voice and accent Cook used for the character of Stapleton are remarkably similar to that of Cook's former Beyond the Fringe
Beyond the Fringe

Beyond the Fringe was a United Kingdom comedy stage revue written and performed by Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Alan Bennett, and Jonathan Miller....
 colleague, Alan Bennett
Alan Bennett

Alan Bennett is an English author, actor, humorist and playwright....
 and a recent book on Cook's comedy, How Very Interesting, speculates that the characters Cook plays in Consequences are broad caricatures of the four Beyond The Fringe cast members – the alcoholic Haig represents Cook, the tremulous Stapleton is Alan Bennett, the parodically Jewish Pepperman is Miller, and the pianist Blint represents Moore.

1980s

In 1980, spurred by his former partner Dudley Moore's growing film star status, Cook moved briefly to Hollywood and appeared as an uptight English butler in a short-lived U.S. television sitcom The Two of Us, also making cameo appearances in a couple of undistinguished films. In 1980, Cook starred alongside a host of celebrities in the LWT special Peter Cook & Co.. The show included several comedy sketches, including a Tales of the Unexpected
Tales of the Unexpected (TV series)

Tales Of The Unexpected is a United Kingdom television series that originally aired between 1979 and 1988, made by Anglia Television for ITV....
 spoof "Tales Of The Much As We Expected". This involved Cook as Roald Dahl
Roald Dahl

Roald Dahl was a United Kingdom novelist, short story writer and screenwriter, born in Wales of Norwegian people parents. After service in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, In which he became a flying ace, he rose to prominence in the 1940s with works for both Children's literature and adults, and became one of the world's bes...
, explaining that his name had actually been Ronald before he dropped the "n". The cast included John Cleese
John Cleese

'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
, Rowan Atkinson
Rowan Atkinson

'Rowan Sebastian Atkinson' is an England comedian, actor and writer, famous for his work on the classic sitcoms Blackadder, The Thin Blue Line and Mr....
, Beryl Reid
Beryl Reid

Beryl Elizabeth Reid OBE was a Great Britain actress of stage and screen....
, Michael Palin
Michael Palin

Michael Edward Palin, Order of the British Empire is an English comedian, actor, writer and television presenter best known for being one of the members of the comedy group Monty Python and for his Travel documentary....
 and Terry Jones
Terry Jones

Terence Graham Parry Jones is a Wales comedian, screenwriter and actor, film director, children's author, popular historian, political commentator and TV documentary host....
. The show has never been repeated since its first airing.

Cook made an appearance as King Richard III in 1983, both before and after death, in "The Foretelling", the first episode of Blackadder
Blackadder

Blackadder is the generic name that encompasses four series of an acclaimed BBC One historical British sitcom, along with several List of Blackadder episodes#See also....
. In 1986 he appeared as a sidekick to Joan Rivers
Joan Rivers

Joan Rivers is an United States comedian, actress, talk show Host , and businesswoman. She is known for her brash manner and loud, raspy voice with a heavy New York dialect....
 on her UK talk show — a role that disappointed many of his fans who felt that such a role was beneath him. He appeared as Mr Jolly in 1987 in The Comic Strip Presents' Mr Jolly Lives Next Door
Mr Jolly Lives Next Door

Mr Jolly Lives Next Door is a 1987 comedy film made for British television as part of The Comic Strip series and was originally broadcast on Channel 4....
, playing a dishevelled and aggressive assassin who covered the sound of his murders by playing Tom Jones records at full volume. Cook also appeared in The Princess Bride
The Princess Bride (film)

The Princess Bride is a 1987 in film film, based on the 1973 in literature The Princess Bride by William Goldman, combining comedy, Adventure , romance film and fantasy....
 that year, as the "Impressive Clergyman". Also that year he spent time working with Martin Lewis on a political satire about the upcoming 1988 U.S. presidential elections for HBO, but the script went unproduced. It was during this production that Lewis suggested that Cook team up with Dudley Moore
Dudley Moore

Dudley Stuart John Moore Order of the British Empire was an English people actor, comedian and musician.Moore first came to prominence as one of the four writer-performers in Beyond the Fringe in the early 1960s and became famous as half of the hugely popular television double-act he formed with Peter Cook....
 for the U.S. "Comic Relief" telethon for the homeless. The duo successfully reunited and performed their classic "One Leg Too Few
One Leg Too Few

One Leg Too Few is a famous comedy sketch written by Peter Cook and most famously performed by Cook and Dudley Moore. It is a classic example of comedy arising from an absurd situation which the participants take entirely seriously, and a demonstration of the construction of a sketch in order to draw a laugh from the audience with almost...
" sketch. Contrary to popular misconception and media speculation, close friends recall that Cook and Moore maintained contact through the years and though there was always sparring between them, the bond was unbroken. Moore attended Cook's memorial service in London in May 1995 and he and Lewis teamed up to present a two-night memorial for Cook in Los Angeles the following November, scheduled to mark the anniversary of Cook's birth.

In 1988, Cook appeared as a contestant on the popular improvisation comedy show, Whose Line Is It Anyway?
Whose Line Is It Anyway?

Whose Line Is It Anyway? was a short-form improvisational comedy TV show. Originally a United Kingdom radio programme, it moved to television in 1988 as a series made for Britain's Channel 4....
. Cook was declared the winner of the episode, his prize being to read the end credits in the style of the host's choosing, which was that of a New York cab driver. He was an avid media follower, reading nearly all the British daily newspapers and following TV and radio
Radio

Radio is the transmission of signals, by modulation of electromagnetic radiation with frequency below those of visible light.Electromagnetic radiation radio propagation by means of oscillating electromagnetic fields that pass through the air and the vacuum of space....
 programmes with vigour. He was an occasional caller to Clive Bull
Clive Bull

Clive Bull is an award-winning radio talk show host on LBC 97.3 in London, England....
's night-time phone-in show on LBC in London, where, using the pseudonym "Sven from Swiss Cottage" he would entertain listeners with his complaints and musings on love, loneliness and herrings, all delivered in a mock Norwegian accent.

Following his death, some recordings were issued of him chatting with his Hampstead neighbour and fellow Clive Bull regular, the London eccentric Rainbow George Weiss
Rainbow George Weiss

Rainbow George Weiss son of a diamond merchant, is a fringe UK politician who stood in 13 Parliamentary constituency at the United Kingdom general election, 2005....
, mostly about George's political plans for Peter within his Vote for Yourself Rainbow Dream Ticket
Vote For Yourself Rainbow Dream Ticket

Make Politicians History is a minor United Kingdom political party that advocates the abolition of Parliament of the United Kingdom in favour of devolution to city-states and decision-making by referendum....
 party, which Cook tolerated with amused disdain. According to Cook's biographer Harry Thompson
Harry Thompson

Harry William Thompson was an England Radio producer and television producer, comedy writer, novelist and biographer....
, Weiss tried repeatedly to persuade Cook to stand for parliament, but Cook always refused. In the last few years of his life, Cook had a lower public profile but maintained a robust social life. He was far more concerned with simply enjoying his life than in pursuing traditional career goals. He once famously said, "I ran out of ambition at the age of 27..."

Revival

In late 1989 Cook married the Malaysian-born property developer Chiew Lin Chong in Torbay, Devon. This marriage brought a beneficial change in the direction of his life, as he reduced his drinking and for a time was a teetotaler. He lived alone in an 18th-century house in Hampstead
Hampstead

Hampstead is an area of London, England, located north-west of Charing Cross. It is part of the London Borough of Camden. It is situated within Inner London....
, once owned by H.G. Wells. His third wife lived in another house away. Cook speculated that their kind of domestic arrangement would be much more popular if more people could afford it. The comedian recounted his favourite pleasures in life – casual chit-chat, reading, sport, radio, television and the newspapers, food, drink and cigarettes, and pedantry. Writing and performing went unmentioned.

Cook returned as Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling for an appearance with Ludovic Kennedy
Ludovic Kennedy

Sir Ludovic Henry Coverley Kennedy is a United Kingdom journalist, Presenter, and author. He was knighthood in 1994 for services to journalism....
 in A Life in Pieces. The series of twelve five- to seven-minute interviews saw Sir Arthur recounting snippets of his life loosely based on the Twelve Days of Christmas
Twelve Days of Christmas

The Twelve Days of Christmas, and the associated evenings of those twelve days , are the festive days beginning on Christmas Day through to the evening of the Twelfth Day of Christmas, ....
. A set of unscripted interviews with Cook as Streeb-Greebling and satirist Chris Morris
Chris Morris (satirist)

Christopher Morris is an England comedian, writer, director, actor and former radio DJ.Morris began his career in radio before moving into television....
 were recorded in autumn of 1993 and broadcast as Why Bother on BBC Radio 3, less than a year before Cook's death. In a later interview (), Morris described them as follows:

"It was a very different style of improvisation from what I'd been used to, working with people like Steve Coogan
Steve Coogan

'Stephen John "Steve" Coogan' is an English comedian, actor, writer, and Television producer. His best known character in the United Kingdom is Alan Partridge, the grotesque sports reporter-turned-television chat show host-turned-regional radio presenter who featured in several television series, such as The Day Today, Knowing Me, Knowin...
, Doon Mackichan
Doon Mackichan

'Doon Mackichan' is an England comedian. Aged 9, she moved with her family to Upper Largo, Fife. She is probably best known as one of the writers and stars of the Channel 4 comedy series Smack the Pony; prior to this she appeared in Chris Morris 's BBC news spoof series The Day Today ; in Morris's controversial Channel 4 series Brass...
 and Rebecca Front
Rebecca Front

Rebecca Front is an England comedienne and actor, perhaps best known for her roles in On The Hour, The Day Today, Fist of Fun, Knowing Me, Knowing You...with Alan Partridge, Monkey Dust and Time Gentlemen Please....
, because those On the Hour
On the Hour

On the Hour was a United Kingdom radio programme that parody current affairs broadcasting, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 1991 and 1992....
 and The Day Today
The Day Today

The Day Today is a Surrealism British parody of television news programmes. It is an adaptation of the radio programme On The Hour. The series is composed of six half-hour episodes and a selection of shorter, five-minute slots recorded as promotion trailers for the longer segments....
 things were about trying to establish a character within a situation, and Peter Cook was really doing 'knight's move' and 'double knight's move' thinking to construct jokes or ridiculous scenes flipping back on themselves, and it was amazing. I mean, I held out no great hopes that he wouldn't be a boozy old sack of lard with his hair falling out and scarcely able to get a sentence out, because he hadn't given much evidence that that wouldn't be the case. But, in fact, he stumbled in with a Safeways bag full of Kestrel lager and loads of fags and then proceeded to skip about mentally with the agility of a grasshopper. Really quite extraordinary."


On 17 December 1993, Cook appeared on Clive Anderson
Clive Anderson

Clive Anderson is a former barrister, now famous for being a successful comedy author as well as a radio and television presenter in the United Kingdom....
 Talks Back
showcasing four completely new characters, and the following day appeared on BBC2
BBC Two

BBC Two is the second major terrestrial television channel of the BBC, aimed at a wide range of subject matter and interests, and specialising in intelligent yet popular programme genres....
 performing links for Arena
Arena (TV series)

Arena is a United Kingdom television documentary series, made and broadcast by the BBC. It has run since 1 October 1975, and over five hundred episodes have been made....
s "Radio Night". He also appeared, on 26 December, in the 1993 Christmas special of
One Foot in the Grave
One Foot in the Grave

One Foot in the Grave is a BBC television situation comedy series written by David Renwick. The show ran for six series, with several specials over a ten year period, from 1990 to 2000....
("One Foot in the Algarve"), playing a muckraking tabloid journalist. Many hoped these high-profile appearances marked the beginning of a revival for Cook, but before the end of the next year his mother died, and Cook returned to a life of heavy drinking. His own death, 13 months later at the age of 57 was officially reported as resulting from internal haemorrhaging. The papers lamented the passing of a 'comic genius who had failed to live up to his promise'. A lone voice countered that he gave every impression of a man who had enjoyed life entirely on his own terms with no compromise to the opinions of others. Eric Idle
Eric Idle

Eric Idle is an England comedian, actor, author, singer and composer of comic songs. He wrote and performed as a member of the internationally renowned British comedy group Monty Python....
 and Stephen Fry
Stephen Fry

Stephen John Fry is an England actor, comedian, author and television presenter. With Hugh Laurie, as the comedy double act Fry and Laurie, he co-wrote and co-starred in A Bit of Fry and Laurie, and the duo also played the title roles in Jeeves and Wooster....
 commented that Cook had not wasted his talent but rather that the newspapers had tried to waste him.

Legacy

Cook's significance to modern British comedy is immense, and persists today: he is acknowledged as the main influence on a long stream of comedians who have followed him from the amateur dramatic clubs of British universities to the Edinburgh
Edinburgh

Edinburgh ; is the Capital city of Scotland, a position it has held since 1437. It is the seventh largest city in the United Kingdom and the second largest Scottish City status in the United Kingdom after Glasgow....
 festival, and thence to the radio and television studios of the BBC. Notable fans include all the members of Monty Python
Monty Python

Monty Python is a group of six comedians who created Monty Python's Flying Circus, a British television comedy sketch show that first aired on the BBC on October 5, 1969....
 and The Goodies
The Goodies

:For information about the television series, see The Goodies The Goodies are a trio of United Kingdom comedians , who created, wrote, and starred in a surrealism British television comedy series called The Goodies during the 1970s and early 1980s combining sketch comedy and situation comedy....
, and, more recently, the aforementioned Chris Morris
Chris Morris (satirist)

Christopher Morris is an England comedian, writer, director, actor and former radio DJ.Morris began his career in radio before moving into television....
. Some have seen Cook's life as tragic, insofar as the brilliance he exhibited in his youth did not fully lead to the recognition many thought he deserved. In his lifetime, Cook himself was constantly aware that some thought that he had not achieved or continued his early potential. He was disdainful of this view, and had no particular desire to achieve sustained career success as traditionally measured. Instead, Cook assessed his own happiness by the quality of his personal friendships and his overall enjoyment of life.

Ten years after his death, in January 2005, Peter Cook was ranked number one in a list entitled
The Comedian's Comedian, a poll of more than 300 comics, comedy writers, producers, and directors throughout the English speaking world and shown on Channel 4
Channel 4

Channel 4 is a UK Public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television broadcaster which began transmissions on 2 November 1982. Although commercially self-funded, it is ultimately publicly owned; originally a subsidiary of the Independent Broadcasting Authority , the station is now owned and operated by the #Channel Four Television...
 in the UK. He finished ahead of other important, legendary comics such Groucho Marx
Groucho Marx

Julius Henry "Groucho" Marx , was an American comedian and film star famed as a master of wit. He made 13 feature films with his siblings the Marx Brothers and also had a successful solo career, most notably as the host of the radio and television game shows You Bet Your Life and Tell it to Groucho....
, John Cleese
John Cleese

'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
, Eric Morecambe
Eric Morecambe

John Eric Bartholomew Order of the British Empire , better known by his stage name Eric Morecambe, was an English comedian who together with Ernie Wise formed the award-winning double act Morecambe and Wise....
, Laurel and Hardy
Laurel and Hardy

Laurel and Hardy were a popular comedy team of thin, British-born Stan Laurel and heavy, American-born Oliver Hardy . They became famous during the early half of the 20th century for their work in motion pictures and also appeared on stage throughout America and Europe....
, Bill Hicks
Bill Hicks

William Melvin Hicks was an American stand up comedy in the 1980s and early 1990s. He challenged mainstream beliefs, aiming to "enlighten people to think for themselves." Hicks used a ribald approach to express his material, describing himself as "Noam Chomsky with dick jokes." His jokes included general discussions about society, religion...
 and Woody Allen
Woody Allen

Woody Allen is an Cinema of the United States film director, writer, actor, comedian, musician and playwright.Allen's distinctive films, which run the gamut from dramas to Screwball comedy film, have made him one of the most respected living American directors....
. Coincidentally, the same week that programme was shown, Channel 4 broadcast
Not Only But Always
Not Only But Always

Not Only But Always is a United Kingdom TV movie, originally screened on the Channel 4 network in the UK on December 30 2004. Written and directed by playwright Terry Johnson , the film tells the story of the working and personal relationship between the comedians Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, a hugely popular duo in the UK during the 1960...
, a well-received television movie
Television movie

A television movie is a feature film that is produced for and originally distributed by a television network....
 dramatising the relationship between Cook and Moore, with Welsh actor Rhys Ifans
Rhys Ifans

Rhys Ifans in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales) is a Wales actor....
 portraying Cook. In August 2005 a stage play, written by Chris Bartlett
Chris Bartlett

Chris Bartlett is a London-based writer and journalist.Along with Nick Awde, he co-wrote the stage play Pete and Dud: Come Again, a hit at the Assembly Rooms at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2005 before transferring to London's West End at The Venue, in March 2006, starring Kevin Bishop as Dudley Moore and Tom Goodman-Hill a...
 and Nick Awde
Nick Awde

Nick Awde , is a British writer, artist and singer-songwriter. He was raised in Nigeria, the Sudan and Kenya before being sent to school in the UK....
 and examining the relationship from Moore's point of view,
Pete and Dud: Come Again
Pete and Dud: Come Again

Pete and Dud: Come Again is a stage play about Peter Cook and Dudley Moore written by Chris Bartlett and Nick Awde. This comedy drama had a sellout run at the Assembly Rooms as part of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2005 before transferring to London's West End at The Venue, in March 2006, in a version starring Kevin Bishop as Moore,...
, was a sellout hit at the Assembly Rooms as part of the Edinburgh Fringe
Edinburgh Fringe

The Edinburgh Festival Fringe is the world?s largest arts festival. Established in 1947 as an alternative to the Edinburgh International Festival, it takes place in Scotland's capital during three weeks every August alongside several other arts and cultural festivals, collectively known as the Edinburgh Festival....
, before transferring to The Venue in London's West End in March 2006. English actor Tom Goodman-Hill
Tom Goodman-Hill

Tom Goodman-Hill is a United Kingdom actor. He gained a Bachelor of Arts in Drama and English with a teaching qualification from the University of Warwick, where he took an active role in student drama....
 played Cook.

A green plaque was unveiled jointly by Westminster City Council and The Heritage Foundation at the site of Cook's "The Establishment Club" on February 15 2009.

Further reading


Filmography

  • The Wrong Box
    The Wrong Box

    The Wrong Box is a British comedy film made by Salamander Film Productions and distributed by Columbia Pictures. It was produced and directed by Bryan Forbes from a screenplay by Larry Gelbart and Burt Shevelove, based on the The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne....
    (1966)
  • Alice in Wonderland (1966)
  • Bedazzled
    Bedazzled (1967 film)

    Bedazzled is a 1967 in film film written by and starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, retelling the Faust legend in the Swinging London of the 1960s....
    (1967)
  • A Dandy in Aspic
    A Dandy in Aspic

    A Dandy in Aspic is a 1968 in film UK spy film, directed by Anthony Mann, based on a A Dandy in Aspic by Derek Marlowe and starring Laurence Harvey, Tom Courtenay and Mia Farrow....
    (1968)
  • Monte Carlo Or Bust (released in the US as Those Daring Young Men in Their Jaunty Jalopies) (1969)
  • The Bed-Sitting Room
    The Bed-Sitting Room

    The Bed-Sitting Room is a satirical play by Spike Milligan and John Antrobus. It started off as a one-act play which was first produced at the Marlowe Theatre, Canterbury....
    (1969)
  • The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer
    The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer

    The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer is a United Kingdom 1970 in film cult satire film written by and starring Peter Cook....
    (1970)
  • Find the Lady (1976)
  • The Hound of the Baskervilles
    The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978 film)

    The Hound of the Baskervilles is a 1978 British comedy film spoofing The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It starred Peter Cook as Sherlock Holmes and Dudley Moore as John Watson ....
    (1978)
  • Derek and Clive Get the Horn (1979)
  • Yellowbeard
    Yellowbeard

    Yellowbeard is a 1983 comedy film by Graham Chapman, along with Peter Cook, Bernard McKenna and David Sherlock. It was directed by Mel Damski....
    (1983)
  • Supergirl
    Supergirl (film)

    Supergirl is a 1984 superhero film. It stars Helen Slater in her first film role in the title role of the DC Comics superheroine Supergirl. Faye Dunaway played the primary villain, Selena....
    (1984)
  • The Princess Bride
    The Princess Bride (film)

    The Princess Bride is a 1987 in film film, based on the 1973 in literature The Princess Bride by William Goldman, combining comedy, Adventure , romance film and fantasy....
    (1987): The Impressive Clergyman
  • Whoops Apocalypse
    Whoops Apocalypse

    Whoops Apocalypse was originally a six-part 1982 sitcom by Andrew Marshall and David Renwick, made by London Weekend Television for ITV. Marshall and Renwick later reworked the concept as a 1986 Film with almost completely different characters and plot, although one or two of the original actors returned in different roles....
    (1986)
  • Without A Clue
    Without a Clue

    Without a Clue is a 1988 in film comedy film starring Michael Caine and Ben Kingsley....
    (1988)
  • Getting It Right (1989)
  • Great Balls of Fire!
    Great Balls of Fire! (film)

    Great Balls of Fire! is an United States biographical film, directed by Jim McBride and features Dennis Quaid as Jerry Lee Lewis. It was written by McBride and Jack Baran, based on an autobiography by Myra Gale Brown and Murray M....
    (1989)
Amnesty
  • Pleasure at Her Majesty's (1976)
  • The Mermaid Frolics (1977)
  • The Secret Policeman's Ball
  • The Secret Policeman's Private Parts (1981)
  • The Best of Amnesty: Featuring the Stars of Monty Python (1999)


UK chart singles:-
  • "The Ballad Of Spotty Muldoon" (1965)
  • "Goodbye-ee" (1965) with Dudley Moore


External links


  • , a Peter Cook Fansite incl. Gallery
  • , script for one of Cook and Moore's most famous and oft-performed sketches.