Entry tags:
Top Comics
Here's a list of the top comedians of all time, as voted for by fellow comics in a poll organized by Channel 4.
1. Peter Cook
2. John Cleese
3. Woody Allen
4. Eric Morecambe
5. Groucho Marx
6. Tommy Cooper
7. Laurel and Hardy
8. Billy Connolly
9. Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer
10. Richard Pryor
11. Chris Morris
12. Tony Hancock
13. Bill Hicks
14. Peter Sellers
15. Steve Martin
16. Ronnie Barker
17. Steve Coogan
18. Charlie Chaplin
19. Eddie Izzard
20. Paul Merton
I imagine a lot of these names are going to mean nothing on the far side of the Atlantic.
I've already written a couple of posts about Peter Cook; he seems to be dead fashionable right now. I don't get it, I really don't.
In the tall, manic Englishman stakes I prefer Cleese. Python and Fawlty Towers were much more fully achieved than any of the rather scrappy things Cook did for TV.
Woody Allen. OK, that's probably about right.
Eric Morecambe. A parochial choice.
Groucho. Yes, yes, yes. But where are Harpo and Chico? Those guys were a team.
Tommy Cooper... but I'm getting bored with this exercise already.
But how can Charlie Chaplin score less than middle-of-the road TV comic Ronnie Barker? And where are Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd?
It's a generational thing. The voters are largely middle-aged and so we have a list weighted to comics who were at their prime in the 60s, 70s and 80s. Older names are downgraded and today's comedy gods (guys with shows currently in the schedules)- Ricky Gervais, Walliams and Lucas, Larry David- don't feature at all.
Oh- and what a surprise- no women!
1. Peter Cook
2. John Cleese
3. Woody Allen
4. Eric Morecambe
5. Groucho Marx
6. Tommy Cooper
7. Laurel and Hardy
8. Billy Connolly
9. Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer
10. Richard Pryor
11. Chris Morris
12. Tony Hancock
13. Bill Hicks
14. Peter Sellers
15. Steve Martin
16. Ronnie Barker
17. Steve Coogan
18. Charlie Chaplin
19. Eddie Izzard
20. Paul Merton
I imagine a lot of these names are going to mean nothing on the far side of the Atlantic.
I've already written a couple of posts about Peter Cook; he seems to be dead fashionable right now. I don't get it, I really don't.
In the tall, manic Englishman stakes I prefer Cleese. Python and Fawlty Towers were much more fully achieved than any of the rather scrappy things Cook did for TV.
Woody Allen. OK, that's probably about right.
Eric Morecambe. A parochial choice.
Groucho. Yes, yes, yes. But where are Harpo and Chico? Those guys were a team.
Tommy Cooper... but I'm getting bored with this exercise already.
But how can Charlie Chaplin score less than middle-of-the road TV comic Ronnie Barker? And where are Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd?
It's a generational thing. The voters are largely middle-aged and so we have a list weighted to comics who were at their prime in the 60s, 70s and 80s. Older names are downgraded and today's comedy gods (guys with shows currently in the schedules)- Ricky Gervais, Walliams and Lucas, Larry David- don't feature at all.
Oh- and what a surprise- no women!
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Many of these names are unfamiliar to me.
In the U.S., surely Jerry Seinfeld would have been high on the list.
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I'd have put Sellers closer to the top. He was a genius. Stanley Kubrick said it, so it must be true. His best performances go further and deeper than anybody else's. They are hyper-real.
But perhaps "comedian" is the wrong category for Sellers. Forget Brando and Pacino and De Niro, I'd vote for him as best screen actor!
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Everyone says how good he is in Mrs Brown. I'm afraid I haven't seen it.
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Hm. According to IMDB, he's been in 39 movies since 1975. Including "Lemony Snicket". Haven't seen most of them. I gather that the drama thing is new for him, since Mrs. Brown.
I liked him as standup, but he was too angry for me. I liked his TV show better, because it was more controlled. I guess I like him older because he still has all his young-angry sensibility, but he gets it across more effectively now.
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At one point he got naked and ran about on a beach. That's not something you see every day!
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Damn straight! And what about Lenny Bruce?
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He also starred in a number of sitcoms- the best of which, Porridge, was a fairly edgy little show set in a prison.
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Rowan Atkinson - One of my favourites, but I don't see him on the list. I guess there's no accounting for taste in the world of comedians.
HePo
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My list would be topped by Spike Milligan and Peter Sellers. I guess that betrays how old I am.