The Secret Policeman's Balls

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  • The Secret Policeman's Other Ball (1981)

    Full Episode

    S 2 : Ep 3 - 9/1/81

    The 1979 Secret Policeman's Ball show had yielded a successful film and two albums (of comedy and music), and the same production team banded together in September 1981 for an even more triumphant four-night reprise at London's Theatre Royal. Once more John Cleese lined up most of the comedic talents - the by-now usual mixture of "Oxbridge" stalwarts and promising newcomers. Martin Lewis parlayed the success of Pete Townshend's 1979 appearance to recruit more musicians to the Amnesty cause: Sting, Phil Collins, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Donovan - and, most fortuitously, Bob Geldof, who made his first-ever benefit appearance at the 1981 show. The concept of entertainers banding together for a good cause apparently left an impression on him.moreless
  • The Secret Policemans Ball (1979)

    Full Episode

    S 2 : Ep 2 - 6/1/79

    The first show to bear the legendary “Secret Policeman’s” title took place over four nights in June 1979. It was held — like the 1976 show that inspired it — at Her Majesty’s Theatre in London. John Cleese again secured most of the talent and (in his own words) “slightly directed” the stage show. In addition to Peter Cook, Eleanor Bron and half of Monty Python, Cleese introduced audiences to newcomer Rowan Atkinson. Coproducer Martin Lewis suggested that the show feature acoustic interludes from rock musicians and recruited Pete Townshend and Tom Robinson to the cause. The resulting film was released theatrically with great success in the U.K. and Australia — and the Secret Policeman’s Ball was truly rollingmoreless
  • Pleasure At Her Majestys (1976)

    Full Episode

    S 2 : Ep 1 - 12/29/76

    The very first show in what came to be called the "Secret Policeman's Ball" series took place over three late nights in April 1976 at Her Majesty's Theatre in London. The show was instigated by John Cleese, who volunteered to "round up a few pals" to perform for Amnesty International's benefit. These pals transpired to be most of Monty Python, Beyond The Fringe and The Goodies (three of the U.K.'s most successful humor ensembles) — together with leading solo performers. It was a gathering of the British comedic tribes. Cleese titled the show "A Poke In the Eye (With a Sharp Stick)." The film documenting this comedy summit was titled Pleasure At Her Majesty's — a wordplay on the formal British expression for imprisonment in which convicts are "detained at Her Majesty’s pleasure."moreless
  • Remember the Secret Policeman's Ball? (2004)

    Full Episode

    S 1 : Ep 6 - 12/9/04

    In 2004 Britain's BBC commissioned a documentary to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the 1979 Amnesty show - the first to carry the "Secret Policeman's Ball" title. By that time there had been no less than 11 Amnesty galas - including performances by literally scores of comedians and musicians. With such a vast treasure trove to draw on, the resulting film was rich in anecdotes and extracts, though inevitably rather subjective. The memories of the original participants were somewhat shaky, but what emerges clearly is the rich pioneering spirit of the first wave of shows (1976–1981) and how those events helped inspire the explosion of benefit shows that followed - including Live Aid and the many subsequent Amnesty galas.moreless
  • The Secret Policeman's Biggest Ball (1989)

    Full Episode

    S 1 : Ep 5 - 9/1/89

    The 1989 show returned to the roots of the series with an emphasis on comedy and eschewing the music that, by the 1987 show, had come to be an equal component of the Balls. The cast was a blend of the 1960s and '70s generation of performers (John Cleese, Michael Palin, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore) with '80s newcomers such as Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders, Lenny Henry, Rory Bremner, Ben Elton, Robbie Coltrane and Adrian Edmondson (The Young Ones). The show took place over four nights in late August through early September 1989 at London's Cambridge Theatre and was directed - in a demonstration of cross-generational entente - by John Cleese and Absolutely Fabulous cocreator/star Jennifer Saunders. The show was the last Ball to feature any of the original performers. When the Amnesty shows resumed in the 1990s and 2000s, the Ball had passed to a new generation.moreless
  • The Secret Policeman's Third Ball (1987)

    Full Episode

    S 1 : Ep 4 - 3/1/87

    Victims of their own success in recruiting stars to appear at fund-raisers, Amnesty took a six-year sabbatical from producing benefit shows in the mid-1980s as a multitude of other good causes staged charity concerts that took the limelight. Amnesty returned in 1987 with refreshed zeal. A new generation of British comedians took up the Amnesty mantle, including Robbie Coltrane, Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie and the Spitting Image puppets. On the musical side, Amnesty show veteran Bob Geldof was joined by several newcomers including Kate Bush, David Gilmour, Joan Armatrading and Duran Duran, as well as three musicians who had recently performed for Amnesty in the USA: Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed and Jackson Browne. The two evenings of comedy and two separate nights of music at the London Palladium in March 1987 were subsequently fused into one TV special - and the Ball continued rolling.moreless
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