Who fans will
be fascinated to learn that, according to Eric Idle, Keith Moon would have had
a speaking part in Monty Python’s The
Life Of Brian had he not inconveniently left our planet a few days before
filming was due to begin. In his memoir, his Sortabiography, which I have just finished reading, Idle states
that he and Keith spoke to one another at the party Paul McCartney threw on the
eve of Keith’s death.
“He came racing across and spouting his
lines from Brian as a mad prophet: ‘And
there shall at that time be monstrous things…’,” writes Idle. “He was terrific
in his Robert Newton voice and I said, ‘Yes, yes, Keith, that’s great, save it
for next week.’ Sadly, after that night… that was that.”
A few days later the Pythons left for
Tunisia to start filming and, had things turned out differently, Keith would
have been with them.
If nothing else, this story puts to the
sword any lingering speculation that Keith may have overdosed deliberately. As plenty
of people know from personal experience, Keith was a huge fan of Monty Python’s
Flying Circus, and there is no way in a million years that he would have missed
out on an opportunity to feature in one of their films, nor of the opportunity
to travel with them abroad, or anywhere else for that matter.
Two pages earlier in Idle’s book, the
nudge-nudge-wink-winker relates that in January of 1978 Keith “followed” the
Pythons to Barbados where he joined in games of Scrabble with John Cleese and
Graham Chapman, “adding the word CAT to their very long words. Mick Jagger also
came to dinner with Jerry, and we played charades, at which he [Keith] was
terrific.”
Oddly, there is no mention of Keith’s
visit to Barbados with the Pythons in any of the many books about him or The
Who, so this nugget of information is revealed for the first time in Idle’s
book. All six Pythons – Idle, Cleese, Chapman, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and
Terry Gilliam – were there to work on the script for The Life Of Brian, so it seems likely that Keith was offered the mad
prophet part during this stay.
Keith was living in London at the time
having just moved to the UK from California, and The Who were recording Who Are You, mostly at their own Ramport
Studios in London’s Battersea. I am reliably informed that Keith flew out to
Barbados on January 16 during a break in recording and stayed at the Colony
Club.
The Sortabiography,
subtitled Always Look On The Bright Side
Of Life, also contains lots of stories about George Harrison and sundry
other rock stars with whom Idle, the most musical of the core Pythons, became friendly.
Not to mention celebrities from just about every other walk of life, thus turning
the book into the biggest name-drop I’ve ever read, for which Idle, amusingly,
makes no apology whatsoever.
11 comments:
Hi Chris,
Another belter- good on you!
Mike Palin’s diaries do mention that Caribbean holiday, I think.
I also saw a ‘Life of Brian’ sorta photo-book many years back: it was dedicated to Keith. A nice touch...
Michael Palin mentioned that Keith Moon and Graham Chapman were a great double act at charades in Barbados and KM was voted into the Life of Brian film by the Python team on 16 June 1978. He was due to fly to Tunisia with the Pythons but according to Chapman, KM had some pills called Heminverin to help him cut down on drinking and should never be taken with alcohol as they increased the strength of anything that was drunk. Looks like he didn’t follow the instructions.
"Not to mention celebrities from just about every other walk of life..."
You mean from just about every other SILLY walk of life. :-)
My mistake! Thanks. CC
Yes, it does now seem that various Pythons alluded to this over the years, either in books or interviews, but I wasn't paying attention to them, only Who books.
Accidentally took 32 pills, huh?
The published script of 'Life Of Brian' was dedicated to Keith Moon.
Just finished reading the Idle book. Yes, the name-dropping is unabashedly smug and constant, but it's still a fun read, even laugh-out-loud at times.
As a Moon fan since the age of 13 in the 70's and a veteran boozer and pill-taker, I know that it is very easy to lose count of the number of pills you take - I do it often! Did you ALSO know that Keith had talked about his plans to ask his GF Annette to marry him that same night? He was NOT in a suicidal mood. He aspirated on his own vomit in his sleep - the majority of the pills were found undissolved. He was trying to get better - there are first hand reports by people he talked to that night that said he had at most two drinks. Moon had his own demons. It is evil to speak ill of the dead.
I do not believe I did speak evil of Keith and nor would I ever do, unless you consider speculation about the cause of death to be evil. I have always believed it to be an accident insofar as Keith was unaware of the impact of too many Heminverin pills. Others have speculated the overdose may have been deliberate and I am putting that to the sword in my post.
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