Cheese Shop sketch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Cleese (right) and Michael Palin (left) of Monty Python performing the Cheese Shop sketch.
Enlarge
John Cleese (right) and Michael Palin (left) of Monty Python performing the Cheese Shop sketch.

The "Cheese Shop" sketch is a famous sketch from Monty Python's Flying Circus. It appears in episode 33, "Salad Days."

The sketch is a fairly typical John Cleese set-piece. In essence, John Cleese attempts to purchase some cheese from the cheese shop; unfortunately the proprietor, Mr. Henry Wensleydale (Michael Palin (as before), playing the obstructive shopkeeper to Cleese's irate customer), appears to have not one single variety in stock, not even a morsel of Cheddar cheese, 'the single most popular cheese in the world'. The slow crescendo of bouzouki music (played by live musicians in the shop, and erroneously called a dulcimer by Cleese) in the background mirrors Cleese's growing anger as he lists various, increasingly obscure cheeses to no avail. The list comes to a bizarre conclusion with Cleese's desperate request for "Venezuelan Beaver Cheese." The secondary punchline of this sketch is when John Cleese, who at the beginning said he wasn't annoyed by the music, suddenly loudly interrupts the musicians and tells them to stop. The main punchline, of course, is that there is no cheese in the shop; when Palin admits this fact, Cleese shoots him in the head, then says sadly to himself: "What a senseless waste of human life!" In the television program, the sketch is revealed to be a teaser for Sam Peckinpah's Rogue Cheddar; this provides a link to further discussions of Peckinpah films.

Contents

[edit] Other versions

The sketch was reworked for The Brand New Monty Python Bok, becoming a two-player word game in which one player ("the Customer") must keep naming different cheeses, and the other player ("the Shopkeeper") must keep coming up with different excuses (otherwise "the Customer wins and may punch the Shopkeeper in the teeth").

The sketch was parodied in an episode of The Young Ones. Alexei Sayle rushes into a shop (also seeming to do a silly walk, paying homage to "The Ministry of Silly Walks" sketch) and asks if it is a cheese shop. Rik Mayall, the Palinesque proprietor, replies "No, sir." Alexei says, "Well, that's that. Sketch knackered then, innit?"

David Welbourn wrote an Interactive Fiction-version of the sketch, a small text adventure game called "Cheeseshop," in which the player can attempt to buy cheese at the shop. The game is available on the internet, at the Interactive Fiction Archive.

The "Asian Bride Shop" sketch in an episode of Goodness Gracious Me also pays homage to the Cheese Shop sketch in which the characters are Asian versions of Cleese and Palin and substitute the names of cheese types with descriptions of types of brides. At the end of the sketch another customer enters, complaining that his bride is dead, a reference to the Dead Parrot sketch.

Another pastiche was a script circulated in early 2004 which parodied the SCO v. IBM lawsuit[1]. In the script, a judge, taking Cleese's role, inquires of the Palinesque attorney for The SCO Group as to the evidence he will be presenting for his suit, only to discover after a monotonous line of questioning similar to the original sketch that SCO has no evidence at all. The script was a sharp parody of the quality of the SCO lawsuit, implying that it was exceedingly frivolous.

Still another variation on the sketch appeared in The Order of the Stick, a webcomic satirizing Dungeons & Dragons. In this one, the cheese shop is replaced by a polearm shop, with the warrior Roy Greenhilt trying to get a replacement for his broken sword, and naming every polearm listed in the game. He expresses frustration that he is unable to purchase a weapon, admitting that if he could, he would use it to stab the shopkeeper. In the comic, the shop owner's cat deposits a dead parrot and a python next to the counter.

The skit was also referenced in the "Weird Al" Yankovic song "Albuquerque". In this version, the main character attempts to buy donuts at a donut shop, with similar results. The scene ends when the shopkeeper reveals that all he has is a "box of one dozen starving, crazed weasels" which the main character purchases, opens, and is attacked by. [1]

The cartoon Histeria! uses a variation of the sketch to depect the Boston Tea Party, where an american sets up a fake tea stand in order to distract a british guard. Rather than simply being out, each time the guard asks for a type of tea, there is a splash heard offscreen, and the american says they're out, implying that each particular tea had just been thrown into the harbor.

[edit] Cheeses

Forty-three cheeses are mentioned in the skit - Red Leicester, Tilsit, Caerphilly, Bel Paese, Red Windsor, Stilton, Emmental, Gruyère, Norwegian Jarlsberg, Liptauer, Lancashire, White Stilton, Danish Blue, Double Gloucester, Cheshire, Dorset Blue Vinney, Brie, Roquefort, Pont l'Evêque, Port Salut, Savoyard, Saint-Paulin, Carre de l'Est, Bresse-Bleu, Boursin, Camembert, Gouda, Edam, Caithness, Smoked Austrian, Japanese Sage Derby, Wensleydale, Greek Feta, Gorgonzola, Parmesan, Mozzarella, Pipo Crème, Danish Fynbo (mispronounced 'fimboe'), Czechoslovakian sheep's milk, Venezuelan Beaver Cheese, Cheddar, Ilchester, and Limburger.

[edit] Venezuelan Beaver Cheese

This type of cheese is, like its supposed progenitor, nonexistent. Although this delicacy appears to be entirely fictional (Venezuela has no native beavers), various recipes for Venezuelan Beaver cheese have since been published.

Venezuelan Beaver Cheese also makes an appearance in Sierra's computer adventure game Leisure Suit Larry VII, and in the webcomic Triangle and Robert.

[edit] Trivia

  • The sign above the cheese shop as seen in Monty Python's Flying Circus.
    Enlarge
    The sign above the cheese shop as seen in Monty Python's Flying Circus.
    In the sketch itself Palin refers to his character's name simply as "Mister Wensleydale". However, the name "Henry Wensleydale" appears above the shop front in the series of stills that precede the original TV version of the sketch. When the same sketch was performed at the Secret Policeman's Ball, his name became Arthur Wensleydale.
  • John Cleese's father changed his surname from 'Cheese' to 'Cleese' many years prior to John Cleese's birth. [2]
  • The Python programming language calls its package repository Cheese Shop.

[edit] External links

In other languages