The Fish-Slapping Dance
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The Fish-Slapping Dance is a popular Monty Python sketch that appears in Monty Python's Flying Circus. It was shot on location, on film.
The sketch stars John Cleese and Michael Palin in safari outfits and pith helmets at the side of a canal lock (Teddington Lock in west London). At first both are facing each other and standing perfectly still. Light-hearted music then begins to play and Palin performs a simple merry dance which consists of dancing towards Cleese, lightly slapping him in the face with two small pilchards, and returning to his starting spot. After Palin does this four times he returns to standing stiff and still. In traditional British dancing, of which this is reminiscent, one would now expect the other dancer to repeat these steps. Instead, the music stops, Cleese reveals his fish - a much, much larger halibut - and clobbers Palin around the head with it, knocking Palin into the water several feet below.
The sketch is about a quarter of a minute long, but its fast-paced non sequitur nature has been enough to endear it to fans. Due to its nature it has not been reproduced for live shows, etc., and therefore does not always receive the same recognition as other popular Python sketches. It remains, however, one of Michael Palin's favorite routines on the show.
In the Monty Python-inspired Broadway show Spamalot, there is a song called "The Fisch Schlapping Song", sung by pseudo-Finnish people, before the historian abruptly ends the song. During the song, men & women dressed in stereotypical Scandinavian garb slap each other with fish, very similar to the original sketch.