Basil Fawlty

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Basil Fawlty, played by John Cleese
Basil Fawlty, played by John Cleese

Basil Fawlty is the major character in the British sitcom Fawlty Towers, played by John Cleese. The character is often thought of as an iconic British comedy character, and has been deemed unforgettable despite only a dozen half-hour episodes ever being made.

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[edit] Personality

Basil is a snobbish, miserly, xenophobic and sexually repressed paranoiac misanthrope who is desperate to belong to a higher social class. He sees the successful running of the hotel as a means of achieving this ("turn it into an establishment of class..."), yet his job forces him to be pleasant to people he despises or aspires to be above socially. His unstoppable wife Sybil will often get in the way of Basil's treatment towards the guests, often trying to bridge the peace, or pick up the pieces, to quite limited avail.

While he is terrified of his wife's sharp tongue, he wishes to stand up to her and his plans often conflict with her wishes. She is often verbally abusive towards him (describing him as "an ageing, brilliantined stick insect") and though he is much taller than Sybil, he often finds himself on the receiving end of Sybil's temper, expressed verbally or physically. Basil usually turns to Manuel or Polly to help him with whatever scheme he has planned, while trying his best to prevent Sybil from finding out, and as such he gained a reputation as an unabashed prevaricator.

Basil takes many of his frustrations out on the hapless Manuel, physically abusing him in a variety of ways. On occasions he also assaults others, such as strangling the guest Mr. Hutchinson in "The Hotel Inspectors", kneeing Major Gowen in "Basil the Rat", and even—most famously—striking his "vicious bastard" of a car in "Gourmet Night" with a tree branch when it refuses to move.

Another eccentricity affecting Basil is that of occasionally swapping words around in a sentence while propounding a falsehood, for instance in "The Anniversary" when he announces to the party guests that it's "perfectly Sybil! Simple's not well. She's lost her throat and her voice hurts", and- less obviously- reassuring himself as much as his wife in "The Wedding Party" that the sound of knocking on his bedroom door was "probably some key who forgot the guest for their door". He also has difficulty disconnecting his thought-process from an unrelated incident, as in "The Wedding Party", when he is looking through life-drawing pictures and answers the telephone with, "Hello, Fawlty Titties?" or in The Psychiatrist, where, after inadvertantly staining the chest area of a female guest with paint, he realises that Sybil has noticed, but then in confusion puts his hands all over the woman's breasts as a means of stopping her from seeing it.

Basil served in the Catering Corps of the British Army, possibly as part of his National Service, but makes it seem as if he was a soldier. He claims: "I fought in the Korean War, you know, I killed four men" to which his wife jokingly replies to the threat, "he was in the Catering Corps; he used to poison them". He is often seen wearing a military tie and a military-type moustache. Fawlty also claims to have sustained a shrapnel injury to his leg in the Korean War.

John Cleese himself described Basil as thinking that he could run a first-rate hotel if he didn't have all the guests getting in the way. He has also made the point that on account of Basil's inner need to conflict with his wife's wishes, "Basil couldn't be Basil if he didn't have Sybil."

He has a slight soft spot for doctors, having aspired to be one himself (however Sybil says that he couldn't even be a tree surgeon: couldn't stand the sight of sap - a ridicule on his dream). Basil is constantly maniacally depressed, intimidating towards guests, and liable to pick up a tail-end of a situation and turning it into a farcical misunderstanding, usually by misinterpreting a situation that was actually quite innocent. Basil is known for his tight-fisted mannerisms, employing Irish cowboy builder O'Reilly in The Builders because he was a cheaper alternative, and more importantly Manuel, who was in a similar boat, and is now the butt of his employer's occasional violence.

Basil has been married to Sybil for fifteen years, as stated in the episode The Anniversary. Basil very rarely shows any signs of real love for his long-suffering wife ("my little piranha-fish" is one of the kindest epithets he bestows on her), and vice-versa. Sybil's friend Audrey will often be the only support she gets, and therefore she struggles on putting up with him. Ironically, The Anniversary was one of the few episodes in which Basil was the one trying to be nice, and Sybil was the one who had misread the situation (i.e., thinking he had forgotten what day it was).

John Cleese reprised the role of Basil in the song Don't Mention the War, based on the situation in the episode The Germans, for the 2006 Germany FIFA World Cup.

[edit] Origins

Fawlty Towers was inspired by the Monty Python team's stay in the Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay. Cleese and Booth stayed on at the hotel after filming for the Python show had finished. The owner, Mr. Donald Sinclair, was very rude, throwing a bus timetable at a guest who asked when the next bus to town would arrive and placing Eric Idle's suitcase behind a wall in the garden in case it contained a bomb (actually it contained a ticking alarm clock). He also criticised the American-born Terry Gilliam's table manners for being too American (he had the fork in the wrong hand while eating), and it is reasonable to assume that his treatment of Gilliam partially inspired Basil's treatment of an American visitor in the episode Waldorf Salad.

[edit] Libel case

In 1989, Cleese successfully sued the Daily Mirror for libel when it described him becoming like his character Basil Fawlty.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ (2006) Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. ISBN 0-141-02715-0. 


Fawlty Towers
Characters:
Basil Fawlty | Sybil Fawlty | Manuel | Polly Sherman
Major Gowen | Terry the Chef | Miss Tibbs & Miss Gatsby
Audrey | Notable guests
Episodes:
A Touch of Class | The Builders | The Wedding Party | The Hotel Inspectors | Gourmet Night | The Germans
Communication Problems | The Psychiatrist | Waldorf Salad | The Kipper and the Corpse | The Anniversary | Basil the Rat
The "thirteenth episode" rumour
Cast and crew:
John Cleese | Connie Booth | Prunella Scales | Andrew Sachs
Ballard Berkeley | Gilly Flower | Renee Roberts | Brian Hall
John Howard Davies | Bob Spiers
See also:
Donald Sinclair | Wooburn Grange Country Club | Torquay | The hotel | Don't Mention the World Cup