Wacky Wales

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The Goodies episode
"Wacky Wales"
Episode № 38
Airdate 3 March 1975
(Monday — 9.00 pm)
Director
Producer
Guest star(s) Jon Pertwee as
"the Reverand
Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn
"
Marcelle Samett as the
"Fan Dancer"
Alun Williams (as himself)
(the "Compere of the Ecclesiastical
Sevens Rugby Games
")
The Fred Tomlinson Singers as the "Rugby Sevens Repressionists' players"
Series V
February 10December 21, 1975
  1. The Movies
  2. Clown Virus
  3. Chubbie Chumps
  4. Wacky Wales
  5. Frankenfido
  6. Scatty Safari
  7. Kung Fu Kapers
  8. Lighthouse Keeping Loonies
  9. Rome Antics
  10. Fleet Street Goodies
  11. South Africa
  12. Bunfight at the O.K. Tea Rooms
  13. The End
  14. The Goodies Rule – O.K.?
List of The Goodies episodes


Wacky Wales is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The Goodies receive an invitation, from the Reverand Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn, to attend an Eisteddfod in Llan Dlubber in Wales.

When they meet the Reverend, they find that he is amazed that the Goodies want to eat and drink tea etc. He tells them that eating, drinking tea, and other such activities are sinful. The Reverend is with the Church of the Seventh Day Repressionists, and the church has disallowed anything that could even be remotely construed as fun.

When they comment on the fun there should be at the Eisteddfod, the Reverend states that the Eisteddfod is the International Festival of Gloom. At this point, Bill is ready to leave and go home. Graeme, however, decides that the Goodies should stay, and remain as competitors in the Eisteddfod, and to be as entertaining as possible. As a consequence, they put on an enthusiastic display of entertainment, and they bring down the wrath of the Reverend on their heads. The Reverend decides to sacrifice the Goodies.

Before he sacrifices the Goodies. he leads his congregation in a devotional song, which just happens to be a well-known rugby song. The Goodies, recognising the song, throw themselves into singing in full voice. This surprises the Reverend. When the Goodies press this temporary advantage by pretending to be Welsh, the Reverend declares that he can't kill fellow Welshmen, tells them that his church worships the game of rugby, and invites the Goodies to join them. Tim declines on the basis that they are Church of England. The Reverend claims that his is the greatest religion, and Tim challenges him to prove it. This results in the "Ecclesiastical Rugby Sevens" competition, in which various teams made up from churchmen from religious groups play against each other (one of the Seven Rugby teams is made up entirely of Derek Nimmos).

Eventually, the Seventh Day Repressionists win the tournament, and their celebrations are less than holy. Tim discovers that half of the Welsh rugby national team is playing with the Repressionists, and he disqualifies the team because they had brought in nonreligious players. The Repressionists take offence at being denied their rightful position as winners, and decide to use the Goodies as footballs in a rough informal game of Rugby.

The Goodies' experiences with the Repressionists have a weird and unusual effect on them all, and life is never quite the same again.

[edit] Quotes

Quote 1

  • Reverand Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn:
"Fun? There's no fun at the eisteddfod
'Eisteddfod' is an old Welsh word from the Old Welsh.
It comes from two words
'Eistedd' meaning 'bored' — and 'fod' meaning 'stiff'".

Quote 2

  • Reverand Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn:
"A nice brisk rub down with a Brillo Pad".

[edit] Spoofs and imitations

[edit] Trivia

  • Jon Pertwee, who played the part of the "Reverand Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn Llewellyn", was the Third Doctor in the long-running British sci-fi series Doctor Who. He was also well-known as a comedy actor, both on radio and television. His radio comedy roles included that of "Chief Petty Officer Pertwee" in The Navy Lark.

[edit] External link


The Goodies episodes (in alphabetical order)

2001 and a Bit | Alternative Roots | Animals | Animals Are People Too | The Baddies | Big Foot | Black and White Beauty |
Bunfight at the O.K. Tea Rooms | Camelot | Caught in the Act | Cecily | Change of Life | Charity Bounce | Chubbie Chumps | Clown Virus |
Come Dancing | Commonwealth Games| | Culture for the Masses | Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express | Dodonuts | Earthanasia | The End |
Farm Fresh Food | Fleet Street Goodies | Football Crazy | For Those in Peril on the Sea | Frankenfido | Gender Education | Give Police a Chance |
The Goodies – Almost Live | Goodies and Politics | The Goodies and the Beanstalk | Goodies in the Nick | The Goodies Rule – O.K.? |
The Greenies | Holiday | Hospital for Hire | Hunting Pink | Hype Pressure | Invasion of the Moon Creatures | It Might as Well Be String |
A Kick in the Arts | Kitten Kong | Kung Fu Kapers | Lighthouse Keeping Loonies | Lips, or Almighty Cod | The Lost Tribe | The Movies |
The Music Lovers | The New Office | Pollution | Punky Business | The Race | Radio Goodies | Robot | Rome Antics | Royal Command |
Saturday Night Grease | Scatty Safari | Scotland | Scoutrageous | Snooze | Snow White 2 | South Africa | The Stone Age | Superstar |
That Old Black Magic | Tower of London | U-Friend or UFO? | Wacky Wales | War Babies | Way Outward Bound | Winter Olympics | Women's Lib |


The GoodiesThe Goodies TV series
Tim Brooke-TaylorGraeme GardenBill Oddie