Humour in Coronation Street
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Humour has featured strongly in Coronation Street since the program's inception on 9 December 1960 airing on British Television. Reflecting on Coronation Street's survival for over four decades, former archivist and scriptwriter Daran Little suggests that most observers attribute the show's success to "two aspects: the mixture of comedy and drama, and the strength of the female characters. (Little 1998, p.6)"
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[edit] Comic Characters
While most Coronation Street characters are used in a comedic capacity at some time or other, a number of characters have been used specifically for comedy throughout the show's history.
[edit] Mavis Riley
The notoriously prissy, reserved and plain Mavis Riley had long-running humorous storylines involving her love life. At one stage, two suitors threw themselves at her, but she could not make up her mind between them. When she finally decided to pick one, she ended up being named as the 'other woman' in a divorce case. At her first attempt to marry Derek Wilton, both failed to turn up at the church.
After their marriage, husband Derek proved a comic foil to dithering Mavis. Derek was offered a company car by his new stationery-manufacturing company, but it turned out to be a lime green car with a large plastic paper clip on top.
Mavis and Derek's garden was filled with kitsch decorations, only to have someone "kidnap" their garden gnome and send letters demanding payment of a ransom. They then received photographs of their kidnapped gnome photographed at several famous world monuments.
The character of Mavis was frequently been parodied in popular culture (particularly by comedian Les Dennis) for her catchphrase "Oooh, I don't really know".
[edit] Reg Holdsworth
Reg Holdsworth was a comic creation from the early 1990s, who was rapidly balding and tried to look more virile by getting an appalling toupée, which he thought would "draw the ladies". This backfired when Reg was accused of being a flasher (Reg's toupee made him look suspiciously like the real culprit).
[edit] Les Battersby
In 2002, one storyline involved the notoriously homophobic loudmouth Les Battersby (whose wife has left him) taking in a male lodger, only to be informed by the local Council that in taking in a lodger he has broken his tenancy agreement and would have to move. To hold on, he and his teenage lodger chose to pose as a gay couple, filling the house with the contents they imagined a gay couple's home might include. His estranged wife Janice (Vicky Entwistle), worried that he might lose his house, returns to pose as his happily married wife. She walks in on a house turned into a shrine to Judy Garland and Liberace, to be asked by the Council official "was it when your husband 'came out' that the marriage broke up?" She blew her husband's totally unconvincing scam by erupting into laughter. "Les. Gay? LES? Les is not gay. Les?"
[edit] Fred Elliott
In recent years a running gag has developed on the show involving Fred Elliott (John Savident)'s tendency to propose marriage to any lady that he gets involved with, usually under bizarre circumstances and leading to disastrous consequences. This long-running gag began in 1996 when Fred proposed to Rita Sullivan (Barbara Knox), who turned him down. Since then Fred has proposed to:
- Maureen Holdsworth (former wife of Reg), who married him only to leave him ten days later for Bill Webster
- Audrey Roberts (Sue Nicholls), to whom he proposed in France, only to have her turn him down
- Eve Sykes, who also married him, but turned out to be a bigamist
- Doreen Heavey, the mother of Fred's daughter-in-law Maxine Peacock, to whom Fred proposed while they were both drunk
- Penny King, who was, unbeknownst to Fred, seeing Fred's best friend Mike Baldwin (Johnny Briggs).
- Beverley Unwin (Susie Blake), mother of bar manager Shelley Unwin, who accepted Fred's proposal on 20 February 2006 when he rescued her after she was unceremoniously dumped by her boyfriend in a country lane. Fred died in Audrey Robert's hallway on the day of his wedding to Bev, minutes before the ceremony could be carried out.
A storyline beginning in May 2004 saw Fred order a bride from Thailand, Orchid Pattaya, through a golfing acquaintance, only to discover that she was a con artist.
[edit] Double-acts and Groups
Pairs and groups of characters have also been used throughout the programme to add comedy to plotlines. Original episodes of Coronation Street featured the busybody trio of Ena Sharples, Martha Longhurst and Minnie Caldwell offering comment and gossip on other residents.
In the 1970s and 1980s, Stan and Hilda Ogden and lodger Eddie Yeats provided light relief, along with stationery duo Rita Fairclough and Mavis Riley.
More recently Jack Duckworth and Vera Duckworth, Rita and Norris, and Les and Cilla have been employed in a number of humorous situations and storylines.
[edit] Humorous Storylines
[edit] The "Red Rec"
Another storyline involved efforts by locals to stop Council plans to turn an open space (the "Red Rec"), into a housing development and stadium complex. The normally reserved Emily Bishop, spurred on by her environmentalist nephew, Spider Nugent (Martin Hancock), staged a sit-in up a tree alongside more youthful environmentalists, aided by Weatherfield "conscience" Ken Barlow (William Roache) and local history expert Roy Cropper (David Neilson).
[edit] The Marriage of Les and Cilla
A storyline in 2005 saw Les marrying Cilla Brown in a ceremony that included a church break-in, a fake priest, a stolen wedding cake, and Cilla coiffed with curls in the shape 666, over-tanned to a carrot orange. To the couple's chagrin, the real vicar's early return resulted in rushed vows and the wedding party's hurried flight from the scene of the crime.
Coerced into performance in compensation for attacking Les in an earlier appearance, rock band Status Quo played at the reception. But the party was ruined when:
- Status Quo ate the party food.
- The wedding cake stolen from Diggory Compton's bakery turned out to be an iced cardboard display model.
- Les destroyed the wedding presents in a ritual enactment of bad rock band behavior. (Presents had been the couple's primary reason for marrying.)
[edit] References
- Little, Daran (1998). The Women of Coronation Street, Boxtree. ISBN 0 7522 2443 3