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John `Q` Cleese samples wine with the Queen

12-Nov-2009 • Actor News

John Cleese, who has made the world laugh with his friends in Monty Python, said having lunch with the Queen of England was a great awakening for his palate - reports Press Democrat.

The Queen served two slightly sweet German whites and Cleese realized his preference for sweet and luscious over dryer wines didn't make him unsophisticated. The star in "Wine for the Confused" videos breathed a sigh of relief.

Cleese, 70, the towering 6-foot, 5-inch comic, will be performing at the Lincoln Theater in Yountville tonight. The Brit, who now lives in Santa Barbara, was lured to California by sunshine and, yes, his love of wine.

The wine enthusiast made several light-hearted wine videos in 2004, and he said it was great fun to meet the winemakers because they think like artists.

"They're obsessed with doing something absolutely as well as they can," he said, "and money becomes much less important to them, which makes them very attractive creatures."

Cleese doesn't have any more wine videos in the offing.

"I'd like to make more wine videos, but I'm not sure what information I would be qualified to put across," he said. "I think 'Wine for the confused' worked because I'm good at simplifying complex information, which makes the video a good introduction."

What are his wine doings to date?

"My wine exploits consist simply of drinking it," he said. "I've become more and more fascinated by the sheer variety of tastes and textures . . ."

Of course, most people don't know Cleese as a wine connoisseur but rather as that looney Mr. Praline, the man with the dead Norwegian blue parrot in the Cheese Shop sketch in "Monty Python's Flying Circus." The show ran on the BBC-Television from October 1969 to December 1974, and has aired in endless reruns, keeping new generations laughing. Other Cleese credits that followed that quirky comedy include "Monty Python and The Holy Grail," James Bond and Harry Potter films, as well as "A Fish Called Wanda," in which he was nominated for Best Original Screenplay.

What follows is a Q&A with Cleese, who studied law at Cambridge but traded up for comedy.

Q: When did you first know you wanted to be a comic? Did something in your childhood happen to give you a clue?

A: When I was at Cambridge, I did a show at the local professional theater with some other guys, and a London impresario told us that he wanted to take the show to London's West End. Until then, it had never occurred to me I could earn a living in this way, and it certainly beat becoming a lawyer. But it's true that in childhood I could overcome my social ineptness by making people laugh.

Q: What was the best part of creating and performing in Monty Python? Favorite Monty Python character?

A: The best part of Monty Python was making each other laugh. We had no idea what our "audience" was, so this was our only criterium. The happiest moment that I can remember was reading out the Cheese Shop sketch, and making Michael Palin laugh so much he literally fell off his chair. My favorite Monty Python character was Mr. Equator, who arrives at a party and behaves badly.

Q: What did that show do for comedy? Do you think it was precedent-setting?

A: I think Monty Python changed comedy because it did away with a lot of the comedy conventions that seemed to imprison all the writing at that time -- things like how sketches should end, and how long they should be, and what sort of content they should have, which had previously been based on the requirements of sketch shows performed on stage.

Q: In a 2005 poll called "The Comedians' Comedian," you were voted No. 2, second only to Peter Cook. What's your reaction to that?

A: I think these polls are rather silly, like most of the awards. Saying A is better than B strikes me as next to meaningless. I wish there were just unranked awards for people who do exceptionally good work.

Q: What was your favorite movie role and why?

A: Donald Sinclair in "Rat Race." I loved wearing those terrible teeth and flashing that murderous grin. Playing someone so shameless was very liberating. It was also a roll beautifully written by Andy Breckman.

Q: In your upcoming show at the Lincoln Theater, what themes do you touch on?

A: The show is really about my career in comedy, with a bit of autobiography about why, and how, I became a comic, and also my experiences working with Peter Sellers, Ringo Starr, Marty Feldman, Steve Martin, the Pythons, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Kline and of course the Archbishop of Canterbury.

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