paulg, on 2012-November-21, 17:49, said:
In addition to the effect that the breakup of the Cleese - Booth relationship had, I remember either reading or watching an interview with Cleese in which he explained the extraordinary level of attention to detail that went into every script and every performance. The series was written, iirc, entirely by Cleese and Booth, whereas most (all?) US sitcoms have teams of writers.
I almost forgot, and this may be off-topic, but one of the truly greatest 'sitcoms' of all time wasn't a television programme at all.
BBC did a radio show back, I think, in the late 1970s by a then young man who had tried to follow in the footsteps of the Pythons, and had in fact been a writing partner of Graham Chapman during one of the Python dry spells. It was called The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The later attempts to make it a book (very successful), a television programme (not as good) and a movie (dreadful) should not obscure the utter brilliance of the original radio broadcasts, that can still be found if one is diligent. I had it on vinyl but then found the complete set of all episodes and a long interview with Douglas Adams on an 8 cd set.
I think the imagination can be a wonderful source of entertainment, and radio can involve the listener far more intensively than can television if done properly, and HHGTTG was and remains in my opinion the best ever. I'd rather listen the adventures of Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect than watch any of the listed sitcoms.