So Anyway...— John Cleese— Recommend
John Cleese is best known for his roles in Monty
Python and the Holy Grail. Besides his appearance as Lancelot, The Black
Knight, Tim, and the French Taunter, Cleese was perhaps the key writer to the
beloved film. So Anyway is his autobiography and it falls
right along the lines of his most famous work; it's irreverent, zany, and
hilarious.
When I decided to read
this book, I was most interested in an analysis of monte python humor. Was the
peasant's monologue about the origin of political power in The Holly
Grail that is used in university law classes poetic coincidence or
intentional genius? Was the opening cheese shop sketch monologue a deliberate
lesson on vernacular or merely humor with a fortuitous vein of applicability?
In many ways, I wasn't disappointed.
To me, the most
important power of humor is the power it has to make us take ourselves less
seriously. Cleese delves into his academic background as well as the background
of the other pythons and engages in some deliberate analysis of his work but he
laughingly admits ignorance on most of it. Cleese is indeed somewhere between a
poet and an analyst, living some kind of whole-brained life if you can imagine
such a thing!
Still, the best part of the
book wasn't the analysis, it was the humor itself. It gave me more than one good laugh. Near the end of the
book, I was out for a run as Cleese layered on hilarity after hilarity. Pretty
soon my face was hurting from smiling and my side ached not so much from
running as from laughing. It made running difficult and probably made the
passing motorists think I was on an unparalleled runner's high.
The third dimension of
the book can perhaps best be described as a form of politics. Cleese has some
extraordinarily irreverent political and religious viewpoints. I found myself
alternating between agreement, bemusement, and disgust. I've rarely met a
person who can hold and rationalize so many viewpoints I would have considered
conflicting. Unsurprisingly, his strongest viewpoints align with his professional
expertise.
"A good sense of humour
is the sign of a healthy perspective, which is why people who are uncomfortable
around humour are either pompous (inflated) or neurotic (oversensitive).
Pompous people mistrust humour because at some level they know their
self-importance cannot survive very long in such an atmosphere, so they
criticise it as “negative” or “subversive.” Neurotics, sensing that humour is
always ultimately critical, view it as therefore unkind and destructive, a
reductio ad absurdum which leads to political correctness."
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