Culture Bring out your stamps: UK’s Royal Mail celebrates Monty...

Bring out your stamps: UK’s Royal Mail celebrates Monty Python

-

- Advertisment -
ADVERTISEMENT

Britain’s Royal Mail has issued stamps celebrating the absurdist comedy of Monty Python… and from all of us here at Euronews Culture, who frequently cut down the mightiest trees in the forest with a herring: it’s a “Ni!” of approval.

The 10-stamp series announced today celebrates some of the legendary troupe’s most iconic characters and catchphrases, from “Nudge, nudge” to “The Lumberjack Song.”

Monty Python's Flying Circus
Monty Python’s Flying Circus Royal Mail

Six stamps depict scenes from the sketch-comedy TV series Monty Python’s Flying Circus, including The Spanish Inquisition, The Ministry of Silly Walks, Dead Parrot and The Nude Organist.

Another four mark the 50th anniversary of the cult classic 1975 film Monty Python and the Holy Grail, including one showing the limb-losing Black Knight insisting “’Tis but a scratch.”

Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Monty Python and the Holy Grail Royal Mail

Made up of Michael Palin, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones and Graham Chapman, Monty Python brought a unique blend of satire, surrealism and unfiltered silliness to British TV screens in their series that ran from 1969 to 1974.

The gang also made several feature films, including Monty Python’s Life of Brian (1979) and Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life (1983). 

Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Monty Python and the Holy Grail Royal Mail

David Gold, Royal Mail’s director of external affairs, said: “Monty Python has left an indelible mark on global comedy, all while remaining unmistakably British at its core. From their groundbreaking television debut to a string of iconic films, this stamp collection honours a body of work that has shaped the comedic landscape for nearly six decades.”

As for Palin, he said he was “very glad to share a stamp with the nude organist!”

The group disbanded in the 1980s, and Chapman died of cancer in 1989 aged 48. The five surviving Pythons reunited in 2014 for a string of live stage shows. 

Jones sadly died in 2020 from a rare form of dementia, aged 77.

Terry Gilliam speaks to Euronews Culture
Terry Gilliam speaks to Euronews Culture David Mouriquand

Euronews Culture caught up with Terry Gilliam two years ago at the Festival Lumière in Lyon, where he told us that Monty Python may not be able to do their brand of comedy in modern times.

“People are losing their sense of humour, and that, to me, is probably the most important sense,” he said. “Sense of touch is very important, sense of taste also – but sense of humour is more important. You get to the point where people are frightened to laugh. ‘Oh, no, you’re making fun of somebody!’ No, I’m making fun of humanity, and we are an absurd species of creatures.”

He added: “We are funny because we got such pretentions, and we fall on our face so constantly. Make jokes about it! It keeps life interesting.”

Check out our full interview with Terry Gilliam here.

The Monty Python stamps are available to pre-order from today and go on general sale from 14 August. 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

Life-sized animal puppets complete 20,000km climate crisis journey

ADVERTISEMENT Back in April, a herd of towering, life-sized animal puppets - from elephants, giraffes, to antelopes and lions - set out from Kinshasa, in the Congo rainforest, on a hugely ambitious journey that would take them across two continents and 20,000km. Their migration - fictional but steeped in reality - was designed to mirror

Fire in the Mosque of Cordoba extinguished

ADVERTISEMENT A fire, reported shortly after 9 pm on Friday, affected the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba. The blaze began in the Patio de los Naranjos, near the Puerta de San José, prompting the evacuation of the area around Magistral González Francés Street to allow fire crews to carry out their work. According to the town's mayor

How the UK’s Green Man Festival has managed to stay independent

ADVERTISEMENT Amid the tranquil verdant hills of the Brecon Beacons in south Wales, one of Europe’s most special music festivals finds its home. While many festivals might turn their sites into cacophonous blurs of hedonism and noise, Green Man Festival is a little different.   Sure, there’s plenty of noise. After all, this year’s line-up includes

AI & memes: How the Trump administration engages in ‘memetic warfare’

ADVERTISEMENT The FBI arresting Barack Obama in the Oval Office. The devastated Gaza Strip turned into a luxury seaside resort. Donald Trump as the next Pope, a jedi, Superman or in Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle jeans. If you have been online in recent months (chronically or no), chances are that you have come across these
- Advertisement -

Ready furr their close-up: How cats became catnip to cinema

ADVERTISEMENT The most unbelievable thing about 2024's A Quiet Place: Day One was not its premise of world-invading ultrasonic-hearing aliens, but rather that a cat in such a situation wouldn’t have everyone within its vicinity immediately killed by tapping a delicately balanced glass off a table.  Cats are - and I say this with nothing

Film of the Week: ‘Weapons’ – Why did 17 children vanish at 2:17am?

ADVERTISEMENT From the get-go, writer-director Zach Cregger aims to get under your skin. A child narrator sets up the “true story,” in which “a lot of people die in a lot of really weird ways.” The unseen youth is not wrong. Before we get to those deaths, we’re presented with Weapon’s central mystery through enduring imagery:

Must read

Life-sized animal puppets complete 20,000km climate crisis journey

ADVERTISEMENT Back in April, a herd of towering, life-sized animal puppets - from elephants, giraffes, to antelopes and lions - set out from Kinshasa, in the Congo rainforest, on a hugely ambitious journey that would take them across two continents and 20,000km. Their migration - fictional but steeped in reality - was designed to mirror

Fire in the Mosque of Cordoba extinguished

ADVERTISEMENT A fire, reported shortly after 9 pm on Friday, affected the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba. The blaze began in the Patio de los Naranjos, near the Puerta de San José, prompting the evacuation of the area around Magistral González Francés Street to allow fire crews to carry out their work. According to the town's mayor
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you