When Things Were Rotten
When Things Were Rotten | |
---|---|
Robin Hood and his Merry Men. | |
Genre |
Parody Sitcom Adventure |
Created by |
Mel Brooks Norman Stiles & John Boni |
Directed by |
Norman Abbott Bruce Bilson Peter Bonerz Marty Feldman Peter H. Hunt Jerry Paris Coby Ruskin Joshua Shelley |
Starring |
Richard Dimitri Dick Gautier Bernie Kopell Henry Polic II Ron Rifkin Misty Rowe David Sabin Dick Van Patten |
Composer(s) | Artie Butler |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Mel Brooks Stanley Jacob Norman Steinberg |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) | Paramount Television |
Distributor | CBS Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | September 10 – December 3, 1975 |
When Things Were Rotten is an American sitcom television series created in 1975 by Mel Brooks and aired for half a season by ABC.
A parody of the Robin Hood legend, the series starred Dick Gautier (who earlier had played Hymie the Robot in Brooks' Get Smart series) as Robin Hood. Also in the regular cast were Dick Van Patten as Friar Tuck, Bernie Kopell (another Get Smart veteran) as Alan-a-Dale, Henry Polic II as the Sheriff of Nottingham (whose name was Hubert), Ron Rifkin as Prince John, Misty Rowe as Maid Marian, and David Sabin as Little John. Richard Dimitri played a dual role as identical twin brothers; Renaldo was one of the Merry Men, while Bertram was the Sheriff's right-hand man. Brooks again spoofed the Robin Hood legend in his 1993 film Robin Hood: Men in Tights.
Humor
One-liners, sight gags and literal humor were hallmarks of the show's style; e.g., complaining villagers, commanded to "Hold your tongues!," obediently reach into their mouths. In another episode, The Sheriff asked to hang the banners, with an immediate cutaway to a husband, a wife, and their two children on a wall, saying "Hi, we're the Banners." There was also occasional breaking of the fourth wall: in one episode, as one of Robin's men (Renaldo) was being interrogated, with an accuser (Little John) asking, "Are you ready to tell that to your maker?" Renaldo turns his head and looks off-camera, and says: "Mel! I didn't do it!"
Much of the humour was anachronistic, such as the occasion where Marian's ladies-in-waiting burst into the 1960s Supremes hit "Stop! In the Name of Love"; or when the Rock of Gibraltar had been destroyed, and a messenger brings Prince John the remaining chunk, to be told "I always wanted a piece of the rock," a reference to Prudential Insurance's successful slogan, "Get a piece of the Rock."; or when King Richard the Lionheart comes ashore after returning from the Crusades and reaches an American baseball home base were an umpire cries out "Safe!" causing the Sheriff of Nottingham to shout "Kill the Umpire!".
Also notable was the show's lampooning of 1970s social concerns; e.g., in the episode "Those Wedding Bell Blues," Prince John was preparing to sign a deal with OOPEC, an OPEC-like cartel whose chief export was olive oil. Prince John: "I'll control all the olive oil! Anyone who wants to make a salad will have to come to me!"
Theme Song
During the opening show credits, a satirical song "Yay for Robin Hood!" was performed:
"Once upon a time when things were rotten,
Not just food, but also kings were rotten.
Everybody kicked the peasants,
Things were bad and that ain't good,
Then came Robin Hood (Ba-bahh!)
"Soon a band of merry men he'd gotten,
They wore outfits made of plain green cotton,
Helping victims was their business.
Boy oh boy was business good --
Good for Robin Hood!
"They laughed, they loved, they fought, they drank,
They jumped a lot of fences.
They robbed the rich, gave to the poor --
Except what they kept for expenses!
"So when other legends are forgotten
We'll remember back when things were rotten.
Yay for Robin Hood!"
Cancellation
The rapid-fire, Mel Brooks style of comedy was out of place on network television of the era, so despite critical acclaim, the series failed to find an audience and was canceled after 13 episodes, with The Bionic Woman being its mid-season replacement, which was a great success.[1] Eighteen years later, Brooks produced another Robin Hood parody, the feature film Robin Hood: Men in Tights. Van Patten also appeared in the later film as an abbot.
The cancellation of When Things Were Rotten allowed Van Patten and Kopell to move on to more successful and long-running series — Eight is Enough and The Love Boat, respectively. Rifkin, meanwhile, would eventually become best known to modern-day audiences as the ambiguously villainous Arvin Sloane on Alias.
Home video and DVD
Several episodes of the series have been released on VHS in North America.
The complete series was released on DVD in 2013 as a manufactured-on-demand item exclusively available on Amazon.com's CreateSpace.[2]
Episodes
Nº | Title | Air date |
---|---|---|
1 | "The Capture of Robin Hood" | 10.Sep.1975 |
2 | "The French Dis-connection" | 17.Sep.1975 |
3 | "The House Band" | 24.Sep.1975 |
4 | "Those Wedding Bell Blues" | 01.Oct.1975 |
5 | "A Ransom for Richard" | 08.Oct.1975 |
6 | "The Ultimate Weapon" | 15.Oct.1975 |
7 | "Ding Dong, the Bell Is Dead" | 22.Oct.1975 |
8 | "There Goes the Neighborhood" | 29.Oct.1975 |
9 | "Quarantine" | 12.Nov.1975 |
10 | "Birthday Blues" | 19.Nov.1975 |
11 | "The Spy: Part 1" | 26.Nov.1975 |
12 | "The Spy: Part 2" | 26.Nov.1975 |
13 | "This Lance for Hire" | 03.Dec.1975 |
See also
- Maid Marian and Her Merry Men - another comic retelling of the Robin Hood legend, for British television
References
- ↑ "The Bionic Woman (1976): Season 1". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2014-09-03.
- ↑ DVD release info at TVShowsOnDVD.com
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to When Things Were Rotten. |
- When Things Were Rotten at the Internet Movie Database
- When Things Were Rotten at TV.com
- Harry S. Anchan's television sitcom & comedy site (with When Things Were Rotten theme song)