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New Chairperson Needed
ATTENTION PLEASE!

Richard Usher thanked John Repsch for his service. Following the long service of our chairman, John Repsch, he has decided to take a break and pass the chair to somebody else.
We need your help!
We need a new chairperson to help steer the Society towards its main goal, to keep The Goon Show fresh and alive in people’s minds and habits and to spread the word to the world.
We need to keep the pressure on the BBC to broadcast shows, appeal to the public for more lost audio treasures, perhaps encourage theatre groups to perform scripts of shows the BBC no longer holds recordings of, and to help build our archive of everything Goon.
In addition, we need to keep membership growing, and to find a long-term solution regarding our archive.If you are attracted by this role, please let the Secretary know. Alternatively, if you’d be interested in the secretary role, get in touch anyway. A reshuffle of roles could well be possible [Contact Form]
Please briefly outline your history with the Society and The Goon Show, and your ideas to ensure the GSPS thrives and fulfils its central aim to: ‘… perpetuate enjoyment of The Goon Show among its members and the wider public, by increasing their knowledge and awareness of The Goon Show, including its pleasures and its place in entertainment history.’It’s your society, so why not become part of the team that runs it?

Please…
and thank you.Regards, Richard Usher
Secretary (Acting Chairperson), GSPS -
Spike on BBC Radio after Midnight

The Colin Murray show on BBC Radio 5 Live on 7th August dedicated its third hour to a celebration of the life and work of Spike Milligan (so actually it’s from midnight going into the 8th). The guests were Jane Milligan, GSPS Secretary Richard Usher, poet Henry Normal and war historian Professor Lucy Noakes.
You can listen to it here through the BBC Sounds website (jump to the third hour of the programme.) It’ll be available for the next 30 days or so.
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Larry Stephens Centenary

16th July marks what would have been the 100th birthday of Larry Stephens, who, on his own or co-writing with Spike Milligan or others, contributed to the scripts of no less than 131 episodes of the Goon Show.
Larry was part of the Goons from the very beginning, brought in to complement Spike’s work as the scriptwriting task would have been too much for one writer. His first period on the show lasted until series 4. If he hadn’t been there, the Goon Show might not even have survived beyond those periods when illness prevented Spike from writing. Larry returned to the Goon Show towards the end of the 6th series and was there through the 7th and 8th. His last script was for The Seagoon Memoirs from series 9, co-written with Maurice Wiltshire. It was just a few weeks after that when, after attending a Goon Show recording, Larry died suddenly. It was 26th January 1959 and he was only 35 years old.

Larry and Spike in 1957 Larry’s loss was a huge tragedy, he packed so much into his 35 years. During WWII he’d undergone the gruelling commando training course (where do you think the phrase “It’s all in the mind” comes from?) and fought in SE Asia. He was an accomplished jazz pianist, a cartoonist, and after the war his scriptwriting talents developed, not least when writing material for his close friend and flatmate Tony Hancock. He wrote for many shows throughout the 1950s and was working on the popular TV sitcom The Army Game when he passed away.
If Larry had survived and worked on, he would surely now be remembered as one of the great British comedy scriptwriters. To help keep his memory alive, his relative Julie Warren researched and wrote a biography – It’s All In The Mind: The Life and Legacy of Larry Stephens. It’s a fascinating read and a must for anyone interested in 1950s entertainment or even WWII history. Copies are becoming hard to get, but Julie has a few paperbacks still available. You can buy one through eBay.
eBay linkGSPS members might also like to search through their collection of newsletters, or their Encyclopaedia Goonicus, for issue no 105 from 2002, which was a Larry Stephens special.
And a bit of extra news. Birmingham Comedy Festival will be celebrating Larry’s anniversary by staging two of the shows he wrote. More info here. -
The Goon Show On Stage in Birmingham
From a press release:
The Goon Show will be making a triumphant return to the stage at this October’s Birmingham Comedy Festival.The one-off performance sees the festival marking the centenary of the birth of Goon Show writer Larry Stephens – who was born in nearby West Bromwich and raised in Quinton, on the outskirts of the city.
Two 1958 scripts written by Stephens and Maurice Wiltshire will be recreated – The Seagoon Memoirs and The Moriarty Murder Mystery. The night will also include a Q&A section featuring Stephens’ biographer, Julie Warren. She will delve into the life of the scriptwriter who famously wrote for flatmate Tony Hancock. He also collaborated with fellow Goon scribes Milligan, Eric Sykes and Jimmy Grafton on other high profile radio projects.
The event is set for Sunday 8 October 2023 at Symphony Hall, Birmingham. Tickets are on sale now – click here.

Birmingham Comedy Festival were the first company to produce an officially sanctioned stage production of The Goon Show, performing a sell-out run of The Canal and The Phantom Head Shaver (of Brighton) in 2014. They returned in 2017 with The House Of Teeth and The Jet Propelled Guided NAAFI. The 2017 shows were described as “absolutely, utterly, 100% unmissable!” by The GSPS’s Chair, John Repsch.
“Shut your eyes for a moment and you are suddenly at home listening to it on your Bakelite wireless set.” he continued. “Open your eyes again and you are catching what listeners missed.”
The cast for the 2023 performance include Richard Usher (Sellers), Mark Earby (Milligan) and Jimm Rennie (Seagoon) – who were all involved in previous productions – plus musician Jim Wynn.
Producer/Director Dave Freak, from Birmingham Comedy Festival, said: “We had initially planned to do this, back in 2020, around the publication of Julie’s book – It’s All In The Mind: The Life And Legacy Of Larry Stephens. But the lurgi got in the way. So we tried again in 2021 for The Goons’ 70th anniversary (and the festival’s 20th). And again, that damn lurgi got in the way. But with this year marking Larry’s 100th birthday, and with us all now being inoculated against both The Spon and The Nadger plagues, the opportunity represented itself, so we decided, why not?
“Larry’s role in the development of British comedy deserves to be better known.”
Birmingham Comedy Festival presents: The Goon Show is at Symphony Hall, Birmingham, on Sunday 8 October 2023, at 7pm. For tickets and more information, see:
bmusic.co.uk
bhamcomfest.co.uk -
John Antrobus at 90

We often remember the significant anniversaries of the talented people who contributed to the making of the Goon Show. Today it’s a pleasure to acknowledge one man who’s still with us and can celebrate his birthday.
Happy birthday to John Antrobus, 90 years old today (born 2nd July 1933, and living well in Chelsea, sometimes in Nice but, seemingly, always working).
As a scriptwriter, John collaborated in 1957 with Spike on two Series 8 Goon Shows, The Spon Plague and The Great Statue Debate. Later on, he and Spike co-wrote the stage play The Bed Sitting Room and the radio programme The Dinosaur. He wrote, and performed in (along with Spike) the series The Milligan Papers.
John Antrobus was interviewed by the GSPS in 2007. Read the article here. Also, check out his book Goon But Not Forgotten.
The most recent GSPS newsletter has an article describing what John has been up to in recent years.
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June Newsletter – out now
We’ll be sending out Issue 181 of Goon Show News to our members this week.
Among other things in this issue we celebrate the centenaries of Goon Show scriptwriters Larry Stephens and Eric Sykes, and don’t forget that a third, John Antrobus, will turn 90 next month.
Also, among the rest of the news and features is a look at the history our recently crowned King Charles III has with the society.

To save all that typing, the links from the A Kick Up The Archives feature are available here.
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Goon Pod – the History of the GSPS

Our favourite Podcast, Tyler Adams’ Goon Pod, featured an interview this week with the GSPS member and luminary of time almost immemorial, Chris Smith.
Chris described at length how the Goon Show Preservation Society developed from humble beginnings and told stories of some highlights of GSPS meetings, including appearances by Spike Milligan, Harry Secombe, Michael Bentine. It’s a great listen, especially for whipper-snapper, Johnny-come-lately members like your humble Website Charlie here.
Goon Pod is available from all the usual podcast sources, including the feed below.
Digby The Biggest Dog In The World (1973) – Goon Pod
"He's only got to lift his leg and he'll drown 50 kids!"This week: Digby, The Biggest Dog in the World, a 1973 British family comedy in which an Old English Sheepdog accidentally drinks an experimental growth formula and raises the woof! Leading the cast is Jim Dale as Jeff Eldon, an animal psychologist at a NATO research facility; when Spike Milligan (playing a shameless German stereotype) moves in next door he is all for having him impounded as he mistakenly believes Jeff thinks he is a dog. It's part Disney family adventure, part monster movie parody and utterly British. Did we forget to mention that other cast members include Angela Douglas, Norman Rossington, John Bluthal and Victor Spinetti? There’s also a cucumber the size of a bus, a mischievous chimp and a wonderful scene set in a roadside café. Plus we ask: did Dulux pay for the outrageous product-placement? Do the special effects hold up? And why wasn’t Jim Dale a bigger star in Britain? Joining Tyler is Graham Rinaldi, film writer and academic and huge Bowie fan, and please feel free to join in the Bowie drinking game as we discuss this fine film.
If the weeks have moved on and the episode with Chris has moved down the list, you can get to it directly through this link. -
On the Coronation of King Charles III
The Goon Show Preservation Society is delighted to wish our monarch King Charles III our warmest congratulations both on his accession to the throne and upon the occasion of his Coronation.
We are proud that as Prince Charles he has been the society’s patron for many years. He remains a strong supporter of The Goon Show and was a personal friend to Spike Milligan, Peter Sellers, Harry Secombe and Michael Bentine.
We delight in taking this opportunity of wishing His Majesty the King a long, happy and successful reign.


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Eric Sykes 100th
May 4th 2023 is the centenary of that fine Oldham born comedian, actor and scriptwriter Eric Sykes.
Eric shared offices with Spike for many years and they shared the scriptwriting duties during series 5 of the Goon Show. He and his wide array of talents will always be fondly remembered.

He granted us this interview in 2006, and there’s more about his involvement with the Goons in this article.
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Blue Plaque for Marcel Stellman
A blue plaque honouring a man with Goons connections has been unveiled. It’s on the former Marylebone home of Marcel Stellman, who passed away in 2021.
Among the many, many credits in his long career as a record executive, writer and producer are Goon songs such as I’m Walking Backwards for Christmas and the Ying Tong Song.
Marcel gave an interview to the GSPS in 2007 in which he recalled those recording sessions. You can read it here.

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9 Orme Court changes hands
We hear that one of the iconic buildings in the history of the Goon Show, and much more British comedy besides, has changed hands.

In 1959 the scriptwriters co-operative known as Associated London Scripts moved into 9 Orme Court, in London’s leafy Bayswater district. It was its third home. ALS had developed from an initial sharing of an office by Spike Milligan and Eric Sykes, above a greengrocers shop at 130 Uxbridge Road, Shepherd’s Bush, where they wrote series 5 of the Goon Show in 1954. It went on to include writers such as Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, Johnny Speight, John Antrobus, Terry Nation, and many others. And let’s not forget the staff, which included Norma Farnes and Beryl Vertue.
The news was broken on Twitter by Jane Milligan:
As Jane says, from 31st March the building is entering the process of becoming the embassy of the Republic of Moldova. Hopefully the blue plaques which adorn the building, one for Spike, one for Eric, will remain for time immemorial, and the new owners will enjoy the echoes of laughter which must surely still pervade those offices.

