John Cleese to embark on tour celebrating Monty Python And The Holy Grail
By Casey Cooper-Fiske, Press Association Senior Entertainment Reporter
Comedic actor John Cleese is to embark on a UK tour celebrating more than 50 years since the release of Monty Python And The Holy Grail.
The 86-year-old will host a 45-minute Q and A session with fans after a screening of the 1975 film introduced by the star.
Cleese said: “I’m delighted to be celebrating more than 50 years of Holy Grail with these incredible live events around the country, mainly because I genuinely never expected either the film or myself to last this long.”
The sessions will see Cleese reflect on the making of the film and its legacy, with fans able to ask their own questions.
The tour will begin at Basingstoke Anvil Arts on September 1 and run until its final show at Leeds Grand Theatre on September 22, stopping at Manchester, Newcastle and Birmingham, with tickets going on sale now and priced at £39.50.
Monty Python And The Holy Grail follows King Arthur and his knights after they are tasked by God to find the Holy Grail.
Along with The Holy Grail, Cleese also starred in two other classic movies alongside the original Monty Python troupe – Sir Michael Palin, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam and Graham Chapman – Monty Python’s Life Of Brian (1979) and Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life (1983).
The original Monty Python’s Flying Circus shows were first broadcast on the BBC in 1969. The ground-breaking, surreal sketches have had a profound influence on comedy and popular culture, and the Pythons have frequently been dubbed “the Beatles of comedy”.
Cleese also enjoyed huge success with A Fish Called Wanda (1988), starring alongside Jamie Lee Curtis and Palin. The movie also featured an Oscar-winning performance from Kevin Kline.
Another enduring success for Cleese was the BBC sitcom Fawlty Towers. Set in a fictional hotel in the seaside town of Torquay, only 12 episodes were ever made, from 1975-79.
Based on a real-life hotel owner, Donald Sinclair, Cleese came up with the idea for the character Basil Fawlty when he stayed at Sinclair’s Gleneagles Hotel and said he became fascinated with his rude behaviour.
Cleese’s latest tour comes after Fawlty Towers’ stage adaption ran at the Apollo Theatre in London’s Shaftesbury Avenue last year, before heading out on a tour of the UK and Ireland.
John Cleese And The Holy Grail tour in full
September 1 – Basingstoke Anvil Arts
September 2 – Tunbridge Wells Assembly Hall
September 3 – Cambridge Corn Exchange
September 5 – Milton Keynes Theatre
September 6 – Buxton Opera House
September 7 – New Brighton Floral Pavilion
September 8 – York Grand Opera House
September 9 – Newcastle Tyne Theatre
September 11 – Torquay Princess Theatre
September 12 – Woking New Victoria
September 14 – Watford Colosseum
September 15 – Bournemouth Pavilion Theatre
September 17 – Cheltenham Town Hall
September 18 – Bedford Corn Exchange
September 19 – Richmond Theatre
September 20 – Birmingham Town Hall
September 21 – Manchester Opera House
September 22 – Leeds Grand Theatre