BLACKADDER III - Amy and Amiability
E: Edmund Blackadder
B: Baldrick
PR: Prince Regent George
A: Miss Amy Hardwood
H: Mr. Hardwood
SC: Sally Cheapside
DC: The Duke of Cheapside
S: The Shadow
MM: Mrs. Miggins
The Palace Kitchens
-------------------
(Baldrick is plucking a goose.
Blackadder is sitting at the kitchen
table.)
E: Oh God! Bills, bills, bills.
One is born, one runs up bills, one dies!
And what have I got to show for
it? Nothing. A butler's uniform and a
slightly effeminate hairdo!
Honestly Baldrick, I sometimes feel like a
pelican - whichever way I turn,
I've still got an enormous bill in
front of me. Pass the biscuit
barrel. (Baldrick does so) Let's see
what's in the kitty shall we?
(shakes out a few coins) Ninepence! Oh
God, what are we going to do?
B: Don't worry Mr B., I have a
cunning plan to solve the problem.
E: Yes Baldrick, let us not
forget that you tried to solve the problem
of your mother's low ceiling by
cutting off her head.
B: But this is a really good
one. You become a dashing highwayman, then
you can pay all your bills and,
on top of that, everyone'll want to
sleep with you.
E: Baldrick, I could become a
prostitute and pay my bills, then
everyone would want to sleep
with me - but I do consider certain
professions beneath me. But
besides which, I fail to see why a common
thief should be idolised, just
because he has a horse between his legs.
B: My favourite's the Shadow.
(Admiringly) What a man! They say he's
half-way to being the new Robin
Hood.
E: Why only half-way?
B: Well he steals from the
rich, but he hasn't got round to giving it
to the poor yet. Look! I've got
a poster of him.
(Baldrick holds up a poster
which reads "Wanted for Hanging, The Shadow.
Reward...")
E: Baldrick, I have no desire
to get hung for wearing a silly hat. If I
want to get rich quick, all I
have to do is go upstairs and ask Prince
Fathead for a rise.
(The Prince rings.)
E: Oop! The bank's open!
The Prince's Lounge
-------------------
E: Good morning sir. May I say
how *immensely* rich you're looking?
Now, was there anything you
wanted? Anything at all? Absolutely
anything?
PR: Well yes, old fellow, I was
wondering if you could possibly lend me
a bit of cash.
E: But of course sir. I- cash?
PR: Yes, I'm rotten stinking
stoning stinking broke!
E: But sir, what about the five
thousand pounds that Parliament voted
you only last week to drink
yourself to death with?
PR: All gone I'm afraid. You
see, I've discovered this terrifically fun
new game. It's called
"cards". What happens is, you sit round the
table with your friends, and
you deal out five "cards" each, and then
the object of the game is to
give away all your money as quickly as
possible. Do you know it?
E: Vaguely sir, yes.
PR: All the chaps say I'm
terrific at it.
E: I seem to remember I was
very bad at it. I always seemed to end up
with more money than I started
with.
PR: Yes, well, it's all down to
practice. I'm a natural apparently. The
only drawback, of course, is
that it's pretty damned expensive. So,
basically, I was wondering if
you could lend me a couple of hundred.
E: I'm afraid that's impossible
sir. I'm as poor as a church mouse
that's just had an enormous tax
bill on the very day his wife ran off
with another mouse, taking all
the cheese.
PR: Well what am I going to do?
E: Yes, it's a difficult one.
PR: Hmm.
E: Let's see now. You can't
borrow money, you're not going to inherit
any money and obviously you
can't earn money. Sir, sir, drastic
situations call for drastic
measures. If you can't make money, you'll
have to marry it.
PR: Marry? Never! I'm a gay
bachelor, Blackadder. I'm a roarer, a
rogerer, a gorger and a puker!
I can't marry, I'm young, I'm firm
buttocked, I'm...
E: Broke?
PR: Well, yes, I suppose so.
E: And don't forget, sir, that
the modern Church smiles on roaring and
gorging within wedlock, and
indeed rogering is keenly encouraged.
PR: And the puking?
E: Mmm, I believe still very
much down to the conscience of the
individual church-goer.
PR: Well yes, tally-ho then
Blackadder. Yes, you fix it up. You know
the kind of girls I like,
they've got to be lovers, laughers, dancers...
E: And bonkers!
PR: That goes without saying!
The Kitchens
------------
(Blackadder is leafing through
a book, while in the background Baldrick is
pulling the giblets out of his
bird.)
E: Oh God!
B: Something wrong, Mr B.?
E: I can't find a single person
suitable to marry the prince.
B: Oh please keep trying. I
love a royal wedding. The excitement, the
crowds, the souvenir mugs, the
worrying about whether the bride's
lost weight.
E: Unlikely with this lot I'm
afraid. If the prince had stipulated
"must weigh a quarter of a
ton" we'd be laughing. Of the 262
princesses in Europe, 165 are
over 80, they're out, 47 are under 10,
they're out, and 39 are mad.
B: Well they sound ideal.
E: Well they would be if they
hadn't all got married last week in
Munich to the same horse. Which
leaves us with two.
B: And what about them?
E: Well, there's Grand Duchess
Sophia of Turin. We'll never get her to
marry him.
B: Why not?
E: Because she's *met* him.
B: Which leaves?
E: Caroline of Brunswick as the
only available princess in Europe.
B: And what's wrong with her?
E: "Get more coffee! It's
horrid! Change it! Take me roughly from
behind! No, not like that, like
this! Trousers off! Tackle out! Walk
the dog! Where's my
presents?"
B: (flustered) All right! Which
one do you want me to do first?
E: No, that's what Caroline's
like. She is famous for having the worst
personality in Germany. And as
you can imagine, that's up against some
pretty stiff competition.
B: So you're stuck then.
E: Yes, I'm afraid I am.
Unless, oh unless! Pass me the paper Baldrick
quick. (he opens the paper)
Baldrick, why has half the front page been
cut out?
B: I don't know.
E: You do know, don't you?
B: Yes.
E: You've been cutting out the
cuttings about the elusive Shadow to put
in your highwayman's scrapbook
haven't you?
B: Oh, I can't help it Mr B.
His life is so dark and shadowy and full
of fear and trepidation.
E: So is going to the toilet in
the middle of the night, but you don't
keep a scrapbook on it.
B: (surprised) I do.
E: Let's see. Now let's see,
society pages. You see, it needn't
necessarily be a princess. All
the Prince wants is someone pretty and
rich.
B: Oh dear, that rules me out
then.
E: Now, let me see. "Beau
Brummel in purple pants probe." "King talks
to tree. Phew what a
loony!" God, the Times has really gone downhill
recently hasn't it! Aha. Listen
to this, listen to this: "Mysterious
Northern beauty, Miss Amy
Hardwood, comes to London and spends
flipping great wadges of
cash!" That's our baby!
The Prince's Bedroom
--------------------
(Blackadder is brushing down
the Prince's jacket.)
PR: Honestly Blackadder, I
don't know why I'm bothering to get dressed.
As soon as I get to the Naughty
Hellfire Club I'll be debagged and
radished for non-payment of
debts.
E: Radished, sir?
PR: Yes, they pull your
breeches down and push a large radish right up
your-
E: Yes, yes, yes, all right.
There's no need to hammer it home.
PR: Well as a matter of fact
they do often have to-
E: No, no! No! Your em, your
money worries are, are, are over sir.
PR: Well hoorah for that!
E: I have found you a bride.
Her name is Amy, daughter of the noted
industrialist, Mr Hardwood.
PR: Oh dammit Blackadder, you
know I loathe industrialists. Sad,
balding, little proles in their
"damn your eyes" whiskers. All puffed
up just because they know where
to put the legs on a a pair of
trousers.
E: Eh, believe me, these people
are the future. This man probably owns
half of Lancashire. His
family's got more mills than, than you've got
brain cells.
PR: How many mills?
E: Seven sir.
PR: Quite a lot of mills then.
E: Yes. He has patented a
machine called "The Ravelling Nancy".
PR: Mmm, what does it do?
E: It ravels cotton sir.
PR: What for?
E: That I cannot say sir. I am
one of these people who are quite happy
to wear cotton, but have no
idea how it works. She is also a beauty,
sir.
PR: Well if she's gonna be my
bird, she'd better be! Right, so what's
the plan?
E: Well I thought I could take
her a short note expressing your
honourable intentions.
PR: Yes, yes, I think so too.
All right then, well take this down. Eh,
"From His Royal Highness,
the Prince of Wales to Miss Amy Hardwood.
Tally-ho my fine saucy young
trollop! Your luck's in! Trip along here
with all your cash, and some
naughty night attire, and you'll be
staring at my bedroom ceiling
from now till Christmas, you lucky tart!
Yours with the deepest respect
etc, signed George. PS Woof woof!"
Well, what do you think?
E: It's very *moving* sir.
Would you mind if I change just one tiny
aspect of it?
PR: Which one?
E: The words.
PR: Oh yes, I'll, I'll, I'll
leave the details to you Blackadder. Just
make sure she knows I'm all
man... with a bit of animal thrown in.
Rrrrgh!
E: Certainly sir. (Scores out
the Prince's letter)
The Home of Amy Hardwood
------------------------
E: From his Royal Highness the
Prince of Wales to Miss Amy Hardwood:-
"The upturned tilt of you
tiny wee nosy, smells as sweet as a great
big posy." Fanciful stuff
of course madam, but, but from the heart.
A: He says my nosy is tiny ?
E: And wee, madam.
A: Well he must be an awful
clever clogs, because you see, my nosy is
tiny, and so wee, that I
sometimes think the pixies gave it to me!
E: He continues. "Oh Lady
Amy, queen of all your sex." I apologise for
the word, madam, but Prince
George is a man of passion.
A: Oh, don't worry, I can get
pretty cross myself sometimes. Tell me
Mr. Blackadder, I've heard a
teensy rumour that the Prince has the
manners of a boy cow's dingle
dangle. What do you have to say to that?
E: Oh, that is a lie madam.
Prince George is shy and just pretends to
be bluff and crass and
unbelievably thick and gittish, whilst deep
down he is a soft little
marshmallowy, pigletty type of creature.
A: Oh I'm so glad, because you
see, I'm a delicate tiny thing myself,
weak and silly and like a
little fluffy rabbit. So I could never marry
a horrible heffalump, or I
might get squished. Tell me, when can I
meet the lovely Prince?
E: (surprised) You want to meet
him?
A: Well if we're going to get
married I think I probably ought to. I
know! Tell him to come and
serenade me tonight. I'll be on my balcony
in my jim-jams.
E: Certainly madam.
(Mr Hardwood enters.)
H: Ay up! Who's this big girl's
blouse then ?
A: Father, this is Mr.
Blackadder, he's come a-wooing from the Prince.
E: You have a beautiful and charming
daughter, sir.
H: Indeed I do. I love her more
than any pig, and that's saying summat!
E: It certainly is.
H: And let me tell you, I'd no
more place her in the hands of an
unworthy man than I'd place my
John Thomas in the hands of a lunatic
with a pair of scissors.
E: An attitude that does you
credit sir.
H: I'd rather take off all my
clothes and paint my bottom blue than
give her to a man who didn't
love her!
E: What self-respecting father
could do more ?
H: On the other hand, if he's a
prince, he can have her for ten bob and
a pickled egg.
E: I can see where your
daughter gets her ready wit, sir.
H: I thank you.
E: Although where she gets her
good looks and charm is perhaps more of
a mystery.
H: No one ever made money out
of good looks and charm.
E: You obviously haven't met
Lady Hamilton, sir. (bows slightly and
leaves)
The Kitchens
------------
(Baldrick is forcing stuffing
into his goose.)
E: I tell you Baldrick, I'm not
looking forward to this evening. Trying
to serenade a light fluffy
bunny of a girl in the company of an
arrogant half German yob with a
mad dad.
B: Well, he is the Prince of
Wales.
E: Have you ever been to Wales,
Baldrick?
B: No, but I've often thought
I'd like to.
E: Well don't, it's a ghastly
place. Huge gangs of tough sinewy men
roam the valleys terrifying
people with their close harmony singing.
You need half a pint of phlegm
in your throat just to pronounce the
placenames. Never ask for
directions in Wales Baldrick, you'll be
washing spit out of your hair
for a fortnight.
B: So, eh, being Prince of it
isn't considered a plus? (hammers a large
orange into the goose)
E: I fear not, no. But the
crucial thing is that they must never be
left alone together before the
marriage.
B: But isn't that a bit unfair
on her?
E: Well it's not exactly fair
on him either. The girl is wetter than a
haddock's bathing costume. But
you know Baldrick, the world isn't
fair. If it was, things like
this wouldn't happen would they? (hits
Baldrick around the back of the
head)
Under Amy's Balcony
-------------------
(The Prince and Blackadder are
hiding behind some bushes. They speak in
whispers.)
PR: All right, so what's the
plan? Shin up the drain and ask her if
she'll take delivery of your
consignment of German sausage?
E: No sir, as we rehearsed,
poetry first, sausage later.
PR: Right. So what do you
think? "Harold the Horny Hunter" should do
the trick.
E: Just remind me of it, sir?
PR: (loudly) "Harold the
Horny hunter, had an enormous horn..."
E: Shh yes yes. It is
absolutely excellent sir, however, might I
suggest an alternative? (hands
the Prince a poem)
PR: "Lovely little
dumpling, how in love I am. Let me be your
shepardkins, you can be my
lamb." Well, I think we'll be very lucky if
she doesn't just come out onto
the balcony and vomit over us, but
still, let's give it a whirl.
E: Just stand right here sir.
Right. Call for her romantically.
PR: Right. (shouts) Oy! Come on
out here, you rollicking trolloping
sauce bottle!
A: George?
PR: Woof woof!
(Amy appears on the balcony.
Blackadder grabs the Prince, covering his mouth.)
A: Is that you?
E: Y-y-yes, yes 'tis I, your
gorgeous little love bundle.
A: Oh George, I think you must
be the snuggly wuggliest lambkin in the
whole of Toyland.
PR: Yuch! (Blackadder silences
him again)
A: What was that?
E: Am, em. Nothing, there was
just a little fly in my throaty. Yuch!
Yuchh!
A: Do you want a hanky-wanky to
gob the phlegmy wemmy woo into? (she
leans over the balcony, pulling
a handkerchief from the top of her
dress)
PR: Phwoah! Crikey!
A: Oh, what was that? Is there
someone down there with you?
E: No, no, no, it was just the
wind whistling through the trees and
making a noise that sounded
like "phwoaaaah.. crikeeeeee".
A: Oh joy! Then come Prince
Cuddlykitten, climb up my ivy.
PR: Sausage time! (strides
forward)
A: There is someone down there
with you!
E: Oh my God, yes, yes, so
there is, a filthy intruder spying on our love.
A: Oh hit him George, hit him!
E: Very well. (whispers to the
Prince) Would you mind screaming, Your
Highness. (loudly) Take that.
(punches him in the face) And that!
(knees him in the groin) And
that! (hits his back; the Prince falls to
the ground)
A: Oh, oh, oh you're so brave!
And I'm so worn out with all the
excitement that I'd better go
sleepy-bo-bos, otherwise I'll be all
cross in the morning.
Nighty-night Georgy Porgy!
E: Nighty-wighty Amy-wamy. (she
vanishes; to the Prince) I think it
worked, sir. In the morning I
shall go in and ask her father; you go
out and start spending his
money. I can't stand meanness when it comes
to wedding presents. And well
done sir, you were brilliant.
PR: Was I?
E: Yes sir.
PR: But I'm in agony!
E: Well, that's love for you.
The Home of Amy Hardwood
------------------------
E: Sir, I come as emissary of
the Prince of Wales with the most
splendid news. He wants your
daughter Amy for his wife.
H: Well his wife can't have
her! Outrageous, sir, to come here with
such a suggestion! (stands up
angrily) Why, sir, or I shall take off
my belt and by thunder me
trousers will fall down!
E: No sir. Sir, you
misunderstand. He wants to marry your lovely
daughter.
H: Ah, ah. (falls back into his
chair, amazed) Can it be possibly true?
Surely love has never crossed
such boundaries of class? (clutches
Amy's hand)
A: But what about you and Mum?
H: Well yes, yes, I grant thee
when I first met her I was the farmer's
son and she was just the lass
who ate the dung, but that was an
exception.
A: And Aunty Dot and Uncle Ted.
H: Yes, yes alright, he was a
pig poker and she was the Duchess of
Argyle, but-
A: And Aunty Ruth and Uncle
Isiah, she was a milkmaid and he was-
H: The Pope! Yes, yes, all
right. Don't argue. Suffice it to say if you
marry we need never be poor or
hungry again. Sir, we accept.
E: Good. So obviously you'll be
wanting an enormous cer-e-mon-y- what
did you say?
H: Well obviously, eh, now
we're marrying quality, we'll never be poor
or hungry again.
E: Meaning that you're poor and
hungry at the moment?
H: (with feeling) Oh yes! We've
been living off lard butties for five
years now. I'm so poor I use my
underpants for drying dishes.
E: So you're skint?
H: Aye.
E: Well in that case, the
wedding's off. Good day.
A: Oh but what about Georgy's
lovey-wovey poems that won my
hearty-wearty?
E: All writteny witteny by
mewee I'm afraidy-waidy. Goodbye.
The Prince's Lounge
-------------------
E: Sir, you know I told you to
go out and spend a lot of money on
wedding presents, well appar-
PR: (sitting amongst a huge
collection of glittering objects) Yes?
E: Nothing.
The Kitchens
------------
(Blackadder enters, putting on
a large black cape.)
E: Crisis Baldrick, crisis! No
marriage, no money, more bills! For the
first time in my life I've
decided to follow a suggestion of yours.
Saddle Prince George's horse.
B: Oh sir, you're not going to
become a highwayman, are you?
E: No, I'm auditioning for the
part of Arnold the Bat in Sheridon's new
comedy.
B: Oh, that's all right then.
E: Baldrick, have you no idea
what irony is?
B: Yeah, it's like goldy and
bronzy, only it's made of iron.
E: Never mind, never mind, just
saddle the Prince's horse.
B: That'll be difficult, he
wrapped it round that gas lamp in the
Strand last night.
E: Well saddle my horse then.
B: What d'you think you've been
eating for the last two months?
E: Well go out into the street
and hire me a horse.
B: Hire you a horse? For
ninepence? On Jewish New Year in the rain? A
bare fortnight after the
dreaded horse plague of old London Town? With
the blacksmith's strike in its
fifteenth week and the Dorset horse
fetishists fair tomorrow?
E: Right, well get this on
then. (hands Baldrick a bridle and bit) It
looks as though you could do
with the exercise.
Robbing the Cheapside Coach
---------------------------
SC: Honestly Papa. Ever since
Mother died you've tried to stop me
growing up. I'm not a little
girl, I'm a grown woman. In fact I might
as well tell you now Papa: I'm
pregnant, and I'm an opium fiend, and
I'm in love with a poet called
Shelley who's a famous whoopsy, and
Mother didn't die, I killed
her!
DC: Oh. (cheerily) Well, never
mind.
E: (off-screen) Stand and
deliver! (the coach starts to pull up)
DC: Oh no! Oh no no no no no,
disaster! It's the Shadow. We're doomed,
doomed!
E: (draws up outside the
window) Ah, good evening Duke, and the lovely
Miss Cheapside. Your cash bags
please. (the Duke hands him a bag of
money) There we are.
DC: You'll never get away with
this, you scoundrel, you'll be caught
and damn well hung!
SC: (to camera) I think he
looks pretty well-
E: Madam, please, no jests
about me looking pretty well hung already,
we have no time.
SC: Pity.
E: Now sir, turn out your
pockets.
DC: Never sir. A man's pockets
are his own private kingdom. I'll
protect them with my life!
E: Oh I see, you've got
something embarrassing in there have you?
Perhaps a particularly
repulsive handkerchief, hmm? One of those
fellows who has a big blow and
then doesn't change it for a week?
Let's have a look shall we?
(takes the handkerchief and pulls out a
jewel) Aha!
SC: Highwayman, I also have a
jewel. I fear however that I have placed
it here, beneath my petticoats,
for protection.
E: Well in that case madam, I
think I'll leave it. I'm not sure I fancy
the idea of a jewel that's been
in someone's pants. A single kiss of
those soft lips is all I
require.
DC: Never sir! A man's soft
lips are his own private kingdom. I shall
defend them with my life.
E: I'm not talking to you,
Grandad.
SC: (kisses him long and hard)
Oh, I'm overcome. Take me with you to
live the life of the wild
rogue, cuddling under haystacks and making
love in the branches of tall
trees!
E: Madam, sadly I must decline.
I fear my horse would collapse with you
on top of him as well as me!
B: (appears next to Blackadder,
wearing his harness) I could try!
E: No Quicksilver, you
couldn't.
B: But that's not fair then.
I've had you on my back for ten miles and
I haven't even got a kiss out
of it.
E: Oh alright, very well then.
(kisses Baldrick) All fair now?
B: Not really, no.
E: Teh, no pleasing some
horses. Hi-ho Quicksilver.
B: Neiighh!
SC: (accusingly) Papa, you did
nothing to defend my honour.
DC: Oh shut your face, you
pregnant junky fag-hag!
A Grassy Knoll in the Forest
----------------------------
E: Well Baldrick, a good
night's work I think. It's time to divide the
loot, and I think it's only
fair that we should share it equally.
B: Which I suppose is
highwayman's talk for you get the cash, I get the
snotty hanky.
E: No, no. No, we did this
robbery together, so you get half the cash.
(hands him a money-bag)
B: Oh, thank you Mr B.
E: This robbery, on the other
hand, I'm doing alone. (holds his pistol
to Baldrick's head) Hand it
over, your money or your life! (Baldrick
complies) You see? All fair and
above board.
B: Fair enough. As long as I
haven't been cheated, I don't mind.
S: Hands up! I am the Shadow
and I never miss.
E: Oh no.
S: You, the one that looks like
a pig.
E: He's talking to you
Baldrick.
S: Skedaddle. (Shoots at
Baldrick's feet; Baldrick runs away) So who
have we here? (takes off
Blackadder's cap) Well, a well set up fellow
indeed. Sir, a kiss.
E: Sorry, I'm not sure I heard
that correctly.
SH: Oh dear, maybe your ears
need unblocking. (holds his gun to
Blackadder's head)
E: Oh I see, a kiss, oh of
course, of course, of course, and then
perhaps a little light supper,
some dancing, who, who knows where it
might lead?
(The Shadow wraps his cloak
around Blackadder, kisses him, and then sweeps
off his cap revealing long
golden hair - it is Amy Hardwood.)
E: Good lord! It's you!
A: (deep Shadow voice) Of
course.
E: But your voice, it's-
A: (normal voice) Clever, isn't
it?
E: Does your father know you're
out?
A: He had to go.
E: You mean he's dead?
A: Yes, dead as that squirrel!
E: Which squirrel? (she shoots
a squirrel, which falls with an "eep"
and a thud) Oh, that squirrel.
Of course, you killed him for ruining
your chances of marrying Prince
George.
A: Huh, I despise the Prince.
Don't you know it's you I want? I want a
real man. A man who can sew on
a button. A man who knows where the
towels are kept. And yes, I
crave your fabulous sinewy body.
E: Well, you're only human.
A: Here's the plan, brown eyes.
You rob the Prince of everything he's
got, right down to the clothes
he's standing in. I'll get my stash and
meet you here and then we'll
run away to the West Indies.
E: Well I don't know I'll have
to think about it. (pause) I've thought
about it, it's a brilliant
plan. I'll see you here tomorrow.
(Amy shoots another squirrel -
"eep", thud.)
The Kitchens
------------
E: (finishing loading up a
barrow of valuables) Right, I'm off.
B: Oh sir, but what about the
danger? Look, the reward is going up day
by day. (holds up a poster,
"Reward 5000 pounds")
E: Pah! I laugh in the face of
danger. I drop ice cubes down the vest
of fear. Things couldn't be
better Baldrick. She'll get me abroad and
make me rich, then I'll
probably drop her and get two hundred
concubines to share my bed.
B: Won't they rather prickly?
E: Concubines Baldrick, not
porcupines.
B: Oh. I still can't believe
you're leaving me behind.
E: Oh, don't you worry. When
we're established on our plantation in
Barbados, I'll send for you. No
more sad little London for you
Balders, from now on you will
stand out in life as an individual.
B: Will I?
E: Well of course you will, all
the other slaves will be black.
(Blackadder starts to wheel out
his barrow; Mrs. Miggins rushes in.)
MM: Oh! Mr Blackadder, oh,
what's all this I hear about you buying a
bathing costume and forty
gallons of coconut oil? Are you going abroad
then sir?
E: Yes, I'm off.
MM: Oh sir, what a tragic end
to all my dreams. And I'd always hoped that
you'd settle down and marry me
and that together we might await the
slither of tiny Adders. (she
sobs against Blackadder's chest)
E: Mrs M., if we were the last
three humans on Earth, I'd be trying to
start a family with Baldrick!
(Mrs. Miggins screams and
cries.)
On a Grassy Knoll
-----------------
E: Well, here I am, all packed
and ready to go.
A: Oh darling, I'm so pleased
to see you, and I've got a little surprise
for you. Close your eyes and
open your mouth.
E: (does so) Mmmm.
A: (points her pistol in
Blackadder's mouth) Ha, ha. Hand over the loot,
goat brains!
E: Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. I, I
always said the bedrock of a good
relationship was being able to
laugh together. Good, well done. So,
which way to Barbados?
A: You're not going to
Barbados. Get away from the cart, Mr Slimey, or
I'll fill you so full of lead
we could sharpen your head and call you
a pencil.
E: This is turning into a
really rotten evening.
A: Yes, well you better make
the most of it, because it's your last.
And it's a pity, because it's
usually against my principles to shoot
dumb animals.
E: Except squirrels?
A: Yes! Bastards! I hate them
with their long tails and their stupid
twitchy noses. (shoots two
squirrels, "eep", "eep") I shall return at
midnight to collect the loot,
when I'll fill you so full of holes I
could market you as a new
English cheese! (Shadow voice) Ha ha ha ha
ha!
E: Oh God! What a way to die!
Shot by a transvestite on an unrealistic
grassy knoll!
(Baldrick wanders up.)
B: Morning Mr B.
E: Bal- Baldrick? Baldrick!
Thank you for introducing me to a genuinely
new experience.
B: What experience is that?
E: Being pleased to see you!
Now what are you doing here, you revolting
animal?
B: I've come for the Shadow's
autograph. You know I'm a great fan of
the Shadow's.
E: Yes, yes, just untie me
Baldrick, come on.
B: What, has he gone? Oh what a
pity, I wanted him to autograph my new
poster. Look, his reward has
gone up to ten thousand pound.
E: Good lord, ten thousand
pounds.
B: Yep.
E: That gives me an idea.
Baldrick, take this cartload of loot back to
the palace and meet me back
here at midnight, with ten soldiers, a
restless lynch mob and a small
portable gallows.
The Prince's Bedroom
--------------------
(Blackadder enters with the
Prince's breakfast tray.)
PR: Aha, brekkers! I could eat
fourteen trays of it this morning and
still have room for a dolphin
on toast!
E: Any particular reason for
this gluttonous levity sir?
PR: Well, what do you think
Blackadder, I'm in love! I'm in love, I'm
in love, I'm in love. Oh Amy,
bless all ten of your tiny little
pinkies. Oh, let's see what's
in the paper. (reads) Oh my God, she's
been arrested and hanged!
E: (casually) Oh really?
PR: It turns out she was a
highwayman!
E: Teh, these modern girls.
PR: Apparently someone tipped
off the authorities and collected the ten
thousand pound reward. What a
greasy sneak. Oh, if only I could get my
hands on him.
E: Teh, you can't trust anyone
these days sir.
PR: It says here that she had
an accomplice.
(Alarmed, Blackadder drops the
breakfast tray.)
PR: But they don't know who it
was.
(The tray flies back up unto
Blackadder's hands.)
PR: Amy, Amy, Amy, I shall
never forget you, never ever, ever ever!
(sobs into his pillow) Right,
what's for breakfast?
E: Kedgeree, sir.
PR: Great. Actually, come to
think of it Blackadder, I didn't need to
get married anyway. I've got
pots of money.
E: Really?
PR: Mmm. The most extraordinary
thing happened. I was a bit peckish
during the night, so I nipped
downstairs to the biscuit barrel.
E: (worried) The biscuit
barrel?
PR: And do you know what I
found inside? (Blackadder nods despairingly)
Ten thousand pounds that I
never knew I had! I've got so much money
now I don't know what to do
with it!
E: How about a game of cards
sir?
PR: Excellent idea!
For the
BENEFIT of SEVERAL VIEWERS
MR. CURTIS & MR. ELTON'S
Much admir'd Comedy
B L A C K A D D E R
T h e T H I R D
OR
AMY and AMIABILITY
was performed with appropriate
Scenery Dresses etc.
by
EDMUND BLACKADDER,
butler to the Prince,
Mr. ROWAN ATKINSON
Baldrick, a dogsbody, Mr. TONY
ROBINSON
The Prince Regent, their
master, Mr. HUGH LAURIE
Mrs. Miggins, a coffee
shoppekeeper,
Miss. HELEN ATKINSON-WOOD
Amy Hardwood, the elusive
Shadow,
Miss. MIRANDA RICHARDSON
Mr. Hardwood, her father, Mr.
WARREN CLARKE
Sally Cheapside, a young lady
of dubious virtue,
Miss BARBARA HORNE
The Duke of Cheapside, her
father,
Mr. ROGER AVON
MUSIC (never perform'd before),
Mr. HOWARD GOODALL
designer of graphics, Mr.
GRAHAM McCALLUM
buyer of properties, Miss. JUDY
FARR
supervisor of production
operatives, Mr. ALLAN FLOOD
designer of visual effects, Mr.
STUART MURDOCH
designer of costumes, Miss.
ANNIE HARDINGE
designer of make-up, Miss.
VICKY POCOCK
mixer of vision, Miss. SUE
COLLINS
supervisor of cameras, Mr. RON
GREEN
editor of videotape, Mr. CHRIS
WADSWORTH
director of lighting, Mr. RON
BRISTOW
co-ordinator of technicalities,
Mr. JOHN LATUS
supervisor of sound, Mr. PETER
BARVILLE
assistant to production, Miss.
NIKKI COCKCROFT
assistant manager of floors,
Mr. DUNCAN COOPER
manager of production, Miss.
OLIVIA HILL
the designer, Mr. ANTONY THORPE
the director, Miss. MANDIE
FLETCHER
the producer, Mr. LLOYD
To conclude with Rule Britannia
in full chorus
NO MONEY RETURN'D
(C) BBC MCMLXXXVII