Gumby Crooner / The Refreshment Room at Bletchley
(Cut back to Canadian
backdrop. In front, a man with the classic “gumby” get up on. Superimposed
caption on the screen ' PROF. R. J. GUMBY')
Gumby: Well I think
televisions killed real entertainment. In the old days we used to make our own
fun. At Christmas parties I used to strike myself on the head repeatedly with
blunt instruments while crooning. (sings) 'Only make believe, I love you, (hits
himself on head with two bricks) Only make believe that you love me, (hits
himself) Others find peace of mind...'
(Cut to a posh nightclub.
Compare enters.)
Compare: Good evening,
ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Refreshment Room here at Bletchley.
(applause) My name is Kenny Lust and I'm your compere for tonight. You know,
once in a while it is my pleasure, and my privilege, to welcome here at the
Refreshment Room, some of the truly great international artists of our time.
(applause) And tonight we have one such artist. (grovelling) Ladies and
gentlemen, someone whom I've always personally admired, perhaps more deeply,
more strongly, more abjectly than ever before. (applause) A man, well more than
a man, a god (applause), a great god, whose personality is so totally and
utterly wonderful my feeble words of welcome sound wretchedly and pathetically
inadequate. (by now on his knees) Someone whose boots I would gladly lick clean
until holes wore through my tongue, a man who is so totally and utterly wonderful,
that I would rather be sealed in a pit of my own filth, than dare tread on the
same stage with him. Ladies and gentlemen, the incomparably superior human
being, Harry Fink!
Voice Off: He can't come!
Compare: Never mind, it's
not all it's cracked up to be. Ladies and gentlemen, we give you Ken Buddha and
his inflatable knees.
(Cut to Ken in evening
dress; his knees go 'bang'.)
Compare: Ken Buddha, a
smile, two bangs and a religion. Now ladies and gentlemen, for your further
entertainment, Brian Islam and Brucie.
(Two animated men dance to
jug band music. When they finish we cut back to the barber and customer, from
the Homicidal Barber Sketch)
Barber: So anyway, I became
a barber.
Customer: (sympathetically)
Poor chap.
Barber: Yes, pity really, I
always preferred the outdoor life. Hunting, shooting, fishing. Getting out
there with a gun, slaughtering a few of God's creatures - that was the life.
Charging about the moorland, blasting their heads off.
(Sketch moves in to the
Hunting Film Sketch)