Man Turns into a Scotsman / Police Station
Newsvendor's Voice: Read all
about it! Read all about it! Man turns into Scotsman!
(Mix through to Potter's
front gate. His with is being interviewed by obvious plainclothes policeman.)
Inspector: Mrs. Potter - you
knew Harold Potter quite well I believe?
Wife: Oh yes quite well.
Inspector: Yes.
Wife: He was my husband.
Inspector: Yes. And, er, he
never showed any inclination towards being a Scotsman before this happened?
Wife: (shocked) No, no, not
at all. He was not that sort of person...
Inspector: He didn't wear a
kilt or play the bagpipes?
Wife: No, no.
Inspector: He never got
drunk at night or brought home black puddings?
Wife: No, no. Not at all.
Inspector: He didn't have an
inadequate brain capacity?
Wife: No, no, not at all.
Inspector: I see. So by your
account Harold Potter was a perfectly ordinary Englishman without any tendency
towards being a Scotsman whatsoever?
Wife: Absolutely, yes.
(suddenly remembering) Mind you he did always watch Dr. Finlay on television.
Inspector: Ah-hah! ... Well
that's it, you see. That's how it starts.
Wife: I beg your pardon?
Inspector: Well you see
Scottishness staffs with little things like that, and works up. You see, people
don't just turn into a Scotsman for no reason at all... (goes rigid with Scots
accent.) No further questions!
(The words are hardly out of
his mouth when he turns into a Scotsman and spins round and disappears up road
in fast motion. Pan with him. Cut to bus queue: man in a city suit and bowler
hat suddenly changes into a Scotsman with beard, turns round and speeds out of
shot. Cut to street policeman pointing way for woman with a pram. Suddenly he
changes into a Scotsman and scuffles out of shot. She looks aghast for a moment
and then she too changes into a Scotsman and hurtles off after him. The baby
suddenly develops a beard and the pram follows her. Single shot of black jazz
musician in cellar blowing a blues sax solo. He changes and whizzes off. Squad
of soldiers being drilled. Suddenly they all change into bearded Scotsmen and
race off in unison. Pan with them past sign: 'Welsh Guard'.)
(Quick animated shot of
flying saucer disappearing over city skyline. Cut to big close-up of passionate
kiss between a scientist and a stupid looking blonde]
She: Charles...
Charles (Graham): Darling...
She: Charles...
Charles: Darling, darling...
She: Charles... there's
something I've got to tell you...
Charles: What is it darling?
She: It's daddy ... he's turned
into a Scotsman...
Charles: What! Mr.
Llewellyn?
She: Yes, Charles. Help me,
please help me.
Charles: But what can I do?
She: Surely, Charles, you're
the Chief Scientist at the Anthropological Research Institute, at Butley Down -
an expert in what makes people change from one nationality to another.
Charles: So I am! (pull out
to reveal they are in a laboratory; he is in a white coat, she is in something
absurdly sexy) This is right up my street!
She: Oh good.
Charles: Now first of all,
why would anyone turn into a Scotsman?
She: (tentatively) Em, for
business reasons?
Charles: No, no! Only
because he has no control over his own destiny! Look I'll show you...
(He presses a button on a control
board and a laboratory TV screen lights ap with the words 'only because they
have no control over their own destinies '.)
She: I see.
Charles: Yes! So this means
that some person or persons unknown is turning all these people into
Scotsmen...
She: Oh, what kind of
heartless fiend could do that to a man?
Charles: I don't know ... I
don't know ... all I know is that these people are streaming north of the
border at the rate of thousands every hour. If we don't act fast, Scotland will
be choked with Scotsmen...
She: Ooh!...
(Zoom in on her face. Cut to
as many bearded Scotsmen as possible, hurtling through wood in fast motion.
Follow them, ending up with skyline shot as per 'Seventh Seal'. They all still
have the arm outstretched in front of them and as always they are accompanied
by bagpipe music. Shot of border with large notice: 'Scotland Welcomes You'.)
American Voice: Soon
Scotland was full of Scotsmen. The over-crowding was pitiful.
(They all dash across harder
and then stap abruptly once they're over. They stand around looking lost.)
American Voice: Three men to
a caber.
(Cut to three Scotsmen
tossing one caber. Cut to Scots wife in bed with bearded husband. Pull back to
reveal five other Scotsmen in the bed. Short but brilliant piece of animation
from T. Gilliam to show England emptying of people and Scotland filling up,
ending with a till sound and a till sign coming up out of England reading:
'Empty'. Track into England. Film of a deserted street. Wind, a dog sniffing,
newspaper blowing along street. Close-up sign on shop door 'Gone to lunch'
(lunch is actually crossed out) Scotland'. Close-up another sign on a shop
door.' 'McClosed'. Shop sign: McWoolworths & Co'.)
American Voice: For the few
who remained, life was increasingly difficult.
(Man suddenly folds up
newspaper and runs round corner. Re-emerges driving bus. Drives it halfway to
stop and then leaps out with bus still moving. Runs to stop, and puts out hand.
Bus stops. He leaps on, rings bell, runs round to front and drives the bus off
again. As bus drives out of frame we just see a couple of Scotsmen flashing
past camera with arms outstretched. Pan slowly round empty football stadium.
Eventually we pick up a solitary spectator, halfway up and halfway along in
stand opposite where the players come out. He suddenly leaps to his feet
cheering. Cut to players tunnel and one player emerging and a referee with
ball. They kick off. Player goes straight down field and scores. Spectator
disapppointed. A quick shot of flying saucer again. Studio. the laboratory
again. Charles is looking through microscope, when the door flies open and she
bursts in.)
She: Charles! Thank goodness
I've found you! It's mummy!
Charles: Hello mummy.
She: No, no, mummy's turned into
a Scotsman...
Charles: Oh how horrible...
Will they stop at nothing?
She: I don't know - do you
think they will?
Charles: I meant that
rhetorically.
She: What does rhetorically
mean?
Charles: It means, I didn't
expect an answer.
She: Oh I see. Oh, you're so
clever, Charles.
Charles: Did mummy say
anything as she changed?
She: (with an air of
tremendous revelation) Yes! she did, now you come to mention it
(A long pause as he waits
expectantly.)
Charles: Well, what was it?
She: Oh, she said ...
'Them!' (thrilling chord of jangling music and quick zoom into her face) Is
there someone at the door?
Charles: No ... It's just
the incidental music for this scene.
She: Oh I see...
Charles: 'Them' ... Wait a
minute!
She: A whole minute?
Charles: No, I meant that
metaphorically ... 'Them' ... 'Them' ... She was obviously referring to the
people who turned her into a Scotsman. If only we knew who 'They' were ... And
why 'They' were doing it... Who are 'Them'?
(Crashing chord... cut to a
small still of a Scottish crofier's cottage on a lonely moor. Slow zoom in on
the cottage.)
American Voice: Then
suddenly a clue turned up in Scotland. Mr Angus Podgorny, owner of a Dunbar
menswear shop, received an order for 48,000,000 kilts from the planet Skyron in
the Galaxy of Andromeda.
(Mix to interior of highland
menswear shop. An elderly Scottish couple are poring over a letter which they
have on the counter. Oil lamps etc.)
Mrs Podgorny: Angus how are
y'going to get 48,000,000 kilts into the van?
Angus: I'll have t'do it in
two goes.
Mrs Podgorny: D'you not ken
that the Galaxy of Andromeda is two million, two hundred thousand light years
away?
Angus: Is that so?
Mrs Podgorny: Aye ... and
you've never been further than Berwick-on-Tweed...
Angus: Aye ... but think o'
the money dear ... £18.10.0d a kilt ...that's ... (calculates with abacus)
£900,000,000 - and that's without sporrans!
Mrs Podgorny: Aye ... I
think you ought not to go, Angus.
Angus: (with visionary look
in his eyes) Aye ... we'd be able to afford writing paper with our names on
it... We'd be able to buy that extension to the toilet...
Mrs Podgorny: Aye ... but he
hasn't signed the order yet, has he?
Angus: Who?
Mrs Podgorny: Ach ... the
man from Andromeda.
Angus: Och ... well ... he
wasna really a man, d'you ken ...
(Creepy music starts to edge
in.)
Mrs Podgorny: (narrowing
eyes) Not really a man?
Angus: (sweating as the
music rises) He was as strange a thing as ever I saw, or ever I hope to see,
God willing. He was a strange unearthly creature - a quivering, glistening
mass...
Mrs Podgorny: Angus
Podgorny, what do y'mean?
Angus: He wasna so much a
man as... a blancmange!
(Jarring chord.)
(Police station: a police
sergeant is talking over the counter to a girl dressed in a short frilly tennis
dress. She holds a racquet and tennis balls.)
Sergeant: A blancmange, eh?
Girl: Yes, that's right. I
was just having a game of doubles with Sandra and Jocasta, Alec and David...
Sergeant: Hang on!
Girl: What?
Sergeant: There's five.
Girl: What?
Sergeant: Five people . . .
how do you play doubles with five people?
Girl: Ah, well ... we
were...
Sergeant: Sounds a bit funny
if you ask me ... playing doubles with five people...
Girl: Well we often play
like that... Jocasta plays on the side receiving service...
Sergeant: Oh yes?
Girl: Yes. It helps to speed
the game up and make it a lot faster, and it means Jocasta isn't left out.
Sergeant: Look, are you
asking me to believe that the five of you was playing doubles, when on the very
next court there was a blancmange playing by itself?.
Girl: That's right, yes.
Sergeant: Well answer me
this then - why didn't Jocasta play the blancmange at singles, while you and
Sandra and Alec and David had a proper game of doubles with four people?
Girl: Because Jocasta always
plays with us. She's a friend of ours.
Sergeant: Call that
friendship? Messing up a perfectly good game of doubles?
Girl: It's not messing it
up, officer, we like to play with five.
Sergeant: Look it's your
affair if you want to play with five people ... but don't go calling it
doubles. Look at Wimbledon, right? If Fred Stolle and Tony Roche played Charlie
Pasarell and Cliff Drysdale and Peaches Bartcowitz... they wouldn't go calling
it doubles.
Girl: But what about the
blancmange?
Sergeant: That could play
Ann Haydon-Jones and her husband Pip. (Cut back to Podgorny's shop. He and his
wife are frozen in the positions in which we left them. They pick up the
conversation as if nothing had happened.)
Mrs Podgorny: Oh, a
blancmange gave you an order for 48,000,000 kilts?
Angus: Aye!
Mrs Podgorny: And you
believed it?
Angus: Aye, I did.
Mrs Podgorny: Och, you're a
stupid man, Angus Podgorny.
Angus: (getting a little
angry) Oh look woman, how many kilts did we sell last year? Nine and a half,
that's all. So when I get an order for 48,000,000, I believe it - you bet I
believe it.
Mrs Podgorny: Even if it's
from a blancmange?
Angus: Och, woman, if a
blancmange is prepared to come 2,200,000 light years to purchase a kilt, they
must be fairly keen on kilts. So cease yer prattling woman and get sewing. This
could be the biggest breakthrough in kilts since the Provost of Edinburgh sat
on a spike. Mary, we'll be rich! We'll be rich!
Mrs Podgorny: Oh, but
Angus... he hasna given you an earnest of his good faith!
Angus: Ah mebbe not but he
has gi' me this... (brings out piece of folded paper from sporran)
Mrs Podgorny: What is it
now?
Angus: An entry form for the
British Open Tennis Championships at Wimbledon Toon ... signed and seconded.
Mrs Podgorny: Och, but Angus,
ye ken full well that Scots folk dinna know how to play the tennis to save
their lives.
Angus: Aye, but I must go
though dear, I dinna want to seem ungrateful.
Mrs Podgorny: Ach! Angus, I
wilna let you make a fool o'yourself.
Angus: But I must.
Mrs Podgorny: Och, no you'll
not ...
( Close-up on Angus.)
Angus: Oh, Mary... (suddenly
we hear a strange creaking and a slurping noise; a look of horror comes into
his eyes) Oh, oh, Mary! Look out! Look out!
(Big close-up of Mrs
Podgorny's eyes starting out from head.)
Mrs Podgorny: Urrgh. It's
the blancmange. (Blur focus. Cut to a desk for police spokesman. A
peaked-capped policeman sits there, reading 'The Rise and Fall of the Roman
Empire' by Googie Withers. He lowers book and talks chattily to camera.)
Policeman: Oh, now this is
where Mr Podgorny could have saved his wife's life. If he'd gone to the police
and told them that he'd been approached by unearthly beings from the Galaxy of
Andromeda, we'd have sent a man round to investigate. As it was he did a deal
with a blancmange, and the blancmange ate his wife. So if you're going out, or
going on holiday, or anything strange happens involving other galaxies, just
nip round to your local police station, and tell the sergeant on duty - or his
wife - of your suspicions. And the same goes for dogs. So I'm sorry to have
interrupted your exciting science fiction story ... but, then, crime's our
business you know. So carry on viewing, and my thanks to the BBC for allowing
me to have this little chat with you. Goodnight. God bless, look after
yourselves.
(He is hit on the head by
knight in suit of armour with raw, chicken. Cut to CID office: a plainclothes
detective is sitting in his office. Podgorny is sobbing.)
Detective: (softly and
understandingly) Do sit down, Mr Podgorny... I... I ... think what's happened
is ... terribly ... terribly... funny .... tragic. But you must understand that
we have to catch the creature that ate your wife, and if you could help us
answer a few questions, we may be able to help save a few lives. I know this is
the way your wife would have wanted it.
(He is sitting on the desk
next to Podgomy. Podgomy with superhuman control makes a great effort to stop
sobbing.)
Angus: Aye ... I'll ... do
... my best, sergeant.
Detective: (slapping
Podgorny) Detective Inspector!
Angus: Er, detective
inspector.
Detective: (getting up and
talking sharply and fast) Now then. The facts are these. You received an order for
48,000,000 kilts from a blancmange from the planet Skyron in the Galaxy of
Andromeda ... you'd just shown your wife an entry form for Wimbledon, which
you'd filled in... when you turned round and saw her legs disappearing into a
blancmange. Is that correct?
Angus: Yes, sir.
Detective: Are you mad?
Angus: No, sir.
Detective: Well that's a
relief. 'Cos if you were, your story would be less plausible. (detective brings
out photograph of blancmange) Now then, do you recognize this?
Angus: (with a squeak of
fear) Oh yes. That's the one that ate my Mary!
Detective: Good. His name's
Riley... Jack Riley... He's that most rare of criminals ... a blancmange
impersonator and cannibal.
Angus: But what about the
48,000,000 kilts and the Galaxy of Andromeda?
Detective: I'm afraid that's
just one of his stories. You must understand that a blancmange impersonator and
cannibal has to use some pretty clever stories to allay suspicion.
Angus: Then you mean...
Detective: Yes.
Angus: But...
Detective: How?
Angus: Yes.
Detective: Well...
Angus: Not?
Detective: I'm afraid so.
Angus: Why?
Detective: Who knows?
Angus: Do you think?
Detective: Could be.
Angus: But...
Detective: I know.
Angus: She was...
Detective: Yes.
(Suddenly, we hear a strange
noise. Angus looks frightened. Detective narrows his eyes and walks over to the
door.)
Detective: Good lord what's
that? (he opens the door and we get a close-up of his staring eyes) Ah, Riley!
Come to give yourself up have you, Riley? (with sudden fear) Eh Riley? Riley!
Riley! It's not Riley!
(Eating noises. He is
dragged out of camera shot. Refocus on Angus ... he averts his eyes as we hear
the detective inspector off-screen.)
Detective: It's an extra-terrestial
being! Agggh!
(Jarring chord: Angus shuts
his eyes. Cut back to laboratory: she is sitting suggestively on a stool. He is
pacing up and down looking intense.)
Charles: So, everyone in
England is being turned into Scotsmen, right?
She: Yes.
Charles: Now, which is the
worst tennis-playing nation in the world?
She: Er ... Australia.
Charles: No. Try again.
She: Australia?
Charles: (testily) No... try
again but say a different place.
She: Oh, I thought you meant
I'd said it badly.
Charles: No, course you
didn't say it badly. Now hurry.
She: Er, Czechoslovakia.
Charles: No! Scotland!
She: Of course.
Charles: Now ... now these
blancmanges, apart from the one that killed
Mrs Podgorny: have all appeared
in which London suburb?
She: Finchley?
Charles: No. Wimbledon ...
Now do you begin to see the pattern? With what sport is Wimbledon commonly
associated?
(She is thinking really
hard.)
Norman Hackforth:
(off-screen) For viewers at home, the answer is coming up on your screens.
Those of you who wish to play it the hard way, stand upside down with your head
in a bucket of piranha fish. Here is the question once again.
Charles: With what sport is
Wimbledon commonly associated?
(SUPERIMPOSED CAPTION:
'TENNIS')
She: Cricket.
Charles: No.
Charles: No. Wimbledon is
most commonly associated with tennis.
She: Of course! Now I see!
Charles: Yes, it all falls
into place!
She: The blancmangcs are
really Australians trying to get the rights of the pelota rules from the Czech
publishers!
Charles: (heavily) No ...
not quite ... but, er, just look in here.
(He indicates microscope. As
she eagerly bends to look into it he picks up a sock filled with sand and without
looking strikes her casually over the head with it. She collapses out of sight
under desk. He continues to think out loud.)
Charles: Yes. So these
blancmanges, blancmange-shaped creatures come from the planet Skyron in the
Galaxy of Andromeda. They order 48,000,000 kilts from a Scottish menswear shop
... turn the population of England into Scotsmen (well known as the worst
tennis-playing nation on Earth) thus leaving England empty during Wimbledon
fortnight! Empty during Wimbledon fortnight ... what's more the papers are full
of reports of blancmanges appearing on tennis courts up and down the country -
practising. This can only mean one thing!
(Flash up caption quickly:)
Voice Over and caption on
sceeen: 'THEY MEAN TO WIN WIMBLEDON'
Charles: They mean to win
Wimbledon! (Jarring chord)