Spitting Image was a satirical puppet show that ran on Britain's ITV television network from 1984 to 1996. The programme was produced by Spitting Image Productions for Central. It was announced on 20 February 2006 that ITV1 would present a documentary about the programme, and "Best Ever Spitting Image" duly aired on 25 June 2006. However ongoing speculation that a new series would follow has been dismissed *.
The puppets, caricaturing public figures often including British and American politicians and celebrities, were designed by the cartoonists Peter Fluck and Roger Law (who sometimes spoonerised their names as 'Luck and Flaw'). They were assisted by various young caricaturists including David Stoten, Steve Bendelack, Tim Watts, Pablo Bach, Christopher Sharrock (who coined the internal name for the show: "Splitting Headache") and Oscar da Costa and virtually every successful British impressionist of the time. Musical parodies were provided by Philip Pope (former member of Who Dares Wins and the Hee Bee Gee Bees team) and later Steve Brown (who played the character of bandleader Glen Ponder in Knowing Me, Knowing You).
The stars of the show, though, were the latex puppets. Centre stage were the politicians, in particular then-British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who was portrayed as a bullying, fascist tyrant and man-woman (she wore suits and used the urinals), and U.S. President Ronald Reagan (a bumbling, nuke-obsessed fool with a (literally) missing brain). Providing admirable support were leather-clad "Bovver boy" Norman Tebbit, bland Geoffrey Howe, manic Michael Heseltine, lecherous Cecil Parkinson, Douglas Hurd - whose spiralling hairstyle resembled a "Mr Whippy" ice cream – the slug-like Kenneth Baker and, on the other side of the House, the senile Michael Foot, gasbagging Neil Kinnock, the actually spitting Roy Hattersley and the creepy, psychotic Gerald Kaufman. Several of the politicians found their characterisations offensive, although in subsequent interviews many were glad of the attention. Though the programme required more than a passing knowledge of British politics, it aired on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation late on Sunday nights in the late-1980s.
As the show progressed, Britain's political landscape altered. Particularly, in the early 1990s, many of the characters which had proven so popular were retired from real-world politics, particularly Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, whilst others – such as Michael Heseltine and Norman Tebbit – became much less prominent. This marked a decline in the show's fortunes. Thatcher was replaced with a dull, all-grey John Major, who enjoyed nothing better than a nice meal of peas with his wife Norma. Tony Blair, at that point leader of the opposition, appeared in the last few series as a grinning puppet hypnotised by a Peter Mandelson snake. The show ended in 1996, missing Labour's 1997 election victory (though the last ever episode featured a 'look forward' to 1997, featuring the party moving into 10 Downing Street).
Another mainstay of Spitting Image was the royal family. The Queen always seemed ever so slightly mad and picking clothes from rubbish bins, Prince Philip was a blunderbuss-toting buffoon permanently in naval uniform, Prince Charles was distant, and Diana was a publicity-hungry Sloane Ranger. There was also playboy Prince Andrew, horsey Princess Anne, petulant teenager Prince Edward, tipsy Princess Margaret, truffle-snuffling Fergie and senile Queen Mother, who was generally seen with a bottle of Gordons Gin, a copy of the Racing Post and a Beryl Reid voice; this was a running joke from a sketch in which the Royal Family's desire to conceal her Birmingham accent was the reason she was very seldom heard speaking on television.
Other popular puppets included a crying Gazza, a smarmy Jeremy Paxman, Donald Sinden (forever seeking a knighthood), Leonard Nimoy (desperate to shake off his Spock image despite the fact he has pointed ears that flapped constantly), hip and swinging "Gorby", election-losing David Owen complete with whining, bed-wetting David Steel in his pocket, Sir John Gielgud (who always fell asleep and had to be prodded awake with a stick), Paul Daniels and his pet wig, John Cole (whose rambling reports from outside Parliament often led to an off-screen individual wrapping a walking stick round his neck and yanking him away), weatherman Ian McCaskill and his spectacles which swung up and down as he got more enthusiastic, vamp-like Edwina Currie, rock'n'roll Pope John Paul II (open shirt, sunglasses), a hippie Jesus, an extremely controversial God character who occasionally plugged his new book "Bible II" and snooker star Steve "Interesting" Davis.
The first series was not as vicious with the writing and songs more similar to the tone of established comedy revue shows such as Weekending. As the Thatcher administration became less popular through 1985 the characterisations became harsher and the show grew in popularity. Despite this, many politicians had an ambivalent attitude to the show, realising that to be caricatured on it was a form of recognition which was perhaps preferable to total obscurity. It was said that while many of those who were viciously lampooned would kill to get off the show, there were others who would kill to get on it. Ultimately, many political figures accepted the show had a purpose and a benefit – Currie, Hattersley and Michael Portillo were among its biggest fans, even though they were frequently treated without kindness by it.
In 1986, the Spitting Image puppets had a number one hit in the UK charts with "The Chicken Song", parodying "Agadoo" by Black Lace – one of several parodies to have featured in the programme.
The other songs released by Spitting Image were "I've Never Met A Nice South African" (which was on the B-Side of "The Chicken Song" and was a savage indictment of the apartheid-ridden country), "Santa Claus Is On The Dole", "The Atheist Tabernacle Choir" and "We've Got Beards" (which poked fun at ZZ Top). "The Chicken Song" was by far the most successful of all of their music and not-so-subtle references were made to it in subsequent sketches in the show itself. An LP was produced, featuring some of their sketches over time along with a few of their songs.
In only one instance, the parody was sung by the original artist. This was when Sting was persuaded to sing the Spitting Image version of Every Breath You Take*.
The Spitting Image puppets also appeared in the video for "Land of Confusion" by Genesis, a song which implied that Thatcher and Reagan were about to bring the world to a nuclear war. The video was depicted as a nightmare Reagan was having, which left him completely immersed in sweat from worrying. To this day, if most Americans know of Spitting Image at all, it is due to that Genesis video; however, in an attempt to crack the American market, a feature-length special entitled Spitting Image : Down And Out In The White House was produced in 1986 by Central for NBC. Introduced by David Frost, it departed from the sketch-based format in favour of an overall storyline involving the upcoming (at that time) Presidential election. It was not successful with its target audience, possibly because its humour was still very British and it was so irreverent about Ronald Reagan at a time when he was enormously popular with the American public. The American puppeteers Sid and Marty Krofft later had a degree of success with a vaguely satirical show called DC Follies which ran from 1987 to 1989, was clearly inspired by Spitting Image and utilised Muppet-style foam puppets rather than rubbery caricatures, but it didn't come anywhere close to being as savage and vitriolic as Spitting Image.
They also released a video with the satirical documentary "Bumbledown: The Life and Times of Ronald Reagan" and a musical based very loosely on West Side Story called "The Sound Of Maggie".
The show was successful, attracting great praise from US critics, and a homegrown variant was attempted. DC Follies had a passing resemblance to Spitting Image, but owed more to Sesame Street (human participants trying to talk sense to the puppets) and was not considered as funny. See also List of British TV shows remade for the American market.
However there are shows still similar:
British television sketch shows | Satirical television programmes | ITV television programmes | Television programs featuring puppetry
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"Spitting Image".
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