Hamish And Dougal

Hamish and Dougal are two characters from the long-running BBC Radio 4 'antidote to panel games' I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue. One of the rounds in this show is Sound Charades, where a title of a book or film has to be conveyed from one team to the other by means of a story. The result of the story is usually a pun on the title in question. Barry Cryer and Graeme Garden usually tell their story as two elderly Scottish gentlemen, Hamish and Dougal. It is in essence a minute long improvised sketch where each performer knows the other well enough to be able to set up joint jokes seamlessly. Each sketch is started with the line "You'll have had your tea", with which those (un)welcome visitors are greeted in Scotland who had a habit of dropping in at dinnertime (In the north of the United Kingdom, the evening meal, typically called dinner in the south, is usually called tea; this can lead to confusion sometimes.) This is done either to deter scroungers or because the person in question is quite tight-fisted themselves (people from Edinburgh are typically characterised that way). Between the 24th and 27th of December 2002, daily episodes of a sitcom You'll Have Had Your Tea were broadcast on BBC Radio 4. These were 15 minutes long and were extensions of the minute long sketches. The main differences were the presence of a script, written by Barry Cryer and Graeme Garden, and of two other actors, Alison Steadman and Jeremy Hardy. Alison Steadman played Mrs Naughtie (pronounced Nochty) the housekeeper, while Jeremy Hardy played the local laird. They were produced by Jon Naismith. The scripts were written very carefully, with barely a single line devoid of a joke. Often the fact that it was broadcast on radio was taken advantage of, with sound effects deliberately giving audiences wrong impressions. An example of this is the laird asking Dougal whether he wanted a drink followed by a long drawn out sound of running water, then the laird saying "Ah that's better, now what would you like to drink?" Sexual innuendo was also heavily relied upon, as it is in I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue. A wonderful example of this was the eternal buzzing of the pie grater Dougal bought for Mrs Naughtie. When someone comes to the door, you hear his strangulated cry as he finds a place about his person to hide it. (The joke is on the similarity between the phrase "pie grater" and the word "vibrator".) Despite the often risqu nature of a lot of the jokes (such as the dance of the seven voles: "Och, where's that little rascal got to"), it is a very gentle comedy, with the usual joyous disregard for storylines that often characterizes this type of comedy. As a nice random touch, two episodes finish with Jeremy Hardy singing very out of tune versions of Atomic Kitten hits.

Episode List

Series 1 Series 2 Hogmanay special

 

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