The Harpoon
The Harpoon was a BBC Radio 4 series broadcast between 1991 and 1994, written by Julian Dutton and Peter Baynham. It consisted of three four-part series and two Christmas specials, and was performed by Julian Dutton, Peter Baynham, Susie Brann, Alistair McGowan and Mary Elliott-Nelson. It was produced by Sarah Smith, the series was nominated for a British Comedy Award for Best Radio Comedy in 1992.
The programme was a spoof of boys' comics from the Empire days of the 20th century, "a magazine for young and old across the English-speaking world" featuring "Your old chum" the Editor presenting regular features, adventure stories, practical advice, readers letters, etc., complete with advertisements. An enthusiastic young reader could be heard turning the pages and occasionally commenting. Much of the humour rested upon anachronistic, politically incorrect attitudes towards such topics as education, class, sex, race, war, and the avuncular, paternalistic style adopted by interwar boys' publications like the Boy's Own Paper in addressing their readers. The reference to whaling in the title was underscored by the illustrated front cover of the magazine, i.e. the opening music/sound effects of the programme.
Writing and performances on The Harpoon were of high quality, as was technical production, using 'authentic' voices, sound effects, and music to evoke the era and create the impression of a magazine being read. The series has been released on Audible (service). Episodes from all three series are regularly repeated on BBC Radio 4 Extra.
Music
Among other pieces, some music found during the series:- "Soldiers of the King" by Leslie Stuart.
- "Who's Been Polishing the Sun" by Noel Gay, sung by Jack Hulbert.
- "" by Con Conrad and Cliff Friend sung by Eddie Cantor.
- "Gaudeamus igitur", traditional.
Signature Sound Effect
A harpoon being fired and apparently hitting some large beast which expires with a theatrical groan that was added in Episode 2.Recurring Features
As in a real magazine, certain features recur in many "issues" -Front Page - A picture of a whaling ship The Harpoon with "oilskinned sailors greasing their harpoons and dreaming of blubber".Title-Page - "..with 6 colour plates and numerous black-and-white illustrations..", "Price, sevenpence ha'penny net", "..available throughout the Empire", "all rights reserved".Opening Page - introduced by "Your Chum, The Editor".A Serial Feature- * Meadowfields Maisie - starring Maisie Drummond - school song "Gaudeamus igitur"
- * Harpoon Romance - The Brigands of Lanada - an adventure serial "in the land of the Dago"
- * Harpoon Mystery - The Case of The Haunted MoustacheHow To - written by the Rev. A. Morris, which has features like "How to build an uphill sledge" -> by attaching a rope to a sledge.Door To The Future - ridiculous predictions of what is to come based on a 1920s perspective.Wonders of Nature - illustrated lifecycles of fictional "creatures".Centre Pages - where the "cutout-and-keep" gift is located.True-Life Tales - tales of exploration and Empire:
- * A sequence journals of expeditions to find other explorers starting with Edmund Colt's.
- * Ring of Fear - The life of Dimmy Dolt.
- * Collett, The Badger That Did Its Bit.Comic Corner - Read out cels of comics usually with a weak pun as the basis.Baffling but Bona-Fide - "fascinating facts at the foot of the page". These "facts" are either trivial observations or non-sequiturs.Boys/Families of Other Lands - xenophobic stereotypes of "Johnny Foreigner" including such peoples as the Italians "Girls, a touch too keen to get his grubby hands on the contents of your bodice" or the Welsh "Bore-da to you, Evanses". Illustrated by photographs.The Harpooners Club - read by The Editor:
- * Reader submitted "joke-ettes", prize a five shilling postal order
- * Answers to last week's puzzles
- * Picture crossword
- * Join the Dots
- * Word Teazer - make more thematic words from a simple set like using "A Pot" and suggest words related to rabbit-keeping
- * Spot the difference - two audio-illustrated "pictures" with very obvious differences
- * Answers to Readers Letters - again with questions not provided
- '''Notable Fireplaces of England'''
Characters
First season characters include -The Reader - a schoolboy type prone to exclamations like "Yaroo! Now for some Fun!"- ""Postie" - who delivers the magazine to The Reader, whistling as he does so, apparently tracking him down even when he is on vacation far away from his home.The Editor - who presents both the "front-piece" - a read table of contents - and the Harpoon Club readers letters on the "rear-pages", with answers to reader's questions, often for innuendo or as inside jokes "Well, Master A. Hitler, I'd give up the painting, if I were you, the samples showed little promise, why not try some other hobby, say, public speaking.. few guns might be handy". All in a jolly, paternalistic, bombastic and often misogynistic style with sound effects suggesting additional off-mic activities. His first name is revealed to be Fortinbras when he reads out a letter from a female reader accusing him of abandonment.Captain Bobbit - Master of the Harpoon. Author - Walrus-Clubbing for the Young at HeartMeadowfields characters
- * Maisie Drummond - Plucky 14-year-old working-class school-girl solving crimes at her posh boarding school "the most exclusive academy in England for young English-Women" - located in the village of Slumber-on-the-Chintz. Weekly cliff-hangers which were improbably resolved, e.g., "with the help of this gun I happen to have". She has a former milkman's horse called "Milko" who has only 3-legs and so is referred to as "Crooked Milko" with which she attempts to win the gymkhana using his "superior dressage skills". Using a blend of class styles, she writes letters home with Cockney rhyming-slang expressions but addresses the letter to "Mater and Pater". Presumably her surname refers to Bulldog Drummond. Her sleuthing is made easier by all villains she encounters having cloth caps, "distorted facial features", and all using binoculars.
- * Princess Tarin of Addabadaba - Maisie Drummond's best friend, with an Anglo-Indian accent. She keeps getting kidnapped. Her mount is called Murray Mint.
- * The Eight Mildreds - Maisie Drummond's school-chums, who all speak in chorus. They all ride ponies called Dobbin.
- * Bertha - Maisie and the Mildred's "rotund chum" who is "fat, wears glasses and likes jam tarts, but is a good egg really".
- * Miss Snape - Scottish Headmistress of MeadowFields. Turns out to be the leader of the white-slavers. Revealed to be Sheik Mustafa Snape leader of the white-slave gang.
- * Abdul "the Arab" Caretaker - member of the gang thwarted by Maisie.
- * Jenny Throgmorton Fanshaw - a kidnapped schoolgirlHobby Horse - an equine presenter of the "cutout-and-keep" gift. The gift can turn out to be in several parts because it is a scale 1:1 "Oast House" that should not be assembled indoors. Miss Winifred Gibson - sports instructress for Margate Young Women's Correctional Facility. Demonstrations by members of the Carshalton Breast Strokers. A jolly-hockey-sticks type who seems to harbor erotic thoughts about her under-age charges.P.C. Poon - of the Harpoon District Constabulary.Brigands of Lanada characters
- * Toby Watkiss - junior law-clerk from Mottram St. Andrew, lead character in The Brigands of Lanada, actually a Group-Captain in British Intelligence.
- * Howard - Toby's young chum who is "unusually well-built". Castrated by "underpaid grape crushers". Westcountry accent. Has been in the second form for seventeen years.
- * General Patata - evil socialist warlord in Lanada. Seems unclear on how the "inter-regnum" after the ouster of the monarchy is actually being run.
- * Rioja, Gazpacho and Tortilla - The three sidekicks of General Patata. Gazpacho rides a donkey called Paella and sings to it as it dies.
- * Franela Lapida Naranja - translated as "Orange Tombstone Flannel", the princess of Lanada who marries Howard after he falls on and kills her mother and so makes her Queen.The Story of The Comb characters
- * Wilhelm Schluppenshaft - would-be comb inventor - experiments include "varm milch"
- * Griselda - "idiot maid" to Dr Schluppenshaft - who actually invented the comb but got no creditThe Life of Dimmy "Dolt" characters
- * Dimmy Dolt "Clinch" - "The tallest midget in Christendom". An Irish 6 foot 4 inch circus performer whose act consists of drinking lemonade on a bed, he yearns to be free of this intolerable circus life.
- * Mr Timothy Smith - "evil" ringmaster who proposes trips to the seaside for Dimmy.
- * Eva La Blanc - trapeze artist and Dimmy's love interest
- * Figaro Ballcock - the knife admirer and rival for Eva's attentions
- * "Massive" Jack - "The 2 foot colossus of Gwent".The Case of The Haunted Moustache characters
- * Professor Cornucopia Blizzard - An archeologist who disturbed the tomb of Zargon The Great of Mesopotamia.
- * Constant Bickwell - friend of Professor Blizzard - a Dr Watson type.
- * Withers - Blizzard's butler
- Selsden Mace Expedition members
- * Raph Hick - medic - winner of the "seal-pup hurling competition".
- * Alistair Burkiss - team inventor.
- * Carlton Sluice - team dentist.
- * Jean-Paul Maison - team French sous-chef.
- * Emerson French - team household product salesman who did a Captain Oates but returned.
- * Constantine Connive - team mayor.