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Eric Idle

The Spamalot Diaries

Limited *Signed* Hardback book - £21.00 | Buy
Standard Unsigned Hardback book - £21.00 | Buy
The inside story of what it took to bring Monty Python and the Holy Grail to Broadway as the unlikely theatrical hit Spamalot, told through actual diaries from ...
Michael Palin

Great-Uncle Harry (paperback edition)

Paperback Book - £10.99 | Buy
From the time, many years ago, when Michael Palin first heard that his grandfather had a brother, Harry, he was determined to find out more about him.
Dip My Brain in Joy: A Life with Neil Innes - The Official Biography

Yvonne Innes

Dip My Brain in Joy: A Life with Neil Innes - The Official Biography

Nine Eight Books
  • Standard Unsigned Hardback book

    Released: 24th Oct 2024

    £22.00
    Buy
  • Limited *Signed* Hardback book

    Released: 24th Oct 2024

    £22.00
    out of stock

 Few individuals have had such an impact on British culture over the past fifty years as the comedy and music icon Neil Innes.

He was the songwriting powerhouse of the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah band. Beatles muse and collaborator. Injector of art college surrealism into 1960s TV comedy. Instigator of a revolution that led directly to Monty Python, the group he repeatedly joined on screen and stage. He was Ron Nasty, co-founder of the much-loved Rutles, the 'pre-fab four'. Accidental inventor of the phrase 'Cool Britannia'. Much loved children's TV storyteller, thinker, maker, creator, undisputed national treasure and Britain's sweet idiot laureate. And through it all, Neil remained one of the kindest and brightest individuals in show business. Musicians, comedians and fans alike loved being around Neil. He created music and joy and art wherever he went. And the person w ho loved having him round more than anybody else was Yvonne. Neil and Yvonne met at Goldsmiths College in the 1960s and they went on to walk hand-in-hand through life for over fifty years, until Neil's untimely death in 2019. This book is a heartfelt, eyewitness tale of the life of one of British culture's quiet geniuses. It is tribute to life inside the circus, with the gentlest and wisest of clowns.

'Some called him the seventh Python, but I prefer to think of him as the first Neil Innes' - Michael Palin