- Lenin of the Rovers
"Lenin of the Rovers" was a
BBC Radio 4 comedy series from1988 written byMarcus Berkmann andHarry Thompson , and starringAlexei Sayle as RickyLenin , a player for Felchester Rovers - Britain's only communistfootball team . Other players in the team included StevieStalin (Andrew McLean ) and TerryTrotsky (Phil Cornwell ). The team was managed by Des Frankly and Colonel Brace-Cartwright (Ballard Berkeley for Series 1 episodes 1 and 2,Donald Hewlett thereafter) who were frequently interviewed by Frank Lee Brian (real-life football commentatorKenneth Wolstenholme ). ActorsJohn Sessions andJim Broadbent made character appearances in Series 2. The title is a parody of the long-running football-themed comic strip, "Roy of the Rovers ".The show loosely parodied the increasing commercialisation of British football and the then-notorious violent loyalty of the fans. The script also made frequent use of Ricky Lenin's attempts to fit in with what he saw as a 'western' lifestyle, in a similar way to some of Sayle's appearances as the Balowski Family in "The Young Ones". Situations included the trouble caused by the ghost-writing of Ricky's regular column in "The Daily Tits" (parodying "The Sun") - a complicated argument in favour of collectivism in Lenin's original was transformed to "I hate all paddies, but I wouldn't mind giving that
Gloria Hunniford one" in the paper; the North-South economic divide inEngland ("In Crunchthorpe there's a hundred and three per cent unemployment. The Government uses the place to dumpnuclear waste ! They pile it up in the town centre. Outside Freeman Hardy and Willis") and films "The Titfield Thunderbolt " and "Apocalypse Now ". A knowledge of football was useful but not essential. The script also took great delight in the violent nature of professional football at the time::Northern pundit: "The average Crunchsider knows his football like the back of his hand. And what he really likes to see is really elegant, skilful one-touch players. Out in the middle of the park, screaming in agony, clutching their gonads."
:Commentator: "So Crunchthorpe don't really go in for one-touch play, then?"
:Northern pundit: "Oh, aye, they do. Provided the one touch is delivered just below the kneecaps like a
steam hammer hitting anavocado ..."Another ongoing joke was various characters (particularly Sayle) speaking lines from pop songs as dramatic dialog. The fictional town of Felchester was itself presumably a joke: a reference to the relatively obscure practice of
felching , conflating that term with Melchester, the fictional home of Roy of the Rovers.1st series 1988
#Up for the Coup
#Felcherama
#The Fifth Man
#Max Gut2nd series 1989
#Ghosts and Goolies
#The Felchester Firm
#Apocalypse Des
#The Final SolutionSeries 2 was released as a double-cassette set in 1992.
External links
* [http://epguides.com/LeninoftheRovers/ epguides.com] Lenin of the Rovers on epguides.com
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