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Showing posts with label Rowan Atkinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rowan Atkinson. Show all posts

Thursday, May 13, 2021

The time Rowan Atkinson ‘forgot’ the words to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony...

  in hilarious skit...

The time Rowan Atkinson forgot the words to Beethoven’s 9th Symphony in hilarious skit

The time Rowan Atkinson forgot the words to Beethoven’s 9th Symphony in hilarious skit. Picture: YouTube

By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London

When a fictitious baritone took on the work of a classical giant – and it all went terribly wrong.

Here’s the moment Rowan Atkinson hit a nerve with every choral singer on the face of the earth, with a hilarious skit in which he misplaces the lyrics to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony.

Under the alias of “distinguished British baritone” Robert Bennington, Atkinson cues the glorious choral ‘Ode to Joy’ finale, Beethoven’s famous setting of German poet Friedrich Schiller’s text.

Atkinson’s baritone character launches into the anthem of the European Union, annunciating the triumphant poem with fervour. But at the end of the first verse, disaster strikes, and he realises he has forgotten the rest of his sheet music.

Left with no other option but to wing it, the baritone panics and begins to spout randomly combined German words.

And so, Beethoven and Schiller’s immortal vision of the human race becoming brothers, slowly descends into a shambolic melting pot of apple strudels and lederhosen (watch below).


This was far from Atkinson’s first rodeo in the world of musical comedy – or indeed, the music of Beethoven.

In 1981, Mr Bean’s creator acted out a brilliantly chaotic skit in which he conducted Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony.

There was also the time Atkinson exercised his extraordinary rubber limbs in an ‘air piano’ sketch of the third, exhausting, movement of Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight’ Sonata (watch below).

And who could forget his cameo at the Opening Ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics, in which he played the London Symphony Orchestra’s unruly keyboard player in a performance of the Chariots of Fire theme.

“Music and comedy sit extremely well together, but they have to blend,” Atkinson told Classic FM More Music Breakfast’s Tim Lihoreau in 2018. “They can’t fight each other – it is a dance.

“Music is many ways in the straight man to the comedy, that essential support mechanism against which you can play.”

(C) 2021 ClassicFM London

Thursday, March 14, 2019

The hilarious hidden joke in 'Mr. Bean's' soundtrack

A fan of the original ‘Mr Bean’ series has discovered it ...


By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London
4K
If you’ve always wondered what the choir are singing about in the choral opening theme to ‘Mr Bean’… wonder no more.
A fan of the classic TV sitcom Mr Bean has discovered a recurring joke in the lyrics of the soundtrack.
The choral score, written by composer and former Classic FM presenter Howard Goodall, repeats the line ‘Ecce homo qui est faba’, which translates into English as ‘Behold the man who is a bean’.
From the beginning of episode two onwards, Mr Bean (played by Rowan Atkinson) falls from the sky in a beam of light, accompanied by the theme.
There are other hidden gags which include the choir singing ‘end of part one’ and ‘part two’, as well as ‘Farewell, man who is a bean’ at the end of each episode.



1. The original Mr Bean TV series is now on @NetflixUK
2. The subtitles on the Latin opening theme have revealed that the actual lyrics are simply:
“Behold the man, who is a bean.”

After 28 years my mind has been blown to pieces and I laughed so hard.

847 people are talking about this
Last year, the original Mr Bean TV series appeared on Netflix in the UK. A fan of the show, James Green, tweeted about his discovery after rewatching the episodes with the subtitles on.
His post has resurfaced again since Netflix retweeted it and Goodall himself posted about the hidden gag, saying:
“Honest truth is I didn’t realise this was a secret. I am delighted to have caused some glee though, all these years later.”
In October last year, Rowan Atkinson revealed a big secret about his famous 2012 Olympics performance on Classic FM’s More Music Breakfast, admitting that the entire performance was prerecorded.
He said: “The only thing we could do was to prerecord the whole thing so Simon Rattle was waving his arms about just as I was, miming to the music.”