"I was asked in my first term at Oxford to do a sketch in this one-night show at the Oxford Playhouse." "And I'd never written anything, and I'm not really naturally a writer." "So I just had to invent a sort of five minutes of something at 48 hours' notice." "'I just stood in front of the mirror 'and started to mess about with my face, basically." "'And this strange, surreal, non-speaking character evolved.'" " Name?" " Bean." "Mr. Bean is the name given to the skin that Rowan can put on to be funny." "You've got a character who is quite intelligent and subversive, but he's also one who looks odd and behaves in an odd way and has odd solutions to problems." "Mr. Bean is an anarchist, unintentionally, I guess, though." "He's not trying to... create chaos and he's just trying to make his own life work." "You like-a try the house wine, sir?" "Um, yes, please." "Mmm." "No, no, no, no, no, no." "I'm driving." "He can be pretty mean and actually do some truly unpleasant things." "He's just able to make something out of nothing." "And his physical humor, what he does with that face." "(Narrator) 'The story of Bean is inextricably linked 'with the story of Rowan Atkinson." "'Although Mr. Bean was only christened in 1989," "'Rowan has been developing the character for most of his life.'" "Whenever we try to think of Mr. Bean and how he will react or would react in certain situations that we might put him in," "I imagine him as a nine-year-old boy, that's how I always see him." "'They're sort of anarchists at heart, really." "'And I think that's what Mr. Bean is, he's an anarchist." "'He'll obey the rules as long as they suit him.'" "Three, four!" "(Narrator) 'Atkinson was educated at Durham Cathedral Choir School." "'He is still remembered by his old headmaster, Canon Grove.'" "I had a member of staff named Cyril Watson who produced plays, and one year he chose Saint Joan." "And it was obviously a spark of genius on his part to see that Rowan was the perfect person for the Dauphin." "It was quite camp." "The first and possibly last time I've played someone truly camp." "Shaw's own description was that the Dauphin was a pathetic little creature, yet irrepressible with a cheeky sense of humor and always liable to get his own way in the end." "And that could be a sort of scenario for Mr. Bean." "What the hell do you think you're doing?" "Pinching my bottom in a hospital queue!" "The first impression he gave was that he was an extremely shy little boy." "'Though he did say that he had begun his sort of career 'by being taken by the boys down into the changing room 'and asked to make funny faces for them.'" "(Atkinson) 'I remember standing up in the changing rooms at 10 or 11 'and putting on a performance.'" "Right." "Quiet, please." "Ainsley?" "Babcock?" "Bland?" "Carthorse?" "Dint?" "Ellsworth-Beast Major?" "I think it very likely that the funny faces were myself and my colleagues." "Jones M, Orifice, Sediment and Undermanager... see me afterwards." "Most of you didn't write nearly enough." "Dint, your answer was unreadable." "Put it away, Plectrum." "If I see it once more this period, Plectrum," "I shall have to tweak you." "Don't sulk, boy, for God's sake." "Has Matron seen those boils?" "Horrid little twerp." "(Atkinson) 'I assumed a habit of making people laugh, 'but of course that was pre-adolescence.'" "Once adolescence set in," "I never really performed off-stage, or off-screen, ever again." "It was only before the self-consciousness set in." "'I think I was quite sort of self-contained." "'Not, I hope, a loner." "'But sort of not really requiring the constant company of my friends 'in order to enjoy myself.'" "Ooh!" "Look, it's me!" "(Atkinson) 'My interest in visual comedy 'was based on discovering a film by Jacques Tati 'called Monsieur Hulot's Holiday, 'which I discovered in the sixth form." "'I was the projectionist." "Myself and a friend were in charge." "'We could leaf through film catalogs 'and order whatever films came into our minds." "'It just struck a chord with me, I so admired it.'" "It was a kind of an uncompromising comic attitude and setting that I really admired." "And... so that... but that was only a filmic experience which influenced me subliminally." " Monsieur..." " Monsieur." "Huh?" "Comment?" " Permettez." " Hulot." "It was something I forgot about for the three years I was at Newcastle University, from where I went to Oxford University." "'And it was there, really, that it sort of returned.'" "My background and my natural inclinations were fairly northern, and suddenly I was in this very sort of cultured, more sort of "southern" environment." "And I was working with, you know, all my friends, if you like, who were reading classics, English and French literature." "I was the only one reading Engineering Science." "When I first met him, he was nervous." "And, uh... he was odd." "There was a lot of nervousness about being around women generally." "Which, of course, is fantastically endearing." " Ah, Lorraine." " Morning, Robert." "Um..." "What, uh..." "What do you do at nights?" "I beg your pardon?" "Do you, uh..." "Do you eat at night?" "Or... or what?" "Well, as a rule, yes." "Aha!" "Ah, yes." "Yes." "Well, ah..." "Yes, well, I do, actually." "l-I quite often go to a pub on my way home." "But tonight I thought I'd really splash out on something a lot better." " Go somewhere really nice." " Ah." " Would you like me to join you?" " No!" "No, no, no, no." "No, no." "No, don't trouble yourself." "No, it'll be, uh... um..." "Ah..." "Yes." "Yes." "Yes!" "Yes, if that'd be OK." "(Narrator) 'In his very first term at Oxford," "'Rowan had a fortuitous meeting with a student comedy writer.'" "I saw an advert in the university newspaper saying" ""We're thinking of getting a comedy revue together," ""meetings at University College" at a certain time." "I thought I'd beetle along, I felt as though I had an interest." "And Richard was there." "Yes." "Rowan and I met at a tiny scriptwriters' conference in a Don's room." "In the summer of 1976." "And I remember he was very bright, very talkative, which I wasn't..." "Cos he was very quiet." "He didn't say anything for the entire two-hour meeting." "But he kind of made up for whatever contribution was lacking from me." "And then, finally one day, we were asked whether we had anything we wanted to put into the revue we were going to do." "And Ro stood up in the room and performed these two sketches he'd worked out." "Which were replete with such flagrant genius." "It was the first time we heard him speak." "They were completely wonderful." "(Narrator) 'The Oxford Playhouse provided a showcase 'where Rowan performed much of his early material 'with Richard as the straight man.'" "At the center of the Elizabethan world sits the king." "Upon the character of the king depends the plot and so there are many different kinds of king." "The benign king." "The benign king with a physical defect." "The benign king with two physical defects." "The mad king." "(Narrator) 'Somebody who saw one of these early shows 'was BBC producer John Lloyd.'" "It was not like any revue that I had ever seen, partly because of Richard Curtis' genius, the lateral jumps it made in terms of subject matter." "'It would always just start, often very surreal and rather European, 'like strange Czechoslovakian cartoons.'" "Where this little man would come on and be chased around the stage by a spotlight, with the music of a clarinet playing." "'It didn't obey any rules of student sketch-writing." "'It wasn't like anything else." "'What we were all doing at the time was Monty Python sketches.'" "And very beguiling and odd." "And suddenly, this fantastically rude vicar talking about blowjobs." "The young, attractive bride-to-be came up to me after a service and asked me just that question." ""Father, what is the Church's attitude to fellatio?"" "And I replied, "Well, you know, Joanne," ""I'd like to tell you," ""but unfortunately, I don't know what fellatio is."" "And so she showed me." "And ever since, whenever anyone has asked me the question," ""Father, what is the Church's attitude to fellatio?"" "I always reply," ""Well, you know, I'd LIKE to tell you," ""but unfortunately, I don't know what fellatio is."" "The shows usually took the form of something very visual, a mime thing." "The famous mime where he mimes to a Beethoven piano sonata." "(Narrator) 'Another of Rowan's long-term collaborators 'is composer Howard Goodall.'" "He is very musical." "We've always done musical sketches on the stage show, so I'm more involved than musical directors normally are in a comedy show." "He did one as a concert pianist playing Beethoven, one as a conductor, he did an AC/DC guitar mime and he did a thing called "Drumming", which we worked on together." "Well, I was friendly with Richard Curtis, and he was, in those days, Rowan's straight man." "In fact, he was, as I later became, the other person in Rowan's one-man show." "Good evening and welcome..." "There were a number of different sketches and characters, all of which had elements of what later became Mr. Bean." "I can remember one when he was... a sketch about someone on his first date." "The first crucial step is having arranged to pick up your date, not to look like a complete idiot when she opens the door." "Best to look as though your attention has been momentarily distracted." "But when you do notice her, it is vital to say how pretty she's looking straight away." "But don't overdo it." "(Deayton) 'He's very, very careful about everything he does.'" "It'll be the same performance every night, but it was much more like preparing a play." "And I think in that regard, he is more like an actor than a comedian." "He'll spend a long time working out the dynamics of a particular scene." "Once in the car, there are various ways of driving." "If you drive like this you... you might lose her respect." "If you drive like this..." "I remember the TV show called Canned Laughter, which he did very shortly after leaving Oxford." "And there, if you look at the character, you can see how it's gradually forming." "Hi, Lorraine." "(Radio) 'He ties you up a lot?" "'" "Oh, my God, look at the time." "Ho!" "Ho!" "Huh!" "Ho!" "Cup, cup, cup..." "Richard Curtis and I were writing a full stage revue for Rowan with lots of different sketches, and we wrote a couple of silent ones for him, one of which was called "Cheating", which I was particularly involved in." "And, well, you know, we co-wrote the whole show." "And that later became a Mr. Bean sketch." "It didn't change at all." "We just didn't call it Mr. Bean at the time." "I think what he did is take elements of those different characters and package them together." "That's probably how Mr. Bean was born." "(Goodall) 'You're all about 22, 'you're touring with one of the great comic geniuses of the century, 'and you're three friends.'" "So how do you handle that?" "The minute Rowan walks on, he has 5,000 people in the palm of his hand." "'It's an extraordinary gift." "'We don't discuss it much, but it's happening.'" "Ah, hello." "It's nice to see you all here." "Now, as the more perceptive of you probably realize by now, this is Hell." "And I am the Devil." "Good evening." "But you can call me Toby if you like." "We try to keep things informal here, as well as infernal." "That's just a little joke of mine." "I tell it every time." "Now..." "Murderers." "Murderers over here, please." "Thank you." "Ah, looters and pillagers over here..." "Thieves, if you could join them." "And lawyers." "You're in that lot." "Villains are always more fun to play than good guys." "That's a well-known fact." "And I enjoy characters..." "who have a vindictiveness in them." "I always have done." "In the end, it's just more fun." "There was a very funny moment when I sent him a script for The Tall Guy." "And the character he eventually played was at that point called Rowan Atkinson, just as a joke." "And he rang me up and asked me which part I wanted him to play." "Was somewhat based on his real-life experiences with Richard Curtis, who wrote The Tall Guy, brilliant man that he is, and funny script that it is." "Cos he played something of the same part in Rowan's one-man show." "I think the rest of us found it quite difficult to adjust to him becoming very famous very quickly when we were still who we were." "This was way before Richard had become a well-known writer." "So there was quite a lot of adjustment to be done." "Especially for Rowan, difficult to adjust to his friends always wondering if he'd buy the meal or not." "The only thing in which Ro was naughty during the stage show is he did have trouble describing it as anything but a one-man show." "I remember saying to him once, pointing at the poster which said "Rowan Atkinson in his one-man show"" "and saying, "Don't you think that poster's slightly strange?"" "And he said, "Oh, yes." ""That typeface should be in green and not yellow."" "I thought, "Well, I won't push it."" "John Lloyd asked if I wanted to join this team he was getting together to do a new topical, satirical comedy sketch show." "The BBC, who in those days were much more paternal than they are now, said to Rowan, "It would be better with other people in the show." ""If you're good, you'll shine and if not, they'll support you." ""You'll only have to do a quarter of the work."" "So I was at this crossroads, really, and I had to choose between doing a show on my own or doing a show with three others." "And there was no doubt in my mind which way to go." "Abou Ben Adhem." "May his tribe increase!" "Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace." "And saw, within the moonlight in his room... (Gibberish)" "And to the presence in his room, he said..." ""What writest thou?" The vision raised its head..." "And with a look made of all sweet accord, answered... (Gibberish)" "It was only rarely in Not the Nine O'Clock News that my special interest in visual comedy was ever allowed to burst through." "The rest of you will watch a mime called, and if there's any sniggering there'll be trouble," "Alternative Car Park." "I said..." "What do you think you're doing?" "What?" "!" "(Quietly) I'm the mime." "Well, why didn't you say so?" "Right." "Get on with the mime." "I... am a mime." "My body is my tool." "The ideas we had for visual characters were rather unfocused, let's say." "But the man who bumped into the tree was a rare occasion when it got through." "I remember Richard Curtis and Rowan coming in very early on and saying," ""We've got this great, great script."" "And it consisted of, it says" ""Rowan is walking down the street and he sees the camera" ""and bumps into a lamppost."" "And I turned over the page expecting the great delivery of the line and said, "What's the joke?"" "He said, "It's really funny."" "I said, "This isn't funny at all." "It's hopeless."" ""Please, can we have two hours with a camera?" I said, "Sure."" "'They went off and shot it and it was absolutely brilliant.'" "It's that shock." "You've been working comedy for five, six, seven years, and somebody comes along and says, "There's another way of doing this."" "Ahh!" "He has not had to compromise." "He's done pretty much exactly what he wants to." "His compromises have generally been so as not to upset his mother." "You know, not to say too many rude words." "It started off being something completely different about bicycle thieves in north London." "And over time, it developed into a medieval sitcom." "So, how it went down that road, I don't know." "I seek information about a wise woman." "(Gasps) The wise woman?" "The wise woman?" "Yes, the wise woman." "Two things, my lord, must ye know of the wise woman." " Yes?" " First..." "She is... a woman!" "And second..." "She is..." "Wise?" " You do know her, then?" " No..." "Just a wild stab in the dark, which is, incidentally, what you'll get if you don't start being helpful." "I delighted in Black Adder and those very long, ornate things." "You know, "Baldrick, that's the most disgusting thing I've seen..."" "...since Cardinal Wolsey got his knob out at Hampton Court... and stood at the end of the passage pretending to be a door." "(Laughing)" "Oh, shut up." "You'd laugh at a Shakespeare comedy." "The Black Adders were very complicated by the end, it has to be said." "Because... there were... you know, six or seven people working in a room, all of whom were capable on their own of developing entire projects, attempting to squeeze all their creative energy into a two-dimensional situation comedy." " Permission to sing boisterously." " If you must." "# Row, row, row your punt" "(Both) # Gently down the stream" "# Belts off, trousers down" "# Isn't life a scream #" "Fabulous." "University education, you can't beat it, can you?" "Bravo." "Now, what have we here?" " Name?" " Baldrick, sir." "Oh, tally ho, yippity dap and zing zang zbillip!" "Looking forward to bullying off for the final chukka?" "Answer the General, Baldrick." "I can't answer him, sir." "I don't know what he's talking about." "Ah." "Are you looking forward to the big push?" "No, sir, I'm absolutely terrified." "Ooh, the healthy humor of the honest Tommy." "Aha!" "Don't worry, my boy." "If you should falter, remember that Captain Darling and I are behind you." "About 35 miles behind you, I would say." "There are two Rowan characters, principally." "There's the absolute bastard who's the schoolmaster or Black Adder, and there's the funny, wibbly little man." "(Exhaling)" "(Inhaling deeply)" "Who's an utter bastard as well." "They both are." "(Narrator) 'In 1989, 'after the consideration of a long list of vegetables, 'the funny little wibbly man was given the name of Mr. Bean.'" "(Tires screech)" "'Quite unexpectedly, this unfashionably silent comedy 'was an immediate hit." "'One of the secrets of the Bean visual humor 'is the careful and highly detailed preparation that goes into filming.'" "(Atkinson) 'I'm not at all sure that I enjoy acting." "'Because I just find it so worrying and difficult." "'I enjoy planning, thinking about things 'and contributing to the creation of things.'" "The window down, a head emerging." "A nice entrance for yourself, trying to get out of the train." "Almost without seeing the window come down." "Just a sense of the grappling hand, the hand coming out." "'Where's the knob?" "'" "(Narrator) 'Each Bean moment is meticulously choreographed.'" "I suppose I'd see him that he arrives in this shot already faltering." "Though we just get the sense, not necessarily that he's acknowledged his loss of ticket in the opening shot, but he could be looking for it." "'And he's still fairly confident." "Then, when we pick him up profile, 'he's starting to falter and there's a bit more of the whole..." "'"Oh, bloody hell, I haven't got it."'" "If this angle works best, lovely." "The change of direction, you see." "I'm always aware that of any 10 suggestions, three or four or five may be along the same lines that he's thinking." "But I'm always unnerved that on almost all the other occasions, he's so far ahead that I then have to choose between open admiration or very quick recovery." "Where I say, "Yes, I felt something similar would do very well."" "Then try and get to the cameraman before he does." "(Atkinson) This bag could do with being six inches longer." " Six inches longer?" " Yeah, I think so." "How fast can you go?" "(Rattling)" "The corner of the bag would go through and get stuck." "And then he'd think there's only one way out - over the top." "(Narrator) 'The co-writer, Robin Driscoll, 'collaborates with Rowan on the improvisation of Bean.'" "If you do a bit of a caterpillar and you get up and you think," ""Freedom's inside."" "Hooray!" "One of the reasons Mr. Bean has gone on is because the process of creating him is a lot of fun." "You think of any basic situation." "You're in a barbershop." ""Yes, this is a place where people don't talk," ""I could do a Mr. Bean thing here."" "(Phone)" "Suzy?" "Then you sit down at the computer and think through five things that might happen." "Sorry, look." "Can I just leave Jamie here with you for a moment?" "I've left my purse in the shop." "Just give him a good haircut." "Be good, Jamie." "(Atkinson) 'Sorry to stop.'" "But I've a feeling that if this happened, that Bean would..." "Well, normal people would say," ""Hang on, he'll be back in a second and I'm first."" "There'd be... because in the end, the real barber's 10 yards that way." "So I'm not sure he'd immediately presume to take on the role of the barber, unless he had an extra kick." "And maybe, actually, Jamie says something like, "Come on!"" "Would Jamie take his own cap off and look at Bean?" "So that we see you..." "yeah, like that expectant thing." "And there's a kind of moment between the two of you." "Yes, that might be quite good." "Yes, yes, that's quite good, yes." "Exactly." "Good." "That might be all I need." "(# Suspenseful film music)" "(Blood-curdling scream)" "I like Mr. Bean, mainly because he's got a bit of a rubber face." "(Woman on PA) 'Blue, three and two, 32." "'And blue, three and five, 35." "'Blue, three and seven, 37." "'White, six oh, 60." "'Yellow, two and five, 25." "'White, five and four, 54." "'Yellow, two and three, 23.'" "'Green, any way around, 69.'" "(Gulping) Bingo!" "He puts peas, mushy peas up the turkey's bum." "And then he puts it up with the hand he's got his watch on." "And when it comes out, you realize he's not wearing his watch." "The turkey on his head!" "And when his girlfriend comes, they find out." "Oh!" "Are you all right in there?" "(Muffled) I'm fine, thank you!" "But I reckon he's a bit gormless." "(# Disco)" "'Good evening." "Call it Beanomania.'" "'And now again, here's Mr. Bean!" "'" "(Speaking Spanish) '..." "Mr. Bean.'" "(Speaking French) '..." "Mr. Bean.'" "Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Mr. Bean." "(Audience applause)" "(Narrator) 'Uninhibited by a language barrier," "'Mr." "Bean has become a truly global success 'and is now watched in over 100 countries." "'The character was always meant to be international." "'The inspiration came to Rowan while on holiday in Italy.'" "I remember strolling through Venice and seeing all these souvenir stores selling posters of George Michael and Phil Collins and Duran Duran, I think, at the time." "And thinking, well, there you go, you know." "Englishmen all, but hordes of Norwegians are very keen to buy posters of them." "'Why does comedy not have an international dimension?" "'" "(Narrator) 'With Mr. Bean," "'Rowan has discovered that international dimension.'" "'I've never been to Canada." "It's absolutely splendid.'" "(Narrator) 'Bean is not quite into sex, drugs and rock and roll." "'But the Bean videos have sold in record-breaking quantities." "'And Rowan is now as well-paid as a major rock star." "'All this on the back of only 14 Mr. Bean half-hour episodes.'" "I certainly never wanted pop star recognition and accoutrements." "We did experience it once in Amsterdam, when I went as Mr. Bean to sign some videos." "'And there was this near riot and I had to be smuggled out the back.'" "It was most peculiar, when you get a sense of what it must be like to be Madonna." "But I have to say, it was an experience I didn't enjoy at all." "(Narrator) 'But despite this extraordinary success," "'Rowan was keen for a new challenge." "'Bean, the Movie offered a whole new set of possibilities." "'And in 1996, it went into production.'" "Reset!" "(Man) 'The Grierson Gallery of California needs a representative." "'They are looking for a scholar of a very high standing.'" "I have therefore decided to recommend for the post and the three months' sabbatical that goes with it, that splendid employee..." "Mr. Bean." "(Excited chatter)" " Excellent." " All those in favor?" " (All) Yes!" " Excellent." "Carried." "'Our loss is America's gain.'" "(Narrator) 'Ludicrously nominated as the National Gallery representative, 'the funny little wibbly man finally arrives in America.'" "He gets a bit of a warm reception at Los Angeles airport and immediately gets on the wrong side of the police." "Move, move, move!" "Police!" "Everyone on the floor!" "Now!" "Not you, sweetie." "(Multiple triggers being cocked)" "The structure and narrative of a film, to make it a success, has got to be so different to that of a half-hour television program." "It is a huge leap to make." "And if we were going to go through all the effort and torment of making that leap and trying to make it work, it seemed logical to try something different with the character." "Which goes back to the idea of trying to explore more facets of Bean than we had been able to do on television." "Just because it's a film, we mustn't allow ourselves not to put in straight, funny, visual sequences." "So we've had about eight days of rehearsal, where we go to a room and three of us just fool around with basic ideas." "Mr. Bean on the plane, Mr. Bean with a pair of wet trousers," "Mr. Bean in bed, you know, and stuff like that." "(Curtis) 'And a lot of the funniest things in the final movie 'well, I suspect, come from those genuinely amusing occasions, 'rather than sitting alone in one's room typing speeches for people.'" "(Man) That's fantastic..." "Lean away from it..." "(All laughing)" "(Narrator) 'Rowan has always been more comfortable 'working within a close circle of collaborators." "'And Mel Smith, director of The Tall Guy 'and co-star of Not the Nine O'Clock News, 'was an obvious choice to direct the Bean movie.'" "In the TV programs, there were no real consequences to what he does." "There are consequences in the short-term, within the 10-minute sketch, to the people in the vicinity." "The interesting thing about doing a film is there are real consequences." "What he does impacts on other people." "Are you feeling lucky, punk?" "Here?" "In our house?" "For two months?" "Whoa, David." "What, suddenly there's no hotels in Los Angeles?" "OK, no need to get excited." "I just thought this is the National Gallery of England's top man, he'd be very exciting to have around, to learn from, to talk to..." "So do we know anything about him?" "No, but they might have said if he was a notorious serial killer." "He's a genius, huh?" "That's what they tell me." "Well, he looks like a fruitcake to me." "The comedy is so simple, you know." "It is so accessible." "It's so manifest, really, to anybody." "Some people who prefer a bit more intellectual content are probably disappointed by most Mr. Bean sketches." "And may, therefore, be disappointed by the film, but I..." "But that doesn't worry me so much." "I enjoy the simplicity of him and his comedy." "And the sort of universal identification, I think, that people throughout the world seem to feel for the character." "Wake up." "Wake up!" "I don't know what to say about Bean." "He's clearly a force 10 disaster area, but..." "God help me..." "I like him." "(Whirring)" "Ahhh!" "Quite a lot of Bean is very extreme." "But quite a lot of the stuff I like the most is when he's just sitting in a chair... in a dentist's waiting room, with nothing much going on." "Just watching him and how he bides his time always amuses me greatly." "(Turns on suction)" "I think Mr. Bean is, um..." "is Rowan Atkinson." "I mean, I've sort of seen him be that person in his own life." "So I think they're not that far apart." "If you're going to present a situation visually," "I think the character, or the personality you create in order to present visual comedy, comes from very deep within you." "It's very identifiable as a part of you." "'Which leads to my theory that you have only one 'truly good and convincing visual comedy character within you." "'Nobody has more than one.'" "(Gasping for breath)" "(Sighing)" "Oh!" "Ah." "(Mumbled quick counting)" "Oh." "I sometimes speculate about where I'd be now if I hadn't decided to take that plunge and write to those agents and take it seriously." "And whether I'd be in some small research laboratory near Swindon doing amateur dramatics every three months." "And I'm sure I would be enjoying it greatly."