ChatterBank0 min ago
carry on
18 Answers
Just watching 'Carry On Up the Jungle' how the hell do they get away showing it now ?
Bernard Bresslaw 'blacked up' as a 'Native chief' , lots of busty white girls with dark make up pretending to be 'Dusky Maidens'? Talk about non PC.
Bernard Bresslaw 'blacked up' as a 'Native chief' , lots of busty white girls with dark make up pretending to be 'Dusky Maidens'? Talk about non PC.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by EDDIE51. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Non PC rubbish has killed humour in this country.
Also bring back the Black and White Minstrels Show too, a wonderful variety show with great songs, glitter and dancing, always watched it and still play their LPs now. Why read racism into that - it was just brilliant. My West Indian friends loved it too.
Also bring back the Black and White Minstrels Show too, a wonderful variety show with great songs, glitter and dancing, always watched it and still play their LPs now. Why read racism into that - it was just brilliant. My West Indian friends loved it too.
The Black and White minstrels was what I was thinking of, that is banned. I do not see that this is any diffrent , in fact this is worse as it is making a joke about black people. My own opinion is that this film was very funny , one of the best in the series, I am just surprised there have been no complaints.
They cut out the scene where Barbara Windsor's bra flew off in Carry on Camping which was screened earlier. All we got was her stretching her arms and then switched to the bra hitting Kenneth Williams in the face. No quick flash of boob as per the original. Here it is for those who missed it. Have a close look at Hattie Jaques' head too.
people were using the off button for the B&W Minstrels, that's why it was dropped. It was never banned; variety was just on the way out. It continued to tour live, ending up doing the rounds of Butlins in 1987 when it was finally abandoned.
As for the Carry Ons, they're just cheap to show and people have been persuaded that they are fine examples of British humour. I imagine they probably are, which doesn't say much. But the infamy joke is the only one people remember, and that was nicked from a radio comedy.
British radio comedy, now that *was* good.
As for the Carry Ons, they're just cheap to show and people have been persuaded that they are fine examples of British humour. I imagine they probably are, which doesn't say much. But the infamy joke is the only one people remember, and that was nicked from a radio comedy.
British radio comedy, now that *was* good.
That was the brand of humour in those days, naughty, cheeky, but not meant to offend anyone. In today's multi-cultural society it is not acceptable but that was then. The war was over and most of the black people were in their own countries. So improvisation by 'blacking up' for a part was the norm. Years ago we never saw an Asian or someone from the West Indies living here, it didn't seem harmful then, making fun or imitating those people, or at least someone who lived a million miles away from here. The older generation have that experience of a different sense of humour that todays young people do not.