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- UBBG::EZONJIC 1701 lines 8-SEP-1992 03:50
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-
- Do ruku mi je dopao scenario jedne divne (novogodisnje) epizode
- Crne Guje iliti Black Adder-a (Blackaddera). Ovo je, u stvari, jedini
- primerak (od 5 epizoda) koji sam uspeo da sacuvam od zloglasne osobine
- SunOS-a na kome sam radio, da brise fajlove iz /tmp direktorijuma posle
- samo 3 dana njihovog nemenjanja (ilibarem touchovanja)
-
-
- Newsgroups: alt.comedy.british
- Subject: Blackadder Christmas Carol (long)
-
- Date: 12 Jul 92 10:48:24 GMT
- Reply-To: keeper@deeptht.armory.com
-
- Blackadder's Christmas Carol
- by Richard Curtis and Ben Elton
-
- Narrator: In the reign of good Queen Vic, there stood, in Dumpling Lane
- in old London town, the Moustache Shoppe of one Ebeneezer
- Blackadder -- the kindest and loveliest man in all England.
-
- [opening theme]
- He's kind and gen'rous to the sick
- He'd never spread a nasty rumour
- He never gets on people's wick
- And doesn't laugh at toilet humour
- Blackadder! Blackadder!
- He's sickeningly good
- Blackadder! Blackadder!
- As nice as Christmas pud.
-
- [as this is sung, we see a man merrily enjoying some carolers, and
- nicking something from their donation bin (I think that's what it
- is, at least); also, a boy wanders through the streets, picking
- pockets]
-
- [Scene: inside the Moustache Shoppe. Baldrick is dusting off
- a mustache which is on a stand.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [from outside the main door] Humbug! Humbug!
- [enters, holding a bag of candies]
- [holds out the bag, in offering] Humbug, Mr Baldrick?
-
- Baldrick: Oh, thank you very much. [takes one]
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, I've got all the presents...
-
- Baldrick: ...and I've nearly finished the Christmas cards.
-
- Ebeneezer: [taking off his tall hat] Oh, splendid! Let me see...
- [opens up a card he has picked up from the desk]
- "A Very Messy Christmas." I'm sorry, Mr Baldrick -- shouldn't
- that be `merry'?
-
- Baldrick: "A Merry Messy Christmas"? All right, but the main thing is that
- it should be messy -- messy cake; soggy pudding; great big wet
- kisses under the mistletoe...
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes... [going to hang up his coat and scarf] I fear, Mr
- Baldrick, that the only way you're likely to get a big wet
- kiss at Christmas -- or, indeed, any other time -- is to make
- a pass at a water closet.
-
- However, be that as it may... [Baldrick gives him the card again]
- "A Merry Messy Christmas." `Christmas' as an H in it, Mr
- Baldrick.
-
- Baldrick: Oh...
-
- Ebeneezer: ...and an R. Also an I, and an S. Also T and M and A...
- ...and another S. Oh, and you've missed out the C at the
- beginning. Congratulations, Mr Baldrick! Something of a
- triumph, I think -- you must be the first person ever to
- spell `Christmas' without getting any of the letters right
- at all.
-
- [He takes the bag of presents he brought from outside into the
- back room.]
-
- Baldrick: [following Ebeneezer] Well, I was a bit rushed. I've been
- helping out with the workhouse nativity play.
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, of course! How did it go?
-
- Baldrick: Well, not very well -- at the last moment, the baby playing
- Jesus died!
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, dear! This high infant-mortality rate is a real devil when
- it comes to staging quality children's theatre. What did you do?
-
- Baldrick: Got another Jesus.
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, thank goodness. ...and his name?
-
- Baldrick: `Spot'. There weren't any more children, so we had to settle for
- a dog instead.
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, dear... [moving toward and eventually sitting on a chair
- near the fireplace] I'm not convinced that Christianity would
- have established its firm grip over the hearts and minds of
- mankind if all Jesus had ever said was "Woof."
-
- Baldrick: [as Ebeneezer removes his shoes] Well, it went all right until
- the shepherds came on. See, we hadn't been able to get any real
- sheep, so we had to stick some wool--
-
- Ebeneezer: ...on some other dogs.
-
- Baldrick: Yeah... and the moment Jesus got a whiff of them, he's away!
- While the angel's singing "Peace on Earth, Goodwill to Mankind,"
- Jesus scampers across and tries to get one of the sheep to give
- him a piggyback ride!
-
- Ebeneezer: Scarcely appropriate behaviour for the son of God, Mr Baldrick.
- Weren't the children upset?
-
- Baldrick: Nah, they loved it. They want us to do another one at Easter --
- they want to see us nail up the dog.
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, the playful young scamps, eh? Still, what a lovely thought
- it is: at this very moment, all over the country, from the
- highest to the lowest, through those charming plump folks
- somewhere in the middle, everyone is enjoying Christmas.
-
- [Scene changes to a room in Buckingham Palace. Queen Victoria
- enters, followed by the chair-bearer (what's the proper
- name for such an individual?), and approaches Prince Albert, who
- is wrapping something. He speaks with a ridiculous accent.]
-
- Victoria: [knowing that Albert's wrapping a present for her]
- What are you doing, Albert?
-
- Albert: [hiding something] Nothing...
-
- Victoria: Oh yes you are, you naughty German sausage! [sits]
- Tell me what you're doing...
-
- Albert: I just said; I'm not doing anything! Really, woman -- when you're
- busy ruling India, you don't tell me what >you< are doing...
- So why should I tell you what >I< am doing when I am busy wrapping
- up this cushion for your surprise Christmas present?
-
- Damn...
-
- Now I have only two surprise presents for you...
-
- Victoria: Oh, dear Alby, don't worry -- I don't mind.
-
- Albert: I >do<... I love surprises. [Hugs her, resting his head against
- her bosom; she enjoys it very much] Christmas without surprises
- is like the nuts without a nutcrack. [has a realisation, rushes
- to the tree, and begins unwrapping something] ...which is why
- I have bought you this surprise nutcracker--
-
- Damn... Damn...
-
- Victoria: Oh, darling Bobo, don't worry. [stands] Besides, haven't you
- forgotten something?
-
- Albert: What?
-
- Victoria: Our traditional Christmas adventure!
-
- Albert: Oh, yes! Of course! The traditional Christmas adventure!
- Huzzah!!!
-
- ...>what< traditional Christmas adventure?
-
- Victoria: You silly soldier! You know: when we disguise ourselves as
- common folk and go out amongst the people to reward the
- virtuous and the good...
-
- Albert: Oh, yes! Of course! [Dumkopf! (spelling help please)]
- [stands] How could I forget? [he shouts something in German]
- [He reaches down to pick up and start unwrapping something.]
- For it is for precisely such an outing as this that I have bought
- you my finest surprise present: this muff which I am going to
- give you tomorrow--
-
- Damn... Damn... Damn...
-
- [As he falls to his knees, Victoria pushes his face into her bosom.]
-
- [Scene changes back to Ebeneezer's living room. He and Baldrick
- have just finished setting things on the table.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, excellent, excellent. What a splendid spread: nuts, turkey
- and presents. What more could a man desire at Christmas?
-
- Baldrick: Well, a tree...
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, of course -- I'd quite forgot. [he heads to the front,
- shop room] I dropped in on Mr Thicktwistle's Garden Emporium,
- and, I think you'll agree, got quite a bargain [he opens the
- front door and steps out to fetch something] on this special
- Christmas Twig. [steps back in, closes the front door]
-
- Baldrick: It's a bit of a tiddler, ain't it?
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes, but size isn't important, my friend -- it's not what
- you've got; it's where you stick it. [sticks the twig into
- an empty candle stand] Besides, look: we've got a whole
- year's profits to spend on fun and larks!
-
- Baldrick: How much is it?
-
- Ebeneezer: Seventeen pounds and a penny.
-
- Baldrick: It'd be a lot more if you didn't give away so much money to
- the poor.
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, yes, but in the feeling-good ledger of life we are rich
- indeed.
-
- Baldrick: Yeah, I just wish we weren't doing so well in the
- bit-short-of-prezzies-and-feeling-a-gullible-prat ledger.
-
- [The doorbell rings.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, bless my ten toes! Who could that be on this cold night?
-
- [Baldrick opens the door. Mrs Scratchit enters, carrying a basket.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, Mrs Scratchit! Greetings to you on this merry Yuletide Eve.
-
- Scratchit: [crying] Oh, Mr Blackadder!!! How can I be merry when we are
- so poor we shall have nothing to eat on Christmas Day? except
- what Grandfather can scrape from under his big toenail...
- No goose for Tiny Tom this year!!!
-
- Ebeneezer: Mrs Scratchit, Tiny Tom is fifteen stone and he's built like
- a brick privy! If he eats any more heartily, he will turn
- into a pie shop. [this is all said in the nicest way possible]
-
- [Scratchit bawls]
-
- Ebeneezer: [As he walks around the counter] Oh, pardon me, but, look, look,
- there must be something we can do... [points inside her basket]
- Ah! That box of matches in your basket is just the thing I need.
- How much did they cost?
-
- Scratchit: [holding up the box, suddenly not crying] A quid a match.
-
- Ebeneezer: Mrs Scratchit, I suspect that to be a lie of sorts...
-
- [Scratchit puts on her crying act again]
-
- Ebeneezer: [rushing round the counter] ...oh, but, but it's Christmas Eve,
- so here: take ten pounds.
-
- Scratchit: So you don't want all the matches, then -- there's seventeen
- of them!
-
- Ebeneezer: Mrs Scratchit, you have the body of a weak woman, but the mind
- of a criminal genius! Here: seventeen pounds, then.
-
- Scratchit: [quite happy, speaking rather like having completed a swindle
- that she has done many times before] Lovely! [leaves]
-
- Ebeneezer: [calls after her] ...and my best wishes to your massive offspring!
-
- [Baldrick closes the door]
-
- Baldrick: So: we had seventeen pound and a penny, and we've given Mrs
- Scratchit seventeen pounds, so that leaves...
-
- Ebeneezer: [sighs, holding up the penny] Yes, come on, Mr Baldrick;
- seventeen pounds and a penny minus seventeen pounds leaves...?
-
- Baldrick: [looks at the penny while thinking, then speaks with confidence]
- Thirty-eight pounds, eight shillings, fourpence!
-
- Ebeneezer: Not bad, Mr Baldrick. The answer is in fact a splendid shining
- penny.
-
- [The door opens; a boy steps in and speaks]
-
- Boy: Merry Christmas Eve, Mr Slackbladder -- I mean Blackadder!
-
- Ebeneezer: [approaching] Ah! and to you, young urchin!
-
- Boy: A penny for Christmas cheer, sucker -- I mean sir?
-
- Ebeneezer: [looks at his penny, knowing it's all he has] Erm, well...
-
- [Boy fakes a tantrum]
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, certainly! Here! [tosses penny over]
-
- [Boy catches it and immediately runs off]
-
- Ebeneezer: [steps out, calling after Boy] Er, going to buy some cake and
- pie for yourself and your silver-haired mother?
-
- Boy: Nah, sod that -- I'm off to the [?] [show?].
-
- Ebeneezer: [returning inside] Che! They grow up so fast these days,
- bless 'em. Oh well -- another year without profit! Still,
- it >is< Christmas; and let us remember, Mr Baldrick [he takes
- the candle stand which holds the twig, and returns to the back
- room], that, be we as stony as a biblical execution, it is still
- the season of good cheer, and we have all our Christmas treats:
- nuts, turkey and presents...
-
- [A ghastly high-pitched cackle pierces the air.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [looking out the back window] Oh! and my God-daughter, Millicent!
- [he picks up a pair of ear muffs] Er, secure the ornaments,
- Mr Baldrick [he puts the ear muffs on], and let her in.
-
- [while Baldrick is gone, he speaks to himself]
- So, we'll put all our presents under our little tree: A scarf
- for me; a pair of gloves for Mr Baldrick; and a hat for
- Millicent.
-
- [Millicent cackles as she enters. Baldrick comes in a short
- while later, with handkerchiefs stuffed in his ears.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, Millicent! To what do I owe this excellent pleasure?
-
- Millicent: Oh, I just thought I pop round, you know, just on the off chance.
- Well, you know, Christmas is a time traditionally connected with
- presents...
-
- Ebeneezer: It is indeed, and, look: [picks up the hat] a lovely hat for my
- dear God-daughter.
-
- Millicent: [quickly snatching it from his hands] Oh, thanks. [looks at
- the items still on the table] Oh! and look: [picking up things
- as she mentions them] a scarf and a pair of gloves to match!
- Well, that's not bad, I suppose. [cackles]
-
- Ebeneezer: [making sure his earmuffs remain in place] Yes, jolly good.
-
- Millicent: I'm sorry I can't stop. I thought perhaps I might come back
- tomorrow at >lunchtime<...
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, what a splendid idea!
-
- Millicent: It'll just be little me and my teensy boyfriend -- so cook a
- couple of extra turkeys! Thanks for all the prezzies...
-
- Baldrick: [sarcastic] Why don't you take the flipping tree?
-
- Millicent: [taking it] Oh, you >are< sweet!!! [turns to leave]
- Thanks... [cackles as she leaves]
-
- Ebeneezer: Bye! [removing the earmuffs] My, what a jolly young girl.
-
- Baldrick: Yeah... pity she nicked all the presents.
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes, but I thought you and I would be spoilt enough with the
- turkey and [picking up a bowl of nuts] this mountain of nuts
- we have...
-
- [The doorbell rings.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, peel my tangerines! This >is< [?]!
-
- [In the front room, Beadle enters, followed by three extremely fat
- orphan boys, whom he warns to stay behind him and not push.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [from the back room] Ah, Beadle! Charmed, honoured, and
- lovelied in every possible way!
-
- [Baldrick hides the turkey in his coat as Beadle and the orphans
- enter the back room.]
-
- Beadle: [to the shoving orphans, who all are trying to fit into the room]
- Get back! [to Ebeneezer] Felicitous compliments of the gorging
- season to you, sir. Peace on Earth, and fat tums to all men.
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, indeed, indeed... and what of your little orphan charges?
-
- Beadle: Well, I don't think I charges them enough, as a matter of fact.
- Luckily, you're here to cover up the shortfall, Mr Blackadder.
- They're looking forward to coming tomorrow; perhaps bringing
- a little surprise for you...
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, surely not another totally unexpected rendition of
- `God Rest Ye Merry Mr Blackadder'...
-
- Beadle: Not for me to say, sir. All I can say is that it's Christmas as
- usual; except, sadly, we've managed to polish off all our nuts
- before the big day... [he and the orphans all lean toward the bowl of
- nuts. Baldrick, behind the orphans, jumps up and down trying to see.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, well, what luck! As fate would have it, we have some.
- Here: help yourselves. [the orphans all prepare to grab them]
-
- Beadle: [stopping them] No, sir! No, sir, I couldn't possibly take them
- from you! Absolutely not! [picks up the bowl] Is this all, is it?
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes...
-
- Beadle: Well, it'll have to do, then! [gives bowl to orphans, who scramble
- hungrily around it] See you tomorrow! [laughs as he and orphans
- leave]
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, what a jolly fellow!
-
- Baldrick: Looked like a fat git to me.
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, yes, Mr Baldrick; but you mustn't judge people from outward
- appearances. Strip away the outer layers of a fat git, and,
- inside, you'll probably find a--
-
- Baldrick: ...>thin< git. Here; those orphans were a bit fat, too.
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, there's some truth there. [goes to sit in fireside chair]
- Certainly, when I go and visit them, I do tend to remove all
- sharp objects for fear of bursting one of them and getting
- showered in two dozen semi-digested pies... But what of it?
- As long as they're happy...
-
- Baldrick: [removes turkey from his coat, puts it on table] Well, at least
- we've still got our turkey! [goes over to Ebeneezer] And -- who
- knows? -- Christmas is a time for miracles, so, maybe, if we
- screw up our eyes really tight and pray to the big pink pixie
- in the sky, someone will come and reward us... come on!
-
- Ebeneezer: [complying, reluctantly] Oh, dear innocent Mr Baldrick...
-
- [After a short pause, the doorbell rings.]
-
- Baldrick: See?
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, baste my steaming puddings!
-
- [He and Baldrick go into the front room. Baldrick opens the door;
- Victoria and Albert are there, badly disguised. The chair bearer
- also is there (sans chair). Sappy "good-news" music plays.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, good evening, sir and madam.
-
- Victoria: Good evening. We have come here on a mission to reward the
- virtuous this Christmas Eve.
-
- [Baldrick smiles.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Good heavens! [looks at Baldrick, rather stunned]
-
- Albert: [not hiding his accent] ...and we have heard many stories of your
- kindness and generosity.
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, well, one tries...
-
- Victoria: So, please...
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes?
-
- [Sappy music stops suddenly.]
-
- Victoria: Give us ten pounds for the virtuous old lady next door.
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, well, we'd love to oblige, but I'm afraid we haven't anything
- to give.
-
- Albert: Surely you must have something... What about a goose?
-
- Victoria: [slightly turned on] Oh, >Albert<!
-
- Baldrick: Well, we've only got a turkey, see...
-
- Victoria: Oh, that sounds ideal!
-
- Baldrick: [in a disappointed whine] Oh...
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, there's a bit of luck! Mr Baldrick, fetch the turkey!
- [while Baldrick is fetching it, he makes idle conversation,
- and speaks to Albert] Er, I detect from your accent, sir, that
- you are not from round here...
-
- Albert: Ah, nein! [slowly, trying to enunciate] I am from...Glasgow.
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, a fine city! I love the [Gorbles?]!
-
- Albert: Ah... Yes... The Gorbles... I love them, too -- a lovely couple;
- lots of fun.
-
- Baldrick: [having returned, holds the turkey out to Albert]
- Bye bye, birdy...
-
- Victoria: Very well done indeed. Good evening. [leaves]
-
- Ebeneezer: Good evening...
-
- Albert: [before he walks out] ...and if I bump into Mr and Mrs Gorble,
- I'll give them your regards.
-
- [Ebeneezer returns to the back room. Baldrick is hanging a stocking
- from the fireplace. An unaccompanied cello plays the Blackadder
- theme slowly.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, dear, Mr Baldrick; it looks as though we're in for a bit
- of a thin Christmas...
-
- Baldrick: Don't you worry, Mr B -- I'm hanging my sock up so Santa will
- come down the chimney.
-
- Ebeneezer: Mr Baldrick, I guarantee that if there's one thing liable to
- stop Santa coming down the chimney, it's your sock waiting for
- him at the end of it.
-
- Baldrick: Well, if I don't hang my sock out, how will Santa fill it?
-
- Ebeneezer: Mr Baldrick, if you >do< hang your sock out, Santa will be
- dead before he gets within a hundred yards of it! Don't you
- have any other socks?
-
- Baldrick: I've got one other... [raises a leg]
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, don't worry about it, my dear fellow. Take one of mine
- from the linen cupboard. I'm off to bed -- there's nothing
- else to stay up for. Good night, Mr Baldrick.
-
- Baldrick: 'night 'night. Oh! By the way -- I forgot to mention: When you
- were out there...
-
- [the cello is now replaced with spooky noises]
-
- ...there was this enormous ghostly creature coming here saying,
- "Beware! for, tonight, you shall receive a strange and terrible
- visitation!"
-
- [the spooky noises stop suddenly]
-
- I just thought I'd mention it.
-
- [spooky noises start up again]
-
- It come through the wall, it said its piece, and then it sodded off.
-
- [noises stop again]
-
- Ebeneezer: [chuckles] Oh, fine. Goodnight, Mr Baldrick. [he leaves into
- the stairway to his bedroom]
-
- Baldrick: 'night 'night. [he goes to sleep in the chair]
-
- [Scene changes to Ebeneezer's bedroom. He is lying in bed, and is
- woken by someone saying a spooky "Woo!" The door to the room falls
- in, as steam and green light comes through. Also coming through
- is a large bearded man holding his hands out, wiggling his fingers
- spookily, saying the "Woo!" He steps in and laughs deeply, and
- begins to thrust his arms about, then does more, quicker, "Woo!"
- noises, getting sillier. Eventually, Ebeneezer, rather unfazed,
- speaks to the man (`Spirit').]
-
- Ebeneezer: Can I help?
-
- Spirit: [speaks with Scottish dialect] No thanks, no, no no... I just
- popped in to say `hello'. [shakes Ebeneezer's hand] Spirit of
- Christmas; how do you do. Just doing my usual rounds, you know:
- a wee bit of haunting, getting misers to change their evil ways.
- But you're obviously such a good chap [pats Ebeneezer on the knee],
- there'll be no need for any of that nonsense, so I'll just say
- `cheery-bye'. Cheery-bye! [turns to leave]
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, can I get you a cup of tea or anything?
-
- Spirit: You wouldn't have anything a wee bit more, er, medicinal...?
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, I see... I've only got some of Nurse McCready's Surgical
- [Brews?] Lotion. [motions where it is]
-
- Spirit: [picks up bottle] Oh, nothing but the best at this house, eh?
- [eagerly opens it, sits `backward' in the chair next to a mirror
- and dresser, begins drinking] Mmm! Delicious. Well, this is a
- nice change from all those skinflints. You know that old fellow
- down the road? Bags of money! I caught him trying to cut down on
- his heating bills by using his John Thomas as a draught excluder!
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, dear... old people today, eh? Tell me: How do you get them
- to change their ways?
-
- Spirit: Well, it's all visions these days. We used to use black-and-white
- line drawings, but the visions are more effective.
-
- Ebeneezer: Well, what sort of thing?
-
- Spirit: Well, it depends, really. With some people, it's just a glimpse
- of their behaviour at school behind the penny-farthing sheds...
- Er, some other people, well, we just show them how rotten their
- ancestors were. Of course, with >your< ancestors, it would have
- to be the full one-hour [ten?]-vision with a break and ice cream.
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, dear! That bad, were they?
-
- Spirit: Och -- did nobody tell ye? Stinkers to men! Oh, perhaps you'd like
- to see... [waves his free hand about and twiddles his tongue]
-
- [Scene changes to Elizabethan England. Lord Edmund Blackadder looks
- very bored at his servant, Baldrick, who is offering him a Christmas
- cracker. They are just outside the throne room.]
-
- Baldrick: Come on, My Lord! Give it a little pull! You know you want to!
- It'll be ever so exciting!
-
- Edmund: [gives in] Oh, God... [he pulls the cracker as Baldrick winces
- in anticipation of the crack -- but there's only a little squeak]
- Yes -- terrifying.
-
- Baldrick: And, look, there's a surprise present for you inside. It's a
- novelty death warrant, and you give it to a friend.
-
- Edmund: Oh, just what I've always wanted. [crumples it]
-
- Baldrick: Have you got anything for me?
-
- Edmund: Oh, it's nothing, really.
-
- Baldrick: [charmed] Oh, Sir...
-
- Edmund: No, it's really nothing. I haven't got anything for you.
- [walks to a large curtained object] I spent all my cash on this
- damn thing for the Queen. [pulls the curtains open, to reveal a
- portrait of the Queen] She'd better she'll bloody like it -- she
- dropped enough hints. [shuts the curtains] Gah, that woman's about
- as subtle as a rhinocerous horn up the backside. [lifts the
- portrait] Door.
-
- [Inside, Queen Elizabeth I and Nursie are tearing apart coloured-
- paper chains. Edmund enters, carrying the curtained portrait.]
-
- Edmund: Good morning, Your Majesty. Christmas again, eh? What joy.
- [puts the portrait down] Don't you just love it?
-
- Elizabeth: No -- I hate it! In fact, I've just abolished it.
-
- Edmund: I'm sorry...?
-
- Elizabeth: I ought to block up the chimneys, burn all the crackers, and kill
- anyone I see carrying a present. [looks at the portrait]
-
- Edmund: Oh. [lifts the portrait and prepares to leave]
-
- Elizabeth: [points at portrait, speaks demandingly] What's that, Edmund?
-
- Edmund: This? ... It's a window...
-
- Elizabeth: A window?
-
- Edmund: Yes, but you seem to have one here; so, sorry to disturb you...
- [exits, leaving her baffled (Nursie just grins brainlessly)]
-
- [Outside, Edmund hands the portrait to Baldrick, who holds it from the
- bottom, so it covers his face. Edmund closes the door, and pulls
- open the portrait's curtains.]
-
- Edmund: Well, so much for that. [punches the Queen's face in the portrait;
- his hand goes through the canvas and hits Baldrick's face. He then
- motions to Lord Melchett, who approaches] Ah, Melchett! Greetings!
- I trust that Christmas brings you its traditional mix of good food
- and violent stomach cramp.
-
- Melchett: ...and compliments of the season to >you<, Blackadder.
- May the yuletide log slip from your fire and burn your house down.
-
- Edmund: I'm glad I saw you -- I feel it only fair to warn you that the Queen
- has banned the Christmas, so I wouldn't get her a present this year.
-
- Melchett: Oh, I'm indebted to you for that advice, Blackadder, and I shall,
- of course, follow it to the letter, the day I get my brain replaced
- by a cauliflower. [exits]
-
- Edmund: [claps his hands once] Hah! Got him with my subtle plan!
-
- Baldrick: [lowering the portrait finally] I can't see any subtle plan.
-
- Edmund: Baldrick, you wouldn't see a subtle plan if it painted itself
- purple and danced naked on top of a harpsichord, singing "Subtle
- Plans Are Here Again." It's what we call a double-bluff. Melchett
- will undoubtedly do the opposite of what I tell him, go and get an
- enormous present, give it to the Queen, and then [runs his finger
- across his neck and makes a quacky noise].
-
- Baldrick: What, he'll turn into a duck?
-
- Edmund: Yes... [walks off; Baldrick follows, with the portrait]
-
- [In the throne room, Nursie continues to tear apart paper chains,
- while Elizabeth is looking out the window.]
-
- Nursie: Pity about this, Tinky-wink. You always used to love this time
- of year...
-
- Elizabeth: [turns round; she is fondling a Christmas pudding] I know --
- leaving a little mince pie and a glass of wine out for Father
- Christmas, and then scoffing it because I was a princess and
- could do what I bloody well liked. [sits in throne]
-
- Nursie: ...and wondering if your father's wife would last until Boxing Day
- without having her head cut off.
-
- Elizbeth: We knew; if he gave her a hat, she'd probably be all right.
-
- Nursie: Happy days...
-
- Elizabeth: Yes... Maybe I was a little rash...
-
- [Edmund and Melchett enter and bow.]
-
- Elizabeth: Ah! Boys! Welcome back! [hands the pudding to Nursie]
- But, Melchett, what have you got under your coat?
-
- [Edmund raises his eyebrows, smiling slyly.]
-
- Elizabeth: [demandingly] It's not a present, is it?
-
- Melchett: A present, Majesty? but of course! [reveals a crown; mutters
- to Edmund] You're so painfully transparent, Blackadder.
-
- Edmund: Am I...
-
- Elizabeth: Oh, that's fab!!! I >love< presents!
-
- [Edmund rolls his eyes, unhappy about the Queen's wishy-washiness.]
-
- Elizabeth: [to Melchett] You know, [??] moment I took against Christmas,
- but I'm completely dippy about it again. In fact, I'd like to
- marry you! ... if you weren't as unattractive as a giant slug!
-
- Melchett: [laughing] Oh, pish, Majesty!
-
- Elizabeth: But, anyway, to reward you, I'm going to give you >lots< of
- presents! Um, fancy a castle?
-
- Melchett: Well, Windsor, Majesty...
-
- Elizabeth: ...title?
-
- Melchett: Duke of Kent?
-
- Elizabeth: ...anything else?
-
- Melchett: Well, a devilish saucy wife would be fun.
-
- Elizabeth: [thinks] Lady Jane Pottle!
-
- Melchett: Oh, yummy!
-
- Elizabeth: I think she's Blackadder's girl at the moment, but that doesn't
- matter, does it, Blacky...
-
- Edmund: No, of course not, Ma'am... and perhaps Lord Melchett would like
- to whip me naked through the streets of Aberdeen...
-
- Melchett: Oh, I don't think we need go that far, Blackadder...
-
- Edmund: Oh, too kind...
-
- Melchett: No -- [Alesbury?]'s quite far enough.
-
- Elizabeth: Super. Well done, Melchy. And, now, Blackadder, what have
- you got me?
-
- Edmund: Erm...
-
- Elizabeth: I WANT A PREZZY!!! Give me something nice and shiny; and if
- you don't, I've got something nice and shiny for you, and it's
- called an axe!
-
- Edmund: Erm, well, well... [looks down at his person hoping to find
- something]
-
- Elizabeth: Right! That's it. Any last requests, Blackadder, before I chop
- your block off and put it on top of the [kremble?] tree?
-
- Edmund: [still searching his person, comes across the novelty death warrant]
- Er, well, there is one, actually, Ma'am: You know how much I've
- always been a great admirer [motions his hand to and fro between she
- and Melchett] of you both -- I was wondering if I could just have
- your autographs, erm, to keep me company during the final, tragic,
- lonely hours... [he has already handed her a quill]
-
- Elizabeth: Oh, all right. [signs]
-
- Edmund: Ah, there. Thank you, Ma'am. [moves to Melchett] And, Lord
- Melchett [gives him the quill]...just there... Thank-- [looks
- astonished] Oh! Dear me!
-
- Elizabeth: What is it?
-
- Edmund: Why, this piece of paper that Your Majesty has just signed turns out
- to be some sort of death warrant!
-
- Elizabeth: Oops. ...and I can't go back on it without destroying the whole
- basis of the British Constitution...
-
- Edmund: I fear not!
-
- Elizabeth: Is there a name on it?
-
- Edmund: Well, yes, there is, actually... It says, "Lord"... er, I can't
- read this terrible childish writing... er, "Lord...Mel...chett" ...
- "Lord Melchett"; that's it.
-
- Melchett: [trying to grab the paper from Edmund] Ma'am! Ma'am! Ma'am!
- It's a trick! You've been tricked!
-
- Elizabeth: Oh, good! Christmas is a time for tricks and japes and larks
- of all kinds. Tell you what, Blackadder: that's so brilliant,
- I'll execute Melchett instead!
-
- Edmund: You're very kind, Ma'am.
-
- [Nursie looks at Melchett and laughs maniacally]
-
- Elizabeth: ...and I suppose that means that everything of Lord Melchett's
- becomes yours.
-
- Edmund: I suppose it does. [he presents a hand to Melchett and snaps his
- fingers; Melchett gives him the crown; he gives the crown to
- Elizabeth, who is delighted] Merry Christmas, Ma'am...
-
- [Scene changes back to Ebeneezer's bedroom.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [with a slight grin] Good lord!
-
- Spirit: Horrible, eh? [stands, goes to the bedside] What a pig!
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes, although clearly quite a clever, charming pig. [Spirit is
- shocked] But, no, as you say, his behaviour...disgraceful.
-
- Spirit: Ah, you're a great improvement on them all. [pats Ebeneezer's
- knees again] You're a good boy...
-
- Ebeneezer: `Them'? Are there more?
-
- Spirit: Oh, yes! Have a [shufty?] at this! [waves his arm and makes
- "Woo!" noise]
-
- [Scene changes to Regency England. Edmund Blackadder, butler to
- the Prince Regent, enters the vestibule outside the Prince's
- quarters with his own servant, Baldrick. He is carrying a red
- sack.]
-
- Edmund: Right, Balders... [puts sack on a chair] I'm sick of getting
- no presents and the Prince Regent getting the lot, so this is
- the plan: We play our traditional game of charades, and, when
- he gets bored and asks for a story, you come out here [lifts
- the sack up a bit], stick the dress and the hat on, and then
- knock on the door. I'll take it from there. Have you got it?
-
- Baldrick: Got it...
-
- Edmund: Yes, well, you certainly will get it if you mess this up.
-
- [Inside, Prince George tries to wake Lord Horatio Nelson, who sits
- in a chair, holding a drink in his left (and only) hand, with an
- eyepatch over his left eye. Edmund and Baldrick enter.]
-
- Prince: Ah, hurrah! Welcome, lads! Oh, this is the stuff, eh? Christmas
- sherry and charades with honest manly fellows. I mean, for
- Heaven's sake, what can I do with a girl that I can't do with
- you, eh?
-
- Edmund: I cannot conceive, Sir...
-
- Prince: Yes, well, there's that, I suppose. Now; who's first up for the
- game? I'd ask old Horatio here, but he's out of it, I'm afraid;
- so it's, er [points at Baldrick], what, it's the little monkey
- fellow first, then, is it?
-
- Edmund: It is indeed, Sir.
-
- Prince: Ah, excellent! Oh, I love charades... [goes over to sit in a chair]
-
- Edmund: OK, off you go, Baldrick.
-
- [Baldrick steps in front of them, then opens his arms like a book.]
-
- Edmund: It's a book...
-
- Baldrick: Well done, Mr B! I didn't think you'd get it >that< quickly.
-
- Prince: Well, I must say, Bladder, that was damn clever!
-
- Edmund: Yes, another great Christmas tradition: explaining the rules eight
- times to the Thicky Twins. The round hasn't in fact started yet.
- It's got to be a specific book. For instance, if it was The Bible,
- I would go like that [holding up two fingers] to indicate that there
- are two syllables in it...
-
- Prince: Two what?
-
- Edmund: Two syllables.
-
- Prince: Two silly bulls? I don't think so, Blackadder -- not in The Bible.
- I can remember a fatted calf, but, as I recall, that was quite a
- sensible animal. Oh, ah! It's it, um, er, Noah's Ark, with the, er,
- two pigs, two ants, and two silly bulls? Is that it?
-
- Edmund: Two syll>a<bles.
-
- Prince: What?
-
- Edmund: Look, we're getting confused; let's start again, shall we?
-
- Prince: No, let's not, Blackadder. I think the whole game's getting
- a bit syll>a<, to be honest. How about a nice Christmas story
- instead?
-
- Edmund: Oh, what a good idea, Sir. [motions at Baldrick] I'll just
- get rid of the servant, shall I? There's a limit to how long
- the smell of roasting chestnuts can blot out the aroma of Baldrick's
- trousers. [as he shows Baldrick out, he mutters to him] Don't
- forget the dress and the hat, Baldrick. [he returns to the Prince]
- So, shall I begin the Christmas story?
-
- Prince: Absolutely, as long as it's not that terribly depressing one about
- the chap who gets born on Christmas Day, shoots his mouth off about
- everything under the sun, and then comes [a crop up?] with a couple
- of rum coves on top of a [hailing Johnny arumlan?].
-
- Edmund: You mean Jesus, Sir...
-
- Prince: Yes, that's the fellow. Keep him out of it -- he always spoils
- the X-mas atmos.
-
- Edmund: Certainly, Sir. Instead, I shall tell you a story about--
-
- Nelson: [wakes] Ah! Oh my god!!! I've gone blind! blind!!!
-
- [Edmund moves Nelson's eyepatch to the right eye.]
-
- Nelson: Oh, that's better. [falls back to sleep]
-
- Edmund: As I was saying: This is a story about a handsome young prince...
-
- Prince: Ah, now, this is more like it. What; good looking, [points at his
- wig] lovely hair perched on top of his head like an exceptionally
- attractive loaf of bread?
-
- Edmund: Exactly.
-
- Prince: Yeah, I can imagine him -- excellent fellow.
-
- Edmund: Well, it is a tale about him and a sad, lonely, old granny who's
- dying of cold on a cruel Christmas night...
-
- Prince: Not a comedy, then...?
-
- Edmund: No, Sir. ...and when she thought that all was lost, and that she
- would die on Christmas night and be swept up on the Boxing Day
- morning, mistaken for a huge dirty handkerchief--
-
- [Prince cries into his handkerchief]
-
- Edmund: ...then she knocked on the door of a handsome young prince, >named
- George<, who gave her all his >massive collection of Christmas
- presents<, and she lived happily ever after.
-
- Prince: [he cries some more] Oh, my Satan's Sausage, Bladder! What a fine
- tale! I'm quite moved to tears, don't you know...
-
- Edmund: Oh, good...
-
- [The doorbells ring.]
-
- Edmund: [obviously] I wonder who that could be?
-
- Prince: ...on a cold, dark, cruel Christmas night... tricky one...
- It could be a robin...
-
- Edmund: [who has moved to the door] Why, Sir! Rather coincidentally, it
- is a sad, lonely, old granny who's dying of cold. Shall I fling
- her from your door, Sir, saying that there is no room in our
- Christmas for a sad, virtuous, silver-haired, old, elderly angel
- like her?
-
- Prince: No, Blackadder, you swine! Bring her in!
-
- [The doors open from the outside, as a cart-pushing human figure in
- red old woman's clothes barges in and starts taking all the presents
- off the table, putting them into the cart.]
-
- Edmund: [mutters to Granny] [??????], Baldrick.
-
- Prince: Take all you want, Granny! You have found Georgy-Porgy, your
- handsome prince!
-
- Granny: Thank you, Sir...
-
- Edmund: Shall I show her to the door, Sir, and make sure she doesn't steal
- the silver on the way out?
-
- Prince: Oh, no -- tell her to take it!
-
- Edmund: Oh, you're very generous, Sir. [bows and closes the door]
-
- [He finishes closing the doors and turns round to an empty vestibule.]
-
- Edmund: Excellent, excellent, Baldrick! A triumph! [pause] Baldrick?
- Baldrick!
-
- [Baldrick enters, wearing white old woman's clothes.]
-
- Baldrick: Sorry, Mr B -- I was just showing a sweet old granny to the door.
- Are we ready yet, Sir?
-
- Edmund: What?
-
- Baldrick: Well, I answered the door and it was this sweet old granny
- collecting for charity, so I let her in.
-
- Edmund: Aaaaaaaagh...
-
- Baldrick: Something wrong, Mr B?
-
- Edmund: No, don't worry -- I should have known not to trust a man with
- the mental agility of a rabbit dropping.
-
- Baldrick: Sorry, Mr B.
-
- Edmund: Oh, it's perfectly all right -- it's not your fault. [punches
- Baldrick in the face; Baldrick falls over] Still, I fear for
- a frail elderly woman, laden with valuables, travelling through
- the inadequately lit streets of London...
-
- Baldrick: [having just got back on his feet] Yeah -- she's not safe, Sir.
-
- Edmund: Well, not from me, certainly. [punches Baldrick in the face; exits]
-
- [Back in Ebeneezer's bedroom; Spirit now is lying beside Ebeneezer.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Hah hah! Very amusing!
-
- Spirit: In what way?
-
- Ebeneezer: Er... the wigs... very amusing wigs. But his behaviour, as you
- say...disgraceful. But, he actually >got< the presents!
-
- Spirit: Yyyyyyes, yes...
-
- Ebeneezer: So, there is actually something to be made out of being bad...
-
- Spirit: Er, technically... technically... yes... yes... But that's not the
- point, is it? It's the the soul...the >soul<...
-
- Ebeneezer: As a matter of interest, what would happen in the future if
- >I< was bad?
-
- Spirit: Erm... Heavens! Is that the time? I really must be off...
- [stands up, but Ebeneezer grabs his arm]
-
- Ebeneezer: I'd love to see Christmas Future...
-
- Spirit: No no no no no no no no... It's terribly melodramatic...
-
- Ebeneezer: Look; just show it...please...
-
- Spirit: All right... [wiggles his fingers a bit and makes a reluctant
- "Nyeu" sound]
-
- [Scene changes to the distant future. Queen Asphyxia XIX sits in
- her throne area as her three husbands -- Lord Frondo, Prince Pigmot
- and Bernard -- have just materialised. Bernard is on a raised
- platform behind Asphyxia, and is just a head with a huge life-support
- system. Pigmot is to the right of Asphyxia, and Frondo is in front
- of Pigmot. Behind them, a hologramme display shows either a spinning
- green oscilloscope design or a close-up of whoever speaks.]
-
- Husbands tutti: Hail Queen Asphyxia, Supreme Mistress of the Universe.
-
- Asphyxia: ...and hail to you, my Triple-Husbandoid. I summon you here
- to group-greet our swift imperial navies home. [calls]
- Approach, Grand Admiral of the Dark Segment and Lord of the
- High-Slung Bottoms of Zob!
-
- [Commander Blackadder walks forward, with all sorts of metal bits
- attached to his leather. He holds his space helmet, and wears
- and metal eyepatch over his left eye. His breastplate armour bears
- the age-old Blackadder symbol.]
-
- Blackadder: [militaristically] 'morning.
-
- Frondo: To you, Blackadder -- thrice-endowed Supreme Donkey of the
- Trouser-Pod -- this much greeting [he raises a hand up to his
- forehead and lowers it with two and a half vertical waves].
-
- Pigmot: [speaks with American dialect] I, too, bold navigator [he gives
- four vertical waves], cringe my dribblies at your resplendent
- pofflesnu!
-
- Blackadder: Yes, well, that won't be necessary, thank you.
-
- Asphyxia: Approach your slave: Baldrick!
-
- [Baldrick steps forward, wearing leather highboots, a studded leather
- collar, studded leather wristbands, and a leather bikini brief with
- a single stud. He stands in a dramatic pose.]
-
- Blackadder: For God's sake, Baldrick -- if you're going to wear that
- ridiculous jockstrap, at least keep your legs together.
-
- Baldrick: [salutes] Wilco, Skipper! [adjusts his stance]
-
- Blackadder: Majesties, I give you this much greeting [he puts his hand to
- his forehead and lets it drop straight back down].
-
- Frondo: What news of the foul Malmydons?
-
- Blackadder: Scattered to the Nine Vectors, My Lord.
-
- Frondo: ...and the Sheepsqueezers of Splatican Five? Have they been
- suckcreamed as a Qvarnbeast's nobbo?
-
- Blackadder: Well, they're dead, if that's what you mean.
-
- Pigmot: Plus, Commander, did you vanquish the Nibblepibblies?
-
- Blackadder: No, My Lord Pigmot, I did not vanquish the Nibblepibblies;
- because you just made them up.
-
- Asphyxia: Hah hah hah hah hah! Excellent, Commander! You have most
- pleasantly wibbled my frusset pouch. Bring forth the gift
- with which you honour me.
-
- Blackadder: Majesties; from a place where the stars begin and end, I bring
- you this! [he holds up a silver rod with two equally-sized
- spheres at the ends; a nob at the bottom of the lower one and
- a spike at the top of the higher one. The higher sphere also
- has numerous rods protruding from the equator]
-
- Bernard: Oh, lovely -- an ashtray!
-
- Pigmot: [kneels beside Asphyxia] Come, Majesty -- he wastes our time.
- I yearn to attend "Twenty Thousand Years of the Two Runoids"
- on the [box plof?].
-
- Frondo: Yes! Send him to the sprouting chamber!
-
- Asphyxia: No, wait! [to Blackadder] What is it, Commander?
-
- Blackadder: Well, I'll show you, shall I? [he raises the object; it fires
- a ray at the husbands, who are dematerialised; Asphyxia looks
- around, shocked] And now, Your Majesty, I must respectfully
- insist that you hand over to me the supreme command of the
- universe, sew a button on my spare uniform, and marry me this
- afternoon.
-
- [He has walked forward; he removes a glove from one hand.
- Asphyxia also has walked forward. The two now are on opposite
- sides of a plasma sphere.]
-
- Asphyxia: I thought you'd never ask.
-
- [They both place a hand on the plasma sphere.]
-
- [Back in Victorian times, Ebeneezer Blackadder laughs.]
-
- Ebeneezer: So, let's get this straight: If I was bad, my descendents would
- rule the entire universe!
-
- Spirit: Maybe... Maybe... But would you be happy? Being ruler of the
- universe is not all it's cracked up to be -- there's the long
- hours... I mean, you wave at people the whole time... you're no
- longer your own boss.
-
- Ebeneezer: But, but, so, what if I stayed good? When then does the
- future hold?
-
- Spirit: Ah, well, I really must put my foot down here. I've got four
- hauntings and a scare-the-bugger-to-death to do before morning.
-
- [Ebeneezer lifts a hand, wiggles his fingers and goes "Woo!"]
-
- Spirit: No! No! [tries to bat away the incoming vision]
-
- [Back to the future]
-
- Husbands tutti: Hail Queen Asphyxia, Supreme Mistress of the Universe.
-
- Asphyxia: ...and hail to you, my Triple-Husbandoid. I summon you here
- to group-greet our swift imperial navies home. [calls]
- Approach, Grand Admiral of the Dark Segment and Lord of the
- High-Slung Bottoms of Zob!
-
- [Commander Baldrick walks forward, with all sorts of metal bits
- attached to his leather. He holds his space helmet, and wears
- a metal eyepatch over his left eye. His breastplate armour bears
- the age-old Blackadder symbol.]
-
- Baldrick: [raising his left arm] Hail!
-
- Asphyxia: ...and your slave...
-
- [Blackadder steps forward, wearing leather highboots, studded leather
- collar, studded leather wristbands, and a leather bikini brief with
- a single stud. He stands in an upset, bored pose.]
-
- Asphyxia: What's his name?
-
- Baldrick: I can't remember, Your Majesty.
-
- Frondo: No matter, Supreme Marshall of the Smells. What news of the
- foul Malmydons?
-
- Baldrick: Good news...
-
- Asphyxia: Excellent!
-
- Baldrick: ...for the Malmydons -- they wiped out our entire army. Sorry;
- I got a bit confused and dropped a bomb on our own lot.
-
- Asphyxia: Silence, squidling! Bring forth the gift with which you honour me.
-
- Baldrick: Oh, damn, I forgot the bloody present and all...
-
- [Blackadder looks quite fed up.]
-
- [The vision ends. Ebeneezer is now standing.]
-
- Ebeneezer: So: one way, it's glory everlasting; the other, it's wearing
- Baldrick's posing pouch!
-
- Spirit: Well, it's not as simplistic, but it does at least point a very
- clear lesson.
-
- Ebeneezer: Namely...?
-
- Spirit: Namely...that the rewards of virtue are largely spiritual, but
- all the better for it.
-
- Ebeneezer: You don't think it points the very clear lesson that
- bad guys have all the fun?
-
- Spirit: No! No! Absolutely not! The rewards of virtue are infinitely
- more attractive! [stands, puts an arm around Ebeneezer]
- Picture it: Quiet evenings in your hovel alone; a Bible; your
- own turnip!
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, well, that makes all the difference!
-
- Spirit: So you're going to be a good boy, then?
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, absolutely.
-
- [Spirit looks at him intently]
-
- Ebeneezer: Would I lie to you?
-
- [Spirit turns, starting his "Woo!" some more, and steps backward
- through the doorway, steam pouring out. The door raises back
- into place (the entrance video run in reverse).]
-
- [Christmas morning. Ebeneezer wakes up.]
-
- Baldrick: [from outside the room] Mr Blackadder! [enters, holding a sock]
- Looks like Father Christmas just forgot about me this year.
-
- Ebeneezer: [stands] Oh, dear me... [takes sock, and begins reaching inside
- it] But don't be too unhappy; because, if you look very
- carefully, there's something in this stocking from me...
-
- Baldrick: Oh!
-
- Ebeneezer: In fact, it's something I made for you...
-
- Baldrick: Well, that's the kind of prezzy that shows the most love!
- What have you made for me, Mr B?
-
- Ebeneezer: I've made you... [takes his hand out] ...a fist.
-
- Baldrick: A fist?
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes -- it's for hitting [punches Baldrick in the face]...
- and what's wonderful about it is that you can use it again
- [punch!] and again [punch!] and again [punch!]. Well, what
- do you say...?
-
- Baldrick: [weakly] Thank you, Mr B...
-
- Ebeneezer: Think nothing of it, Baldrick -- I, after all, think nothing
- of you [punch!].
-
- [Hanging onto the window, calling through, is the young boy.]
-
- Boy: Oi! Gitface! How about a penny for the season?
-
- Ebeneezer: Hark! Do I hear the voice of a darling little cherub at the
- window?
-
- [Ebeneezer walks to the window and opens it, causing the boy to
- fall down with a scream.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [looks outside, then shuts the window] No -- I must have
- imagined it.
-
- [The doorbell rings.]
-
- Baldrick: Shall I get that, sir?
-
- Ebeneezer: No, Baldrick -- leave them out in the snow until I get dressed.
- I'll only be about forty minutes.
-
- [Forty minutes later, in the front room, Baldrick stands by the
- door as Ebeneezer finally comes downstairs, dressed.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Door.
-
- [Baldrick opens the door. Leaning into the doorway, now with
- icicles hanging from their noses, are Beadle and the three
- fat orphan boys.]
-
- Beadle: [holding a tiny Christmas pudding] Compliments of the season, sir.
- We have come to sing merrily and to make you a gift of a small
- pudding. [to orphans] ...3, 4...
-
- Beadle and orphans: [singing]
-
- God bless Mr B at Christmas time
- And maybe Jesus too
- If we were little pigs we'd sing
- "Piggywiggywiggywiggywoo!"
- And "Piggywiggywiggywiggywiggywiggywiggywiggy
- "Wiggywiggywiggywiggywoo!
- "O! Piggy wiggy wiggy woo!
- "Piggywiggywoo!
- "O! Piggy wiggywiggywiggywiggywiggywiggywoo!"
-
- Ebeneezer: [applauds slowly] Utter crap.
-
- Beadle: Thank you very much, sir.
-
- Orphan3: Do we get a Christmas treat now?
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes, indeed you do.
-
- Orphan [1 or 2?]: What is it?
-
- Ebeneezer: It's a door in the face. Here you are! [slams the door]
-
- Baldrick: [shocked] Oh, Mr B! You can't send them out into the world
- with nothing but a small pudding!
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, how right you are, Baldrick. Door.
-
- [Baldrick opens the door; Beadle and the orphans are in the exact
- same place they were before, Beadle still holding out the pudding.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [takes the pudding] Thank you. [slams the door]
-
- Baldrick: You know what I'm hoping?
-
- Ebeneezer: What are you hoping, Baldrick?
-
- Baldrick: I'm hoping that this is all a merry Christmas jape, and, in a
- moment, you're going to go "Yo ho ho!" and give me a mince pie.
-
- Ebeneezer: [grins] Close your eyes, Baldrick...
-
- [Baldrick closes his eyes.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Open your mouth...
-
- [Baldrick opens his mouth.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Yo ho ho. [sticks the leafed end of the pudding into Baldrick's
- mouth]
-
- [Doorbell rings.]
-
- Millicent: [from outside] Cooeee!
-
- [Baldrick opens the door; Millicent cackles as she enters, and is
- followed by her boyfriend, Ralph -- a paradigmatic twit.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, my dear Millicent come for her dinner. [looks at Ralph]
- ...and she seems to have brought the fish course with her.
-
- [Millicent and Ralph are confused.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Who, my dear, is the huge halibut in the trousers?
-
- Ralph: I think...it's me!
-
- Millicent: This is Ralph -- he's my fiance.
-
- Ralph: We're in love!
-
- [Ralph laughs; Millicent cackles]
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, dear... Ill-conceived love, I should warn you, is like
- a Christmas cracker: One massively disappointing bang, and the
- novelty soon wears off.
-
- [Ralph laughs; Millicent cackles]
-
- Ebeneezer: Shut up.
-
- Millicent: [shocked] Oh, Mr Blackadder! What's happened? You've changed
- from the nicest man in England into the...the horridest man in
- the world!
-
- Baldrick: I was thinking the same thing myself.
-
- Ebeneezer: [hits Baldrick in the back of the head] ...when spoken to.
- [to Millicent] I would explain, my dear, but I fear that you
- wouldn't understand -- blessed as you are with a head that is
- emptier than a hermit's address book.
-
- [Millicent smiles as though that was a compliment.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [to Ralph] As for you: Are you sure that you can keep my
- God-daughter in the manner to which she is accustomed?
-
- Ralph: Oh, yes! Absolutely! [gives his wallet to Ebeneezer]
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, splendid. [takes it, looks at all the money inside]
-
- [Ralph holds his hand out as though expecting Ebeneezer to return
- the wallet.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Congratulations. Good day. [shakes Ralph's offered hand]
-
- [Ralph and Millicent smile, then slowly start laughing/cackling.]
-
- Ebeneezer: OUT!
-
- [Ralph and Millicent begin crying, and leave.]
-
- Ebeneezer: [holding the money that was in the wallet] Baldrick, I want you
- to take this and go out, and buy a turkey so large you'd think
- its mother had been rogered by an omnibus. [gives the money]
- I'm going to have a party, and no-one's invited but me.
-
- [Baldrick heads for the door; Ebeneezer heads for the back room.
- When Baldrick opens the door, Mrs Scratchit enters.]
-
- Scratchit: Cooo!
-
- Ebeneezer: [returning to the counter] No peace for the wicked...
-
- Scratchit: Ah, Mr Ebeneezer... I was wondering if you had perhaps a little
- present for me...? or had found me a little fowl for Tiny Tom's
- Christmas...?
-
- Ebeneezer: I've >always< found you `foul', Mrs Scratchit -- and more than
- a little.
-
- [Mrs Scratchit is stunned.]
-
- Ebeneezer: As for Tiny Tom's Christmas: he can stuff it up his enormous
- muscular backside.
-
- Scratchit: But he's a cripple!
-
- Ebeneezer: He's >not< a cripple, Mrs Scratchit. Occasionally saying "Phew!
- My leg hurts!" when he remembers to wouldn't fool >Baldrick<!
-
- Baldrick: It did, actually.
-
- Ebeneezer: However, if you want something for lunch, take this. [he
- reaches down and lifts up a bucket with some brown stain running
- down the side] It's a pound of lump, and, as luck would have it,
- there are seventeen lumps left. [takes his money back from her
- basket] Thank you.
-
- Scratchit: But what about my Tiny Tom?
-
- Ebeneezer: If I was you, I'd scoop him out and use him as a houseboat.
- Good day.
-
- [Scratchit cries and leaves]
-
- Baldrick: [closes the door once more] Mr B... Where's the milk of
- human kindness?
-
- Ebeneezer: It's gone off, Baldrick -- it stinks.
-
- [Doorbell rings.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Get that; and, whoever it is, slam the door in their faces --
- or I'll slam your face in the door. [goes to the back room]
-
- [Baldrick opens the door and finds Victoria, Albert and the chair-
- bearer (sans chair again).]
-
- Alfred: Hello, small dwarf fellow. Is this the house of the great
- philanthropist and all-round softy, Ebeneezer Blackadder?
-
- Baldrick: [confused] What, Mr Blackadder lives here?
-
- Alfred: Ah, that is good, because we have a wunderbar secret!
-
- Baldrick: What secret?
-
- Alfred: Hah! I've I were to tell you that we're going to give him an
- enormous fortune for being so generous, then it would not longer
- be a secret--
-
- Damn... I'm so stupid! Damn...
-
- Baldrick: What would no longer be a secret?
-
- Victoria: [leaning forward, half bowing] We are Queen Victoria.
-
- Baldrick: What, all three of you?
-
- Victoria: [charmed] My dear little hobgoblin... Here is our Royal
- Seal. [holds out the seal; Baldrick takes it and slowly kneels]
- We have come to present your master with fifty thousand pounds
- and the title of Baron Blackadder, for being the kindness man in
- England.
-
- Baldrick: Nummy, Your Majesty!
-
- Ebeneezer: [returning from the back room] Baldrick, what did I tell you
- I'd do if you didn't slam the door in the faces of these
- scrounging loafers?
-
- Baldrick: But... [Ebeneezer moves him aside and grabs the door]
- Mr Blackadder-- [Ebeneezer opens the door wide, into Baldrick's
- face, then slams the door shut]
-
- Ebeneezer: I'm not at home to guests.
-
- [Ebeneezer returns to the back room, where the scene now takes place.
- He sits in the fireside chair. Albert, Victoria and the chair-
- bearer walk in.]
-
- Albert: I flatter myself; we are rather special guests, sir...
-
- Ebeneezer: Oh, of course! [stands] I must apologise! It's not often that
- one receives a Christmas visit from two such distinguished guests.
-
- Albert: Ah, so you recognise us at last.
-
- Ebeenzer: Yes. [to Victoria] Unless I'm very much mistaken, you're the
- winner of the Round Britain Shortest, Fattest, Dumpiest Woman
- Competition. And for her to be accompanied by the winner of
- this year's Stupidest Accent Award is really quite overwhelming.
-
- Victoria: Sir! I cannot be--
-
- Ebeneezer: Cork it, Fatso! Don't you realise that this is the Victorian
- Age, where -- apart from Queen Piglet Features herself [Albert
- covers Victoria's ears] -- women and children are to be seen and
- not heard?
-
- Albert: "Queen Piglet Features"?!
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes -- `Empress Oink', as lads call her. The only person in the
- Kingdom who looks dafter than her is that stupid Frankfurter of
- a husband [Albert covers his own ears]. `The Pig & The Prig'
- we call them. [approaches them, forcing them back into the
- front room] How they ever managed to produce their one hundred
- and twelve children is quite beyond me. The bedchambers of
- Buckingham Palace must be copiously supplied with blindfolds.
-
- Victoria: Sir! We have never been so insulted in our entire lives!
- [all three of them are now outside the shoppe]
-
- Ebeneezer: [leans out doorway] Well, all I can say is, you've been damned
- lucky. [goes inside and slams the door]
-
- [Later, in the back room, Ebeneezer is feasting. Baldrick is
- pouring a drink.]
-
- Ebeneezer: Ah, Baldrick, this is excellent, excellent -- all the riff-raff
- and the spongers dealt with, and gargantuan quantities of tuck
- to be gobbled. [slices off a piece of turkey] Here; have
- a wishbone. [gives wishbone to Baldrick]
-
- [Baldrick breaks the wishbone.]
-
- Ebeneezer: What do you wish?
-
- Baldrick: I wish there was some meat on this.
-
- Ebeneezer: Those last two were particularly satisfying -- it felt just
- like having a go at the real Queen and Prince Albert.
-
- Baldrick: It >was< the real Queen and Prince Albert.
-
- Ebeneezer: Don't be ludicrous, Baldrick -- what would the Queen be doing
- here?
-
- Baldrick: Well, she'd come to visit you to reward you for being the nicest
- man in England, by giving you fifty thousand pounds and the title
- of Baron Blackadder.
-
- Ebeneezer: Baldrick, it couldn't have been the Queen; because, when she
- visits people, she leaves them her Royal Seal.
-
- Baldrick: What, like this one? [takes seal out of a pocket]
-
- Ebeneezer: Yes, just like tha-- [he stares at it in disbelief]
-
- [end theme; credits]
-
- Blackadders Ooh ooh ooh ooh!
- ROWAN ATKINSON Woo ooh ooh ooh!
- Ooh ooh ooh ooh!
- Baldricks Woo!
- TONY ROBINSON
- [repeat twice]
- Queens Elizabeth I / Asphyxia XIX
- MIRANDA RICHARDSON Blackadder! Blackadder!
- Di dum di dum di da!
- Lords Melchett / Frondo Blackadder! Blackadder!
- STEPHEN FRY Ti rum ti tum ti ta!
-
- Princes Regent / Pigmot Blackadder! Blackadder!
- HUGH LAURIE Ti rum ti tum ti ta!
-
- Spirit of Christmas
- ROBBIE COLTRANE
-
- Queen Victoria
- MIRIAM MARGOLYES
-
- Prince Albert
- JIM BROADBENT
-
- Nursie / Bernard
- PATSY BYRNE
-
- Beadle
- DENIS LILL
-
- Mrs Scratchit
- PAULINE MELVILLE
-
- Lord Nelson
- PHILIP POPE
-
- Millicent
- NICOLA BRYANT
-
- Ralph
- RAMSAY GILDERDALE
-
- Enormous Orphans
- DAVID BARBER
- ERKAN MUSTAFA
- DAVID NUNN
-
- Music by Howard Goodall; Sung by Sally-Anne Marsh, Costandia Costi,
- Natalie Cramer, Lydia Cumber
-
- Graphic Designer Properties Buyer
- Tom Brooks John Watts
-
- Technical Co-ordinator Camera Supervisors
- Mike Chislett Chris Glass, Roger Goss
-
- Visual Effects Designer
- Steve Lucas
-
- Vision Mixer
- Angela Beveridge
-
- Videotape Editor
- Chris Wadsworth
-
- Lighting Director Sound Supervisors
- Henry Barber Alan Machin, Peter Barville
-
- Costume Designer Make-Up Designer
- Richard Croft Vicky Pocock
-
- Production Assistant Production Secretary
- Jayne Spooner Hilary Charles
-
- Production Manager Assistant Floor Manager
- Sarah Gowers Lindsay Trenholme
-
- Designer
- Antony Thorpe
-
- Director
- Richard Boden
-
- Producer
- John Lloyd
-
- (C) BBC MCMLXXXVII
-
-
- [the following appears (in hand print) over the final screen]
-
- Merry Kweznuz
- A ^ Messy <Kwelfnuve> [crossed out]
-
-
- --
- --- keeper@deeptht.armory.com (Ron O'Dell) Do >not< mail hermit!
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-