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Idi in exile

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      • On Television: Introduction
      • Glued to the Box
        • Author's note
        • Introduction
        • All the Anthonys
        • Quite slim indeed
        • St Vitus's gospel
        • Santa and the Seed
        • Scoop it!
        • Face your dog
        • Ultimately and forever
        • Cold gold
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        • Three famous, three high
        • Your brain's got it wrong
        • Nude bathing in Britain
        • Moral imagination
        • Oodnadatta Fats
        • How do you feel?
        • Master stroke
        • Someone shart JR
        • Idi in exile
        • Hrry Crpntr
        • Prospect
        • Borg's little bit extra
        • Big-time Sue
        • There is no death
        • You tested the gyroscope?
        • A horse called Sanyo Music Centre
        • This false peace
        • Bottom of the sea
        • Bouquet of barbed haggis
        • Thank you, wow
        • Fast maggots
        • Donor kebab
        • Good lug
        • Very lovely salver
        • I am a tropical fish
        • Not psychic myself
        • Back in showbiz
        • Yes sir, that's my foetus
        • While the music lasts
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        • Ferry funny
        • Paint it yellow
        • The Colonels are nuts
        • Wedding announcement
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        • Whacky world of weather
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        • Actual flow
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        • Blinding white flash
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        • Forbidden kiss
        • Guardians of party orthodoxy
        • Hail Columbia!
        • Heavenly pink light
        • Ho ho!
        • Hot pistils
        • Idealogical intervention, man
        • Lindi's built-in barbecue
        • Make mine Minder
        • Man of Marshmallow
        • Midwinter night's dream
        • More Borgias
        • No kidding
        • Nobody understands all
        • Rebarbative reverberations
        • Rumpole recollects
        • Signals from the void
        • Speer checks out
        • Spirit of Bishop's Stortford
        • Steve doesn't smoke
        • Stop treading on the rug!
        • Terms of reference
        • The Bagwash speaks
        • Them again
        • Three dots for suspense
        • Two goals down
        • Wedding of the century
        • One last look
      • Visions Before Midnight
      • The Crystal Bucket
    • Other Non-Fiction

As if to demonstrate that the tangles democracies get into count as nothing beside the horrors of tyranny, Idi Amin made an appearance on the Nine O'Clock News (BBC1). Exclusively interviewed by Brian Barron, Idi spoke from his mysterious hideout, which nobody except everybody knows to be the Sands Hotel, Jeddah. That the BBC agreed with Idi to keep his whereabouts secret bespeaks a certain old-world charm, like the punctiliousness with which, during the Second World War, they are reputed to have paid Hitler's royalties into a Swiss bank account. Idi's phone number at the Sands, incidentally, is Jeddah 692020. Give him a bell in the middle of the night and tell him you're the voice of retribution. God knows he's got it coming.

But Idi looked as innocent as a chocolate Easter egg as he faced up to Brian Barron's exotic vowels. 'Hay,' asked Barron, 'did you get eight of Uganda?' Idi earned some marks for understanding the question, even if his answer left something to be desired in the area of veracity. He called his precipitate flight a Tactical Withdrawal. There was a lot of emphasis on his determination to regroup and stage a comeback. Soon his country would call him. At this point the viewer was assailed by a profound sense of familiarity. Where had we heard it before, this talk of answering the people's summons? Of course! Oswald Mosley!

Idi stood revealed as a black Blackshirt. His rather pleasant dial, however, showed you just how little you can judge by appearances. A sinister buffoon whose idea of a good time is to make innocent people bash each other's heads in with sledgehammers, Idi has all the self-righteousness of the truly dedicated nut. 'I am fresh, strong, and I am concerned with the question in Uganda.' Uganda had better sort itself out pronto before Idi checks out of the Sands and comes back to look after his adoring flock. 'Most of them love me... they want me to save them from the chaos situation that is now happening in Uganda.' What made this last utterance particularly horrible was the element of truth in it. Apparently Uganda is now in such a mess that half the population would welcome Idi back just so as to have a maniac they could rely on.

With that degree of unintentional humour available, the intentional kind had little chance of snaring the viewer's allegiance. Nevertheless Victoria Wood's play Nearly a Happy Ending (Granada) made its intended impact on the benumbed funny-bone. Written by Victoria Wood and with lyrics by Victoria Wood, the play starred Julie Walters and Victoria Wood. The lady's credits gang up on you in a way that was once reserved for Orson Welles, to whom, in her own self-awarely self-conscious mind, Victoria bears a certain physical resemblance. She's got herself pegged for a fatty. Even the slim version of Victoria Wood thinks like the fat one, with nervously defensive but almost invariably funny results.

In this play Victoria had slimmed down to find love. Unfortunately nobody wanted her body even in its narrow form. She discovered this fact while out on the town with her hopeless friend, engagingly played by Julie Walters. Julie was a scruff with an X-certificate kitchen you couldn't have cleaned with a skip. The exaggerations are Victoria's: she has a knack for them. Her jokes fall into shape as naturally as her figure doesn't. Witness her midnight emergency telephone calls to the Weightwatchers' duty officer. 'I'm on the kitchen extension staring full-face at a Marks & Spencer's Individual Spotted Dick.' Spotting that word 'Individual' as the indispensable comic element is a gift that can't be taught: you've either got it or you haven't, and Victoria's got it. Next time, however, she might care to go deeper.

 8 June, 1980

 

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