John Cleese Trivia

Trivia

  • His mother, Muriel Cleese (b. Cross, 11 November 1899 - 11 November 2000) died on her 101st birthday.
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  • Father-in-law of Ed Solomon.
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  • Rector of University of St Andrews from 1970-1973.
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  • Said he was to be the first person to say the F-word at a memorial service when he spoke at Graham Chapman's funeral.
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  • Daughter, Camilla, born 1984 (with second wife Barbara Trentham)
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  • He has played the character of the "Black Knight" on two occasions, Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) and the episode "Mary Loves Scoochie" on the show "3rd Rock from The Sun (1996)".
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  • A newly discovered species of lemur, avahi cleesei, was named after him in honor of his love of the endangered primates, which figure prominently in his movie, Fierce Creatures (1997).
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  • Has played the father of two of the Charlie's Angels. First he played Lucy Liu's father in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003). The next year he played Cameron Diaz's father in Shrek 2 (2004).
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  • Just to see if anyone would notice, during the early 1970s Cleese added one obviously fake film per year to his annual filmography listing in Who's Who. For the record, these fake films were "The Bonar Law Story" (1971), "Abbott & Costello Meet Sir Michael Swann" (1972), "The Young Anthony Barber" (1973) and "Confessions of a Programme Planner" (1974). Although Cleese confessed to the gag in the 1980s, mentions of these bogus films still appear from time to time in scholarly works on Cleese, including the entry in the Encyclopedia of Television, 1st ed. (1996) edited by Horace Newcomb.
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    Posted by Editor wdwdemo
  • Father of Cynthia Cleese.
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  • Campaigned long, hard but unsuccessfully to win the role of Brian in Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979) because he wanted to expand his range in his first substantial film role, but the rest of the group favored the late Graham Chapman, and eventually the group persuaded Cleese that Chapman was better suited to the part of Brian and Cleese stepped aside.
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    Posted by Editor wdwdemo
  • He and Terry Gilliam are the only members of 'Monty Python' to be nominated for Oscars. Coincidentally, they were both for Best Original Screenplay, Gilliam for Brazil (1985) and Cleese for A Fish Called Wanda (1988). Both screenplays did not win their Oscars, and both films featured Michael Palin.
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  • Terry Gilliam noted among his Monty Python co-stars that there seemed to be a division between the taller, more "aggressive" Cambridge men (Cleese, Graham Chapman, & Eric Idle) and the shorter, lighter-humored Oxford men (Michael Palin & Terry Jones), the latter of which the American Gilliam found himself closer to. Gilliam considered Cleese the most "Cambridge" of the group, being the tallest and most "aggressive" member of Monty Python.
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  • The role of Cogsworth in Beauty and the Beast (1991) was written with him in mind, and no other actor was considered for the role. But he still turned it down.
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  • When the Globe Theatre was rebuilt in London, a service was offered whereby you could have your name on a tile in the courtyard, for a donation to the project. Cleese and fellow python Michael Palin both signed up for tiles, but Palin's was spelled wrong. Cleese paid extra to ensure it would be spelled "Pallin."
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  • Voiced Jean-Bob, a frog who believes he's a prince, in The Swan Princess (1994), then went on to voice a king who used to be a frog in Shrek 2 (2004).
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  • According to Brian Henson, when Cleese guest-starred on "The Muppet Show" (1976), he enjoyed the show very much and became very close with the writers because he wanted to get involved in the writing. When he did get involved with the writing, he and the other writers came up with a concept where Cleese was being held against his will on the show and would try to get off the show while the Muppets were trying to get him to do his scheduled bits. Of course, in this case, life did not imitate art, as a few years later, Cleese appeared again with the Muppets in the film The Great Muppet Caper (1981).
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    Posted by Editor wdwdemo
  • The inspiration for "Fawlty Towers" (1975) came from a hotel stay he had with the other Pythons in the Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay, England. The hotel manager was called Donald Sinclair, someone Cleese considered to be the rudest man he had ever encountered. He later played a character by the name of Donald P. Sinclair in Rat Race (2001).
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    Posted by Editor wdwdemo
  • Is an Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University.
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  • As a child loved the radio comedy show "The Goon Show".
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  • When he guest starred on "The Muppet Show" (1976), there is a skit in which he plays a pirate, complete with a nagging parrot/possible wife. Shortly before the end of the skit, he asks, "Do you want to be an EX-parrot?" and fires off his gun, missing the parrot. This is a reference to the infamous Parrot Sketch from Cleese's Monty Python's Flying Circus.
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    Posted by Editor wdwdemo
  • Who's Who lists his recreations as "gluttony, sloth."
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  • Father Reg Cleese was an insurance salesman.
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  • Appeared in a series of educational short subjects produced by Video Arts [gb] designed to teach management and trainees how to handle stress and unusual situations. Cleese took advantage of his comic talents and portrayed events as absurd situations so that audiences would better remember their training.
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    Posted by Editor wdwdemo
  • Was the tallest member of Monty Python, having been about 2 inches taller than Graham Chapman.
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  • He was a cast member of the highly successful radio show "I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again". His fellow cast members were Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden, Bill Oddie, David Hatch and Jo Kendall. It was during this radio show that Cleese's famous 'Ferret Song' (later sung on the television series, "At Last the 1948 Show" (1967)) was first heard.
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  • Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith. Pg. 108-109. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387
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  • Offered to write speeches for Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Obama.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • When he first started acting his original goal was to be a classically trained Shakespearean actor.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Was invited to the party Steve Martin was throwing that turned out to be his wedding.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Before becoming an actor, Cleese studied to be a lawyer. He went on to play a lawyer in A Fish Called Wanda (1988) and Splitting Heirs (1993).
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Is a vegetarian.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • One of his favorite TV shows is Disney`s Dave The Barbarian.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • In 2005, offered a part of his colon, removed due to diverticulitis, for sale on his official website. The proceeds are reportedly to be divided between Cleese himself and his surgeon.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Has said that Cornell University is set in one of the most beautiful locations on earth.
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  • Former supporter of the Liberal Democrat political party.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Has resided for many years in the prestigious Chicago North Shore suburb of Lake Forest, Illinois.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • In 2002, he appeared in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002), with Maggie Smith, and in Die Another Day (2002), opposite her son, Toby Stephens.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • He allegedly refused the British Honour of the C.B.E. (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in 1996.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • When he left the Monty Python team, he was approached by the BBC to do something else, and together with Booth, created "Fawlty Towers (1975)" based on their experiences in a Torquay hotel.
    (imdb.com)
    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • In the late nineties he appeared in German TV commercials for a lottery service. He actually spoke German in some of these spots (while some had no dialogue and others where dubbed later on).
    (imdb.com)
    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • His mother, Muriel Cleese (b. Cross, 5 October 1899 - 5 October 2000) died on her 101st birthday.
    (imdb.com)
    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Reached adult height of 6` 4 3/4" by the age of 13.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • John`s father`s name was Reg Cleese but his grandfather was named John Edwin Cheese. He changed his name when he joined the British army in 1915.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Co-owns the Christine Schell Fine Objects antique shop in Montecito, CA.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Ever since one of his most famous Monty Python sketches, The Ministry of Silly Walks, he has found himself continually pestered by admirers to do silly walks for them.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • When he had to join the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists in 1989, for his third appearance on American TV, none of the staff at the AFTRA office recognized him, or had any idea who he was.
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Went to the United States with the Footlights stage show "Cambridge Circus" in 1964, and appeared on the Ed Sullivan`s "Toast of the Town" (1948).
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  • Co-wrote several episodes of "Doctor in the House" (1969) and its sequels with Graham Chapman, and also wrote some later episodes as sole author.
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  • Was a member of the prestigious Cambridge University Footlights Club.
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  • Holds a law degree from Cambridge University.
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  • Member of the comedy group "Monty Python".
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
  • Married 3 times
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    Posted by Chief Editor CindyCelebs
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