written by Brian Sibley
from his blog:
"It was back in 1977 - which, heaven help us, is thirty-three years ago - that I wrote what was only my second programme for radio, but which turned out to be something of a classic. Entitled ...And Yet Another Partridge in a Pear Tree, it was a quirky take on that well-known song about the seasonal gifts which someone sent to his True Love on the Twelve Days of Christmas.
It was, I later discovered, not exactly a new
joke and it has been re-worked by others since, but it had the
distinctive twist of literally following the cumulative list in the lyrics, thus providing the recipient not with one partridge in a pear tree, two turtle doves, three French hens and so on, but with twelve partridges, twenty-two turtle doves, thirty French hens and so forth.
...Fresh milk is one thing. Eight enormous Frisians in the drawing room is something else altogether. True, the milkmaids have a certain rustic charm, but you wouldn't believe how much they eat. You may also care to note that my bath has only so much room in it for
swans with a seemingly insatiable urge to be a-swimming, and it will
definitely not hold fourteen of them. Take that from one who has tried!
I was extremely fortunate in having Penelope Keith (then at the height of her fame as Margot Leadbetter in the wildly successful TV sit-com, The Good Life) play Miss Cynthia Bracegirdle, the increasingly harassed lady who has to cope with (among other
nuisances) forty maids a-milking, thirty-six ladies dancing, thirty
lords a-leaping and twenty-two pipers piping...
...And Yet Another Partridge was repeated annually for many years and is still broadcast at
Christmas in all kinds of places from America to Australia. In fact,
every year I get requests for copies of the broadcast (which
unfortunately is not possible because the BBC have never commercially
released the programme) and transcripts of Miss Bracegirdle's correspondence.
Anyway, if - like others - you remember this little piece of fluff and would
like to hear it again or if you've never heard it and think it might
tickle your funny bone, then TODAY'S the DAY!"
Replies
Thank you