Reg Varney as Sherry Sheridan in The Best Pair of Legs in the Business (1973) |
Britain
in the early 1970s was a place of moral panics, strikes and power cuts. Stuart
Hall comments that 1972 was a year of ‘sustained and open class conflict of a
kind unparalleled since the end of the war’ (1978: 293). Terry Staples also points
out that the miner’s strike of 1973 had a direct influence on the film industry
in early 1974 when the ‘restrictions on the non-domestic use of electrical
power’ during the ‘three-day week’ meant that cinemas had to ‘reduce the number
of shows they put on’ (1997: 229).
British
cinema itself was heading for a crisis. Most of the debt-ridden Hollywood
companies had withdrawn funding from British films at the end of the 1960s.
Filmmakers had to resort to tried and tested formulas, such as movie spin-offs
of TV sitcoms, or sex comedies, in order to sustain a living. Although Best
Pair is not based on a sitcom, it is a film adaptation of a TV play, both
of which star Reg Varney in the central role of Sherry Sheridan. During this
period there were a number of films released which looked back nostalgically to
the traditional British holiday such as Holiday
On The Buses (1973), That’ll Be The
Day (1973) and Carry On Girls (1973).
However, Best Pair appears to evoke the mood of the time more
successfully, exposing the holiday on a cheap caravan park for the dismal
experience it could be.
A
lot of the action in the film takes place at night. This darkness adds to the
gloomy atmosphere. It’s as if the lights have literally been turned off –
pre-empting the blackouts of the early 1970s. As the campsite’s only resident
entertainer, Sherry attempts to construct some sense of community in the
half-empty clubhouse of Greenside Caravan Park, by starting sing-a-longs such
as ‘Oh I Do Like To Be Beside The Seaside’, but the merriment appears to be
forced. The atmosphere is like the aftermath of a party where the guests have
stayed too long – a hangover, perhaps from the affluence and optimism of the
late 1950s and 1960s. It’s as if the decade before hasn’t lived up to its
expectations, and the decade that has followed has seen both an economic and
spiritual slump.
The
caravan holiday in Britain had originally been a middle-class pursuit in the
1920s and 1930s, as part of the fashion to ‘get back to nature’, just as the
original pioneer holiday camps had been. Camping in a Romany style van had been
a rare novelty for Bohemian types who wanted to get away from it all, the whole
point of the holiday (as Angeloglou, 1975: 49-50, explains) was to ‘rough it’,
by digging your own toilet, cooking over an oil stove, and by looking after the
horse, which most city folk were not used to. The static caravan parks of the
post-war era, however, had little to do with the origins of middle-class
camping, instead providing a cheap alternative to the holiday camp, with
cut-price accommodation. As Walton points out, the number of people taking
caravan holidays at the end of the 1960s had more than doubled to 4.5 million
in comparison to the 2 million who took a similar holiday in 1955, and ‘The
coastline of Lindsey (Lincolnshire) saw caravan numbers increasing at 1,000 per
year throughout the 1950s and 1960s from the 3,000 already present in 1950’ (2000:
43). The rows of static caravans were seen by some traditionalists to be an
eyesore. In his 1974 poem, ‘Delectable Duchy’ Betjeman expresses a wish for
them to be swept ‘out to sea’ by a ‘tidal wave’ (1974: 21).
The
crisis of the central character in The Best Pair appears to embody the
crisis of Britain at the time the film was made. As an entertainer who has just
been dropped by his agent, Sherry’s future job prospects look very bleak. In
one scene he announces his options as “the Labour Exchange, National
Assistance, and very shortly the old-age pension”, and as a last resort, he
pessimistically hopes for death. Sherry belongs, suddenly, to another era. He
sings Flanagan and Allen songs and does a terrible drag act that allows him the
freedom to fill his gags with innuendo, when in actual fact he disapproves of
the sexual revolution – in one particular scene he decries the world as a
‘filthy, dirty’ place, after discovering that his wife is having an affair. Not
only has Sherry been stripped of his masculinity, but he has also lost his
authority as head of the household. His son, Alan, for whom he paid to have a
private education and then go on to university, is now effectively middle class
and Sherry feels threatened by this. Sherry believes that Alan is also ashamed
of his father for ‘making a living by being a lady’, even though his act is
‘good enough for Royalty’, as Sherry points out.
Sherry in drag |
Sherry
is a monarchist. His ‘idea of England’ as Stuart Hall refers to, is an imperial
one, with ‘a commitment to what Britain has shown herself to be capable of,
historically…rooted in ‘feelings about the flag, the Royal Family and the
Empire’ (1978: 147). The film was made at a time when the Royal Family was relatively
free from scandal, and it could be argued that the strong Royalist sentiments
of the time were a reaction again to the crisis of the period. Princess Anne’s
wedding was celebrated in the year of the film’s release, and the Jubilee came
four years later. These celebrations were part of a trend of nostalgia, as
Britain desperately looked back to the Coronation; a time when it was coming
out of a period of austerity and rationing and was looking forward to better
times.
Sherry
constructs part of his national identity around his monarchist values, and
name-drops the Queen at any given opportunity, his brief meeting with her,
being the highpoint of his career, and a boost to what little ego he has left.
He stretches the story, however, beyond credibility, telling two young campers
that his Royal command performance was by special request from her Majesty, and
that his job at the caravan park is merely a ‘paid holiday’. Later, we get a
glimpse of a photograph of the occasion. The Queen is greeting a group of
entertainers after their performance, but Sherry is on the back row, and not in
close proximity to the monarch, which puts paid to his later claim that he’s
shaken hands with her.
The
argument that ensues is triggered by Sherry’s not knowing the proper way to eat
cake during middle-class ‘tea’. The vicar’s Georgian silver tea service, handed
down from his grandmother is a symbol of inherited wealth. Mary expresses her
admiration for it – she sees it as a symbol of ‘family’, whereas, Sherry is
intimidated by it. He tries to go one better by saying that he has eaten off
gold plates with the Queen. The claim is so ludicrous that no one believes him
for a minute, and the lie is further compounded by Sherry’s saying that it
happened first at Buckingham Palace, then Windsor Castle. Sherry wrongly
believes that an association with Royalty gives him ‘class’, not realising that
those who do have class might not necessarily give a damn whether he has met
the monarch or not. He also attempts to speak of his relationship with the
Queen in ‘show business’ terms by saying she has ‘warmth and star quality’.
This is an attempt by Sherry to exclude the vicar and underline his allegiance
to the Queen, and in turn demonstrate her supposed loyalty to entertainers.
The Garden Party |
Sherry’s
façade then slips. He stops speaking in Received Pronunciation, throws down his
pastry fork and eats the cake with his hands, much to the disgust of everyone
else. By trying to break their pretence by disregarding the rituals of eating
with a fork, plate and napkin, he reduces eating to its most basic function and
makes it grotesque. He then also admits to his working class status by arguing
that he has ‘slaved himself into the ground to make a gentleman’ of Alan. When
his lie about having eaten with the Sovereign fails to convince, he desperately
claims that he has ‘shaken hands with her’. Even this is a lie, and one which
his wife refuses to back him up on. The bitterness of Sherry, and his lack of
identity is fore-grounded in a scene which could have come as light relief, set
as it is in an English country garden, away from the bleak and depressing
campsite. The setting, however, throws Sherry’s inadequacies into relief. He
doesn’t fit in with the middle-class traditions of the past, and without the
support of his family, and uncertain job prospects, his future is uncertain
too.
If
earlier depictions of the holiday camp in films such as Sam Small Leaves Town (1937) and Holiday Camp (1947) attempt to construct an ideal working class
community in the pre- and post- war, in The Best Pair community falls apart,
prefiguring an emergent pessimism, expressed in the crisis of the three-day
week.
Bibliography:
Angeloglou, Maggie, 1975, Looking Back at Holidays (1900-1939), EP Publishing
Betjeman, John 1974, A
Nip in the Air, London: John Murray
Hall, Stuart, Critcher, Chas, Jefferson, Tony, Clarke, John,
Roberts, Brian, 1978, Policing the Crisis,
Mugging, the State, and Law and Order, London: Macmillan
Staples, Terry, 1997, All
Pals Together, The Story of Children’s Cinema, Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press
Walton, John K., 2000, The
British Seaside, Holidays and Resorts in the Twentieth Century, Manchester:
Manchester University Press
Thanks for this review of the film. I found it very disturbing when I first saw it. I think you are right about the film reflecting the troubled times. There are also echoes of Osborne's The Entertainer about a former music hall star adrift in a Britain riven by the Suez crisis. Then there's the constant evocation of being in an 'imbetween state', class, gender, relationships, youth and adulthood etc which reinforces all the social anxieties you mention. The symbol of water or drink is also important from the kid who empties his glass over Sherry's feet for no reason to the two youths who throw him in the swimming pool. No idea of its significance but it's something to ponder. Thanks again for treating this neglected masterpiece with the attention it deserves
ReplyDeleteThank you Hugh,
DeleteI'm glad you liked the post and that you took an interest in this film. Your observations about Sherry finding himself wet on several occasions are interesting too.
This post was based on a presentation I did several years ago at a symposium. I wrote at more length in my book 'The Holiday and British Film'. Best Pair was one of the main films I wrote about in my chapter about the 1970s and one of the reasons I wrote the book! I think the film is great.
Cheers
Matt