IMDb > "Are You Being Served?" Roots? (1981)
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"Are You Being Served?" Roots? (1981)



Overview

User Rating:
6.7/10   11 votes
Director:
John Kilby
Writers:
David Croft (writer)
Jeremy Lloyd (writer)
Original Air Date:
24 December 1981 (Season 8, Episode 8)
Genre:
Comedy more
Plot:
Every year the department store has an elaborate celebration for the birthday -now the 90th- of Mr. Grace... more | add synopsis
User Comments:
A Problem About British Humor. more (1 total)

Cast

  (Episode Credited cast)
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Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Harold Bennett and Kenneth Waller's final appearance as Young and Old Mr Grace. more
Goofs:
Boom mic visible: A boom microphone appears and then disappears while Captain Peacock and Mr. Rumbold are discussing the former's candelabra. more
Quotes:
Old Mr. Grace: How long have you been frightened of the dark, my dear?
Miss Virginia Edwards: Ever since you blew out all the candles, Mr. Grace.
more

FAQ

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1 out of 4 people found the following comment useful.
A Problem About British Humor., 25 February 2008
6/10
Author: theowinthrop from United States

*** This comment may contain spoilers ***

This episode of the popular British comedy series illustrates a real problem regarding English (and I suspect European and Foreign humor) that Americans have been trying to deal with here since the age of Lenny Bruce. Although humor deals with discomforting images of people, humiliated or momentarily hurt in some manner (deserved or not), there has also always been elements of bigotry or bias to different groups in humor. It the humor is self-deprecating (a Jewish comedian talking about himself and his fellow Jews, like Jackie Mason, or an African-American talking about African-Americans, like Redd Foxx) the audience does not care because we are laughing with the party. But when a Caucasian makes remarks about other groups, we start thinking differently about it (unless, like Don Rickels, he or she attacks all the groups including his or her own). We call it "political correctness" for better or worse. Other countries in the west struggle with it, but I suspect the U.S. (with it's really polyglot population) deals with it more frequently.

The issue is should we do this, or should we just enjoy the joke?

The British are slowly getting it into their heads that with increased foreign (i.e., non-White) peoples being third or fourth generation English, they have to clean up their act too. But there are vestiges that are visible from a few decades ago that surprise and baffle us, and probably (when they appeared) did not bother the British public for the most part.

This was the "Christmas Episode" for 1981 of ARE YOU BEING SERVED?, which usually had a number of musical sequences for the regulars. Here they are having a 90th Birthday party of old Mr. Grace (Kenneth Waller) and even bring back his predecessor and younger brother young Mr. Grace (Harold Bennett). In 1981 the success of the television program ROOTS from the U.S. was an international phenomenon. That series, you recall, was Alex Hailey's attempt to trace his ancestry in the U.S. back to Kunte Kinte, the African who came to the U.S. as a slave in the 18th Century, through other figures in the 19th and 20th Centuries like Chicken George. It is a phenomenon still affecting us - just look at the number of genealogical sites on the internet some forty years after that show. Keeping this in mind, the episode followed how the staff of Rumbolt's floor are assigned to do genealogical research into the Grace family, and to present a pageant of that research with a song from the part of England the Grace's originated from.

Well, the Graces are first shown as Scotsmen, then Yorkshiremen, then Welsh, with slight changes in their name.

SPOILER COMING UP:

Then we are told they are further south in origin than that. To the tune of "Waitin' For the Robert E. Lee" we see the cast come out in top hats, tales, and black-face (yes, black-face) for the finale.

Now the effect, to me, is mixed. A similar kind of joke on a "Benny Hill" show (where Hill, back in the late 1970s, was playing the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin) also has that on me. Hill was in a military tunic and wore black face. He behaved...well as nutty as Benny Hill usually did. But the black face got me, as did a joke on the tyrant's name (the tyrant's desk had two "in" and "out" mail boxes, labeled "Amin" and "Amout"). But Hill's hit and run comedy, if here unsettling, could quickly pass to the next matter. Not so with the finale of ARE YOU BEING SERVED? for everything in the episode led to that conclusion (which made a referenced pun of the title of the episode "Roots?"). While as well produced and performed as any other, the conclusion is out of kilter with what we currently expect - or what American audiences would have expected even in 1981! So I give it a "6" out of "10"...and it is a rather weak "6" at that!!

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