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Bob Spiers (Read 13651 times)
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Bob Spiers
Dec 11th, 2008, 10:09am
 
This is taken from the Independent:

Bob Spiers: Director of 'Absolutely Fabulous', 'Fawlty Towers' and 'Dad's Army'
Tuesday, 9 December 2008


For more than a quarter of a century, Bob Spiers proved a master of directing intelligently written, madcap television sitcoms that proved groundbreaking and far removed from the mainstream of television comedy.

When he was asked to take over as director for the second series of Fawlty Towers (1979), written by John Cleese and Connie Booth, who starred as the manic Torquay hotel owner Basil Fawlty and its calm, collected maid Polly, Spiers was reluctant. He was following in the footsteps of John Howard Davies, who produced the anarchic Monty Python's Flying Circus, which had included Cleese in its team. However, Spiers had no trouble in maintaining the standard of Fawlty Towers, which also featured Prunella Scales as Basil's dragon-like wife Sybil and Andrew Sachs as the Spanish waiter Manuel.

It was four years after the initial series aired and Spiers recalled that the manic atmosphere usually caused a lot of work for him as director. "There were well over 400 shots per episode," he recalled. Cleese and Booth's scripts, which each took six weeks to write, ran to almost twice the length of those for most sitcoms and included details of facial expressions and camera cuts. The result was a programme considered by many to be British television's finest sitcom.

Born in Glasgow, Bob Spiers moved to London at the age of 13 and gained a love of acting at school. On finishing his elementary education he started out as an actor with amateur companies and directed his first play, which was eventually performed at the Arts Theatre Club, in Soho. By day, he worked for an audience research company, before joining the BBC in a similar capacity in 1970.

Eighteen months later, Spiers became an assistant floor manager. He worked in that role on Dad's Army (1971), before moving up to become production manager (1973-74) on the enduringly popular sitcom written by David Croft and Jimmy Perry. After cutting his teeth as a director with outside dance routines for the entertainment show Seaside Special, Spiers directed most of the final series of the comedy (1977).

"I have nothing but fond memories of Dad's Army," he recalled. "But, by the time the last series came around, we had a few walking wounded. Arnold Ridley had his leg in plaster, so had to be shipped up to Norfolk [for location filming] in a limousine which had sufficient leg room, while John Le Mesurier wasn't well because he was recovering from an awful bout of hepatitis caught while abroad. Arthur [Lowe], due to his narcolepsy, kept dozing off – usually when David Croft was giving him notes. I remember filming a scene and David turning to me and saying, 'I've just got a feeling this is the last series!' "

Spiers also directed episodes of It Ain't Half Hot, Mum (1976) and Are You Being Served? (1977-83), written by Croft with Perry and Jeremy Lloyd respectively. The switch to a more zany screen humour came with the cult BBC series The Goodies (1977-82), which had begun seven years earlier, embraced the "stream of consciousness" humour of Monty Python's Flying Circus and starred Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie.

It was during this time that Spiers made the second series of Fawlty Towers and directed the unscreened pilot of Not the Nine O'Clock News (1979). On going freelance, he produced and directed the final series of The Goodies for ITV and it seemed a small leap to The Comic Strip Presents..., the archetypal alternative comedy series made for the newly launched Channel Four, for which he directed eight stories (1982-88), beginning on its opening night with Five Go Mad in Dorset, starring Adrian Edmondson, Peter Richardson, Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders.

Spiers switched to comedy-drama with the award-winning children's series Press Gang (1989-93) and, for the BBC, directed 15 episodes of French and Saunders (1988-93), including the sketch that inspired Absolutely Fabulous, for which he worked on more than two dozen episodes (1992-5, 2001). He also directed French's comedy-chiller series Murder Most Horrid (1991-94).

The director's other television shows included the sitcoms Joking Apart (1993, 1995) and Bottom (starring Adrian Edmondson and Rik Mayall, 1995), and the sketch series A Bit of Fry and Laurie with Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie (1995).

Spiers directed three films: the Walt Disney picture That Darn Cat starring Christina Ricci and Doug E. Doug (1997), the commercially successful but critically panned Spice World, featuring the Spice Girls (1997) and Kevin of the North, a comedy with Skeet Ulrich, Leslie Nielsen and Rik Mayall (2001). His wife, the television and film make-up designer Annie, died last year.
Anthony Hayward

Bob Spiers was one of the very best comedy directors working in TV in the last 40 years, writes Jon Plowman. He had a brilliant eye for the look of a show and the construction of a comedy moment. From Dads Army and Fawlty Towers to Five Go Mad... and the Comic Strip films made for the early days at Channel 4, he was always an innovator.

I met him first when he had just finished Press Gang for ITV where he had worked with a young Stephen Moffat (now the Dr Who guru) and an even younger Julia Sawahla. He had been trained by Fawlty Towers, The Goodies and Dad's Army; what better training could there be?

We were about to make the first of the many series of French and Saunders. I seem to remember that on first meeting he seemed a bit of an irascible, curmudgeonly Scot, but once he could see that I wasn't agin him but rather for him our relationship grew and often included the imbibition of the odd libation in the BBC bar. Our first days filming I seem to remember involved Dawn and Jennifer, two motorbikes and some very large false breasts. Ah, comedy!

He was supremely confident about what he wanted the finished product to look like and how he was going to achieve it – all the brilliant film parodies came as much from Bob's understanding of what the original film-maker had done as from the girls' brilliance at nailing the parody. In that first season he did wonders with everything from The Sound of Music through The Exorcist via Les Liaisons Dangereuses in a disused mental asylum near Eastbourne.

After two or three series of French and Saunders, Absolutely Fabulous appeared out of one of the sketches we had made with Dawn and Jennifer. He was the only man for the job. He contributed his huge skill to the look and style of a show that was entirely about style and look. Overhead shots and dream sequences involving puppets and liposuction were not the everyday contents of studio sitcoms, which usually just pointed three or four cameras from a fourth wall and hoped for the best. Their challenges here were meat and drink to Bob, and the crews he worked with always knew that they would be stretched but that the work would be hugely original and funny.

The actors also knew that he was going to let them give of their best, that they would be encouraged but not restricted, even if they could hear him shouting into the floor managers' ears something less than supremely complimentary. He also contributed lines and ideas, as we all did, to an always vivid rehearsal process. Perhaps his greatest skill was in allowing the artists to give of their best and giving them the confidence that no idea was too strange and no angle too tricky.

After Ab Fab he went on to make Spice World with the Spice Girls, which must have felt like leaving the parody for the real thing. Again, he brought humour and good looks to something that might otherwise have crashed and burned. He understood that not every show ever filmed was going to be huge, but that was not going to stop him making it look more than a cut above the rest. He will be sadly missed by us all.

Bob Spiers, film and television director: born Glasgow 27 September 1945; married (two daughters); died Widecombe, Devon 8 December 2008.

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Re: Bob Spiers
Reply #1 - Dec 15th, 2008, 10:15am
 
This is taken from The Times, December 15, 2008:

Bob Spiers: Bafta award-winning TV director

For most viewers, directors of television comedy are little more than a name flashing past on the end credits. Bob Spiers, however, deserves to be remembered as one of the best in the field, bringing to the job a special creativity that greatly enhanced a string of landmark shows.

His credits ranged from Dad’s Army to Fawlty Towers and A Bit of Fry and Laurie. He had a special rapport with Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders, two of the most successful comedians of the past twenty years. Spiers worked with them both as a duo, and on their separate projects.

Some of his finest work was on Saunders’s outrageously funny Absolutely Fabulous, starring Saunders, Joanna Lumley and June Whitfield. Spiers directed all the episodes from the beginning in 1992.

Spiers was modest about his contribution, declaring that he worked on instinct and had no idea what made a good comedy script, except that he knew one when he saw one. He also gave most of the credit to the writers: “It’s there in the scripts. I’m in safe hands. I simply have to bring it out.”

It was left to others to pinpoint Spiers’s qualities. The writer Howard Schuman, who worked with Spiers on the Channel 4 comedy drama, Up Line, said: “He’s incredibly visual. His camera moves. The editing, design and pace is impeccable.” Spiers himself conceded that the camera must be more than a passive observer: “It should push, move, participate.”

Jon Plowman, a former BBC head of comedy, said Spiers had a brilliant eye for the look of a show but “perhaps his greatest skill was in allowing artists to give their best and giving them the confidence that no idea was too strange and no angle too tricky”.

Born in Glasgow in 1945, Spiers moved to London as a teenager and attended Southgate College. Here he discovered a talent for acting that he later developed in amateur companies. He joined the BBC in 1970 and became an assistant floor manager, working on the Saturday variety series Seaside Special and with performers such as Cilla Black and Pan’s People.

But his main career would be in comedy. He had been a floor manager on the Home Guard sitcom, Dad’s Army, and moved up to become production assistant to the show’s co-writer and producer, David Croft. In this capacity he worked on Dad’s Army from the sixth series in 1973. By the final series, transmitted in 1977, he had been promoted to director, responsible for all but one of the six episodes.

Spiers directed other Croft sitcoms, such as It Ain’t Half Hot Mum, which starred Windsor Davies as a tough minded sergeant-major among a squad of army entertainers in a Far East setting, and Are You Being Served? — which gave John Inman his “I’m Free” catchphrase. In 1979 he was recruited for the second series of Fawlty Towers, starring John Cleese as the manic hotel proprietor. While most of the public credit went to the meticulous scripts by Cleese and Connie Booth, the pace and timing owed much to Spiers’s skilled input that won him a Bafta award.

In 1980 Spiers left the BBC staff to freelance. He became increasingly associated with more boisterous and anarchic humour of a new generation of comedians, notably those of The Goodies and The Comic Strip Presents, the standard-bearers for so-called alternative comedy, The Comic Strip regulars included French and Saunders and also Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson for whom Spiers directed episodes of their show, Bottom.

He became a regular collaborator on the French and Saunders sketch show, particularly relishing their parodies of pop stars and movies, and worked with French on the comedy-thriller series, Murder Most Horrid, in which she played a different character in each episode. But with Absolutely Fabulous, which derived from a French and Saunders sketch that Spiers had directed, he was at his peak and it brought him a second Bafta.

Joanna Lumley, along with Saunders, Julia Sawalha, Jane Horrocks and June Whitfield, made up the show’s all-female cast. Spiers was revealed as having a particular empathy with women. “He likes women,” Lumley said. “He likes women for what they are. Some directors don’t.”

Spiers was equally at home with shows, such as those featuring Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, which depended on narrowly worked wit rather than broad humour. He was the principal director and a strong influence on Steven Moffat’s ITV children’s drama, Press Gang, and directed Moffat’s later adult comedy, Joking Apart, which dealt with the painful aftermath of a divorce.

Spiers’s occasional cinema work included Spice World (1997), which was built around one of the biggest acts in pop music at the time, the Spice Girls. The film was derided by the critics but it was a lively and unpretentious piece that successfully tapped into the group’s huge fan base. In Hollywood Spiers made That Darn Cat for Disney but it was a poor remake of a much better 1965 film.

In 1990 he directed Ben Elton’s first stage play, Gasping, a satire on big business and the media, at the Theatre Royal Haymarket.

Spiers’ wife, Annie, who had a distinguished career in her own right as a makeup designer in film and television, died in 2007. He is survived by his two daughters.

Bob Spiers, television comedy director, was born on September 27, 1945. He died after a long illness on December 8, 2008, aged 63
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Re: Bob Spiers
Reply #2 - Dec 18th, 2008, 10:20am
 
This is taken from The Guardian:

Bob Spiers
Director of some of the best British TV comedy of the late 20th century
by Bob Chaundy
Thursday 18 December 2008


Bob Spiers, who has died of cancer aged 63, was one of Britain's foremost directors of television comedy. His credits are a roll-call of popular sitcoms from the 1970s onwards, from Dad's Army and Fawlty Towers to Absolutely Fabulous. He was twice a Bafta winner.

Born in Glasgow, Spiers was a national junior tennis champion before moving to London at the age of 13. He developed a love of acting at Southgate college, north London, and later became involved in youth theatre, touring Britain with various drama groups.

He joined the BBC as a junior in 1967. One of his favourite moments occurred early on while working as a broadcast assistant on Top of the Pops. He received a call from John Lennon, one of his heroes, demanding that Yoko Ono should be granted a spot on the programme to plug her new single. The request was turned down.

Spiers's creative talent was soon recognised and he was fast-tracked through vision-mixing, floor management and production assistant until he had learned all the skills required to be a director. He began with Seaside Special and comic dramas from David Croft and Jimmy Perry such as It Ain't Half Hot Mum and Dad's Army. He was then chosen to direct the second series of Fawlty Towers in 1979. Among the episodes under his charge were Waldorf Salad, Basil the Rat and Kipper and the Corpse.

The scripts, by John Cleese and Connie Booth, made great technical demands of the director, including continuous action sequences and inventive camera angles. Colleagues recall how draining the schedule was, yet Spiers had by then developed a reputation for acute concentration and the ability to make scenes appear more visually interesting. He won his first Bafta for Fawlty Towers.

He continued to produce series such as Are You Being Served? and The Goodies, whose zany brand of humour chimed with his own. He turned freelance in 1982, feeling that the BBC did not grant the same kudos to sitcom directors as those working on dramas or in film. The growth of the independent sector also offered creative opportunities, with less accompanying bureaucracy.

His friend Peter Richardson, the actor, writer and director, hired him to direct The Comic Strip Presents ... for Channel 4. By then, his marriage to Annie, a leading make-up artist, had failed. While on the set of one of the Comic Strip episodes, A Fistful of Travellers' Cheques, a spaghetti-western spoof, he met Sophie Richardson, Peter's sister, who would become his second wife.

From 1989 to 1993, Spiers directed the entire run of Press Gang, ITV's children's series about a youth newspaper, which was written by Steven Moffat. His collaboration with Moffat continued with Joking Apart.

At the same time he was lured back to the BBC to direct nine episodes of French and Saunders. By then, his reputation was that of a perfectionist. Crews loved working with him because he challenged them creatively, and brought out the best in them. French and Saunders led, via Murder Most Horrid, Bottom and A Bit of Fry and Laurie, to the Absolutely Fabulous series, for which Spiers directed every episode from 1992 to 2001. Jennifer Saunders regarded him as the best sitcom director, and one who never put style over content. She recalled how he would remove a tile from a set just to offer up another camera angle, and that his mental ability to determine camera sequences was so acute that he was once able to edit out a whole character from a scene without having to re-shoot. He won his second Bafta for Absolutely Fabulous in 1992.

Spiers's reputation spread to Hollywood, and in 1997 he was hired by Disney to direct the film That Darn Cat, starring Christina Ricci. He and Sophie took up residence in Nichols Canyon, California, where they counted Julia Roberts and Stevie Wonder among their neighbours.

His next film, in the same year, was Spice World: The Movie. He had not heard of the Spice Girls but Saunders advised him to take it on. When he was first introduced to them at a Los Angeles bar, Victoria Beckham, aka Posh Spice, told him that she wanted the group to become "as famous as washing powder". The film was panned, though Spiers received praise for the direction.

He made one more movie, Kevin of the North (2001), a comedy shot in Canada starring Skeet Ulrich, Leslie Nielsen and Rik Mayall.

Spiers's subsequent career was blighted, first by a drink problem and then by cancer. When told that he required a second round of chemotherapy, he decided to endure it in more pleasant surroundings, in the sun and by the sea. He knew a friendly hotel in Acapulco, Mexico, once owned by John Wayne, where he went to convalesce. But after six months with no recovery, he returned home to Devon.

Spiers was a private man who had few interests outside work, save for a love of Arsenal Football Club.

Annie died in 2007. He is survived by Sophie, his stepdaughter, Coral, and his daughter, Sienna.

• Bob Spiers, television and film director, born 27 September 1945; died 8 December 2008
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Re: Bob Spiers
Reply #3 - Jan 23rd, 2009, 10:17am
 
This is taken from the Daily Telegraph:

Bob Spiers
Director who worked on some of the BBC's best-loved comedies, including Dad's Army and Fawlty Towers
Last Updated: 6:57PM GMT 22 Jan 2009


Bob Spiers, who has died aged 63, was one of the BBC's most prolific situation comedy directors responsible for the second series of Fawlty Towers in 1979, as well as episodes of French and Saunders, Absolutely Fabulous and Dad's Army.

His work on Fawlty Towers earned him a Bafta award, and he won a second Bafta – and an American Emmy – for the fashion industry satire Absolutely Fabulous. The actress Joanna Lumley, who played Patsy in the show, observed that but for Spiers's expert direction, her Bollinger-swigging character "would never have glittered quite so brightly".

Credited with influencing the look of contemporary British television comedy during the 1990s, Spiers began his career in traditional light entertainment. His early credits included Dad's Army; The Goodies; It Ain't Half Hot, Mum; Are You Being Served? – and Fawlty Towers, after which he confessed himself baffled by criticism of the Andrew Sachs character, the Spanish waiter Manuel. He accused journalists of trumping up claims that Spaniards were offended in order to make a story. Far from being outraged, Spanish television bought the series and simply recast Manuel as an Italian.

Robert Alexander Spiers was born on September 27 1945 in Glasgow, where his father printed Scottish banknotes. He was an athletic boy and at 13 became Scottish junior tennis champion; when the family moved south, young Bob was educated at Enfield, but dropped out of his degree course in Chemical Engineering at Imperial College London after only a few months. He became an actor, appearing in productions at the Royal Court Theatre with Joan Plowright and supplementing his wages by working as a statistician for BBC audience research during the day.

In 1967 he moved into television production as an assistant floor manager, working on Doctor Who. In 1973, after his efforts on an episode of Dad's Army, the director David Croft promoted him to be production assistant, and from 1976 Spiers directed many of Croft's comedies, including episodes of It Ain't Half Hot, Mum, Are You Being Served? and the final series of Dad's Army.

In 1979 he fulfilled an ambition by directing the second series of the award-winning Fawlty Towers. Although he worried that it would not live up to the first, he won acclaim for his skill in realising John Cleese and Connie Booth's tightly-written scripts.

With the launch of Channel 4 in 1982 Spiers was to prove highly influential in the development of alternative television comedy. The channel's opening night featured his comedy The Comic Strip Presents... Five Go Mad In Dorset which established performers Adrian Edmondson, Peter Richardson, Rik Mayall, Jennifer Saunders and Dawn French, and introduced a fresh, biting style of comedy to television, shot not on video but on film. It was Spiers' experience on more traditional comedies that produced a visual style to appeal to a new generation.

He directed 15 episodes of French and Saunders at the BBC, including the one-off sketch that inspired the award-winning Absolutely Fabulous. Other credits from this time included the anarchic Bottom.

After working in television for nearly 25 years, Spiers turned his attention to film, and at the height of the popularity of The Spice Girls he was invited to direct their first and only film, despite insisting that (having been away in America) he had never heard of them before. Although Spiceworld: The Movie was a financial success, his fun-filled-style approach met with a muted critical response.

While much television comedy is shot to a formula, Spiers made the camera bob, dip and weave, refusing, as he himself noted, "to be a passive observer. It should move, push, participate."

Most of Spiers' best work was with women. "Bob likes women," recalled Joanna Lumley, who called him "His Bobness". "He likes women for what they are. Some directors don't." Spiers freely admitted the charge: "The girls take risks," he once explained.

Spiers himself remained unassuming. In an interview he said: "Think of the people I work with. It's there in the scripts. I'm in safe hands. I simply have to bring it out."

Bob Spiers, who died on December 8, married twice. In 1984 he was divorced from his first wife, Annie, a television make-up artist; she died in 2007. He remarried, in 1992, Sophie Richardson, a television producer, who survives him with their daughter.
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