Graham Chapman
- 48 years old
- Male
- Born Jan 08, 1941
- Died Oct 04, 1989
- Maidstone, United Kingdom
About
BIOGRAPHY
Graham Chapman was born on January 1941 in Leicester, in the middle of an air raid. Chapman�s father was a policeman and as a result, Graham (and older brother John) moved around the country to where their father�s postings took them. Although as a consequence they both attended many different schools, it seems that the one that provided the most influence to Graham was Melton Mowbray Grammar. It was here that Graham picked up the theatrical bug, becoming involved in the regular Gilbert and Sullivan, Shakespeare and revue shows the school held. Around this time, Chapman saw a clip of a Footlights show on television and decided that he wanted to go to Cambridge. He also, like most of the other Pythons, discovered The Goons, which was to so influence their work. Encouraged by his headmaster Mr. Brewster, Chapman applied to Cambridge, and in 1959 without much trouble was admitted to Emmanuel College to read medicine. Immediately Chapman set about joining the Footlights. However, his first contact with them, at the Fresher's Fair was a dismal failure after being turned down for membership by the club secretary (a Mr. David Frost). Not disheartened, Chapman teamed up with fellow student Anthony Branch to write their own �smoker� (�unofficial� reviews that acted as a preliminary audition for those aspiring to Footlights membership). Chapman and Branch invited the Footlights committee, and impressed them enough to be elected to audition, and from there to be admitted as members. John Cleese (who had taken a year to get into Footlights) also attended the audition. The two met up afterwards in a coffee shop, and a new writing partnership was formed. n 1962, Chapman and Cleese wrote and performed in the revue Double Take (alongside amongst other Humphrey Barclay, Tim Brooke-Taylor and Miriam Magoyles, and directed by a young Trevor Nunn). Some of the material they wrote for this show as later re-used for I�m Sorry I�ll Read That Again and Not The 1948 Show. A young Graham Chapman That summer Chapman moved to London to continue his studies as a trainee doctor. He still managed to perform in cabaret, teaming up with future Spitting Image co-creator Tony Hendra (and Double Take veteran). In 1963 Chapman was offered a part in the revue show A Clump of Plinths in the West End (now re-named Cambridge Circus), after another member of the cast dropped out. Chapman would stay with the show for three months. Then he was offered a choice � continue with Cambridge Circus on its tour of New Zealand, or carry on with his medical training. Chapman eventually managed to do both by negotiating a year off from college, and went to New Zealand (and also eventually to Broadway). After a year of touring, he returned to London to complete his training. Upon graduation, Chapman decided to continue with his new show business career rather than his medical one (in part because doing the required years residency would have been financially crippling). Along with John Cleese, Chapman quickly got a job writing for Marty Feldman�s show Marty, as well as penning some episodes of the Doctor series (no doubt Chapman�s medical training coming in handy), Ronnie Corbett�s series Look Here Now, gags for The Petula Clark Show and a film entitled The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer. From here, Chapman was recruited into the writing team for The Frost Report, alongside fellow Pythons Eric Idle, Michael Palin and Terry Jones. Then a man called Barry Took came along, assembled 6 comedy writers and comedy history was made� All throughout this time, Chapman struggled with the problem of alcoholism, which had steadily escalated since his time at Cambridge. By the time of filming Monty Python and The Holy Grail, it was so bad that it sometimes affected his performances, and that if he went without drinking for any length of time he would go into withdrawal. (Although it had to be said that Chapman�s drinking did help avert a mutiny on set.Because of the conditions everyone was filming in at the time - cold and wet, everyone was getting so miserable they started threatening to leave. At this point Chapman bought everyone a drink in the local pub and led them in a rousing singsong, thus reuniting the team spirit). One of Chapman�s greatest supports during this period was his long-term partner David Sherlock (who was also joint guardian of Chapman�s adopted son John Tomiczek). Chapman had been a practising homosexual since his mid-twenties, and embraced his sexuality with vigorously, becoming a founder member of Gay News and an active campaigner for gay rights. In 1977 Chapman (with frankly superhuman effort) gave up drinking almost overnight. Even without the drink, Chapman�s humour was always the most surreal of any of the Pythons � after all who else would turn up to a speaking engagement dressed as a giant carrot, and stand in silence for 10 minutes before leaving again? Still, his next Python role, in The Life of Brian, could perhaps be considered the peak of his career. Post-Python Unlike the rest of the Python tem, Chapman did not move on to anything even half as successful. His only solo project, the film Yellowbeard, was a dismal failure. The only real post-Python success came in America and Australia, on lecture tours formed out of the question and answer sessions he took on in Chicago plugging his autobiography Liar�s Autobiography. In November 1988, Chapman went to see his GP about growths on his tonsils and was quickly diagnosed with throat cancer. This swiftly spread to his spine. Despite prolonged and painful treatment, Chapman continued working, appearing in the Python compilation Parrot Sketch Not Included. In September 1989, the cancer was declared incurable and two months later on October 4, he died, Michael Palin and John Cleese by his side. Yellowbeard film poster Yellowbeard Publicity Poster The rest of the Python team decided to stay away from his funeral, to avoid it becoming a media circus and to give Chapman�s family some privacy (although they sent a wreath in the shape of the famous Python foot, with the message �To Graham from the other Pythons. Stop us if we�re getting too silly�). Instead they held a memorial service two months later in St Bart�s Hospital Great Hall, with choruses of �Always Look On The Bright Side of Life� and Chapman�s favourite �Jelusarem� (the Chinese version of Jerusalem, reading "� Bling me my speal, oh crowds unford. Bling me my chaliots of file�", and with John Cleese�s address including the immortal words �Graham Chapman is no more. He has gone to meet his maker. He has run down the curtain and join the choir invisible� (Cleese was also the first person to say �fuck� at a memorial service). Eric Idle, choking back tears, also said of Chapman that he had thought that Michael Palin talked too much and had died rather than listen to him any more. It was a send-off appropriate for a man, who more than any other Python, lived the lunacy that the show depicted.

My memory
luisa bass Jun 02, 2010
Love you graham!
Memory
Agata Jaszek Apr 14, 2008
My Memory
Dana Oshiro Dec 03, 2007
My Memory
Tia Marie Nov 27, 2007