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Monty Python’s long, not entirely serious history of hating each other

As Eric Idle’s recent gripes prove, members of the revered comedy troupe have spent more time feuding than working. But is it all a joke?

Monty Python might be one of Britain’s most beloved comedy acts, but, over the past few years, it has become as renowned for the in-fighting between its surviving members as it has for the television series and films that established its peerless reputation. While its most beloved alumnus, Sir Michael Palin, prepares to publish his next volume of diaries, and the ever-inventive Terry Gilliam may or may not be about to begin work on a new film, the other, more belligerent members Eric Idle and John Cleese are engaged in a war of words that shows no signs of coming to a close. 
In February this year, Idle took to social media to complain vociferously about the downsides – both artistic and commercial – of his involvement with Python, which began in 1969 and has continued to delight, and frustrate, both its members and fans ever since. Idle declared, apropos of a fan’s innocuous enquiry, that “I don’t know why people always assume we’re loaded. Python is a disaster. Spamalot made money 20 years ago. I have to work for my living. Not easy at this age.” 
Idle then went on to complain, “We own everything we ever made in Python and I never dreamed that at this age the income streams would tail off so disastrously. But I guess if you put a Gilliam child in as your manager you should not be so surprised. One Gilliam is bad enough. Two can take out any company.” For good measure, he attacked his erstwhile colleague John Cleese, saying “he bullied Jonesy [Terry Jones]. I always felt ashamed we did nothing”. He doubled down on this when someone asked whether Cleese was really a bully, “Totally. Still is.” He then revealed that he hadn’t seen Cleese in seven years. When another fan said “That makes me sad”, Idle replied: “Why. It makes me happy.”  
Cleese has now, belatedly, fought back. In response to Idle’s remark that “once they put Gilliam’s daughter in as manager and Cleese fires Jim Beach, well it’s over”, he called it “an invention” and clarified that “Jim, who was an old friend of mine from Cambridge days, became Python manager after the O2 show. About four years ago he suffered a bad stroke and subsequently resigned as our manager. His number two, Holly Gilliam, automatically took over as Python manager.” 
He had previously said of their current manager that “I have worked with Holly for the last 10 years, and I find her very efficient, clear-minded, hard-working, and pleasant to have dealings with.” Crucially, he went on to note that “Michael Palin has asked me to to make it clear that he shares this opinion. Terry Gilliam is also in agreement with this.” 
This is an inventionJim, who was an old friend of mine from Cambridge days, became Python manager after the O2 showAbout four years ago he suffered a bad stroke and subsequently resigned as our managerHis number 2, Holly Gilliam, automatically took over as Python manager https://t.co/SsucYmnXkQ
Over the past decades, the relationship between the members of Monty Python has oscillated between genuine friction, played out in public, and a kind of tongue-in-cheek silliness, in keeping with their distinctive brand of surreal humour, that makes it hard to know when a genuine row is going on and when one or other Pythons fancies being provocative for the sake of it. 
In his latest diaries, Palin writes in 2000 how he received an email from Idle after an attack on their friend George Harrison and notes, “[Idle added] the sort of friendly, conciliatory remarks that we used to exchange before the Python tour disagreements. The drama of the Friar Park attack has brought us closer again – as if acknowledging how trivial by comparison are our own differences – and perhaps also, how much we need our friends.” 
It is impossible to know whether there will be similar placatory emails going between Cleese and Idle today, perhaps with Palin and Gilliam on cc. Yet Python has always had a long legacy of rows and disagreements between its members. Here are some of the previous fallings-out between its talented but combustible members that may, or may not, have been wholly sincere. 
Monty Python was always made up of a series of writing partnerships rather than a coherent whole: Graham Chapman and Cleese wrote together, as did Michael Palin and Terry Jones, while Idle wrote individually. Terry Gilliam’s contributions were largely visual, rather than verbal. However, from the outset, there was a tension between the roles that Cleese and Chapman played within the group. Palin wrote in the published edition of his diaries The Python Years, dealing with the period 1969 to 1979, that because Cleese was higher-profile than the other members of Python – “John was a big name, one of the great new discoveries of the Sixties… the rest of us were journeymen scriptwriters”, he said in 1993 – he felt that he was in charge and therefore dominated the others. Hence Idle’s later claim that Terry Jones, in particular, was bullied by him. 
It may have been because of Cleese’s influence on the group that Chapman, an amicable and talented man – and also one of the first public figures in Britain to come out as gay – was allowed to remain in Python, given how heavy and destructive his drinking was. Palin wrote in his diary in 1969 that Chapman was “the high priest of hedonism”, and complained that “he is now concerned with his homosexual relationships and perpetuating the atmosphere of well-being which good food and drink bring. He doesn’t want to have to think too much about himself now, and above all he does not want to have to struggle. He seems to feel that, having stated his position, he now deserves the good life.” 
Of all the Pythons, the one who seemed (and seems) happiest with the life of a celebrity is Idle, who long since swapped rainy England for a life in California, and recently complained, of his diminished earnings, that “we still get something but not enough to keep me on the beaches”. 
Yet from the early days in Monty Python, there was a sense that the actor-writer was keeping his options open and refusing fully to commit to the group with the same intensity that his colleagues had done. Palin complained in his diary in 1970 that Idle alternated between lucrative scriptwriting for Ronnie Corbett and his supposed day job, claiming that Idle got away with it “for the simple reason that everyone had done the work for him on Monty Python”. 
This resentment only increased with time, and in 1971 Palin wrote, “The split between John and Eric and the rest of us has grown. John and Eric see Monty Python as a means to an end – money to buy freedom from work.” This was not an opinion shared by Jones, of whom Palin wrote “Terry is completely the opposite and feels that Python is an end in itself – work which he enjoys doing and keeps him from the dangerous world of leisure.” He noted “in between are Graham and myself.” 
Predictably, the continual disagreements over billing (and therefore money) began to lead to schisms between the Pythons after a few years. At the start of 1973, Cleese announced that, while he was prepared to work on a stage tour, he was no longer prepared to appear in the television series. As Idle later said, “It was on an Air Canada flight on the way to Toronto, when John turned to all of us and said ‘I want out.’ Why? I don’t know. He gets bored more easily than the rest of us. He’s a difficult man, not easy to be friendly with. He’s so funny because he never wanted to be liked. That gives him a certain fascinating, arrogant freedom.” 
Cleese refused to appear in the fourth series of the show, which only ran to six episodes, although he was credited as a writer on three of them. It may have been just as well for relations between the group, as he was arguing vitriolically with Jones – Palin noted in his diary that “At lunchtime, Terry had a shouting match with John, and the intensity of T’s outburst took even John by surprise. It was all about T feeling oppressed by John’s rather dismissive handling of any suggestion of Terry’s” – and general bad feeling meant that the group could no longer function in the way that they had done for the previous four and a half years. At the end of the year, Palin wrote, “1973 is the year which saw the break-up of the Python group. A freshness has gone, and 1974 will see just how we pick up the threads again.” 
Ironically, it transpired that the bad feeling between the members of the act led to two vast cinematic successes, in the form of 1975’s Monty Python and the Holy Grail and, even more so, the ever-controversial, ever-brilliant 1979’s Monty Python’s Life of Brian. Yet neither of these proved to be an easy sell. In the case of Holy Grail, the film was put together by private funding from rock acts such as Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin after no studios would invest in it – perhaps aware of the potential for fighting between its combustible members – and Chapman’s heavy drinking continued, leading to him forgetting his lines and often being unable to perform on set. 
Palin pithily summed up the situation in his diary in May 1974. “Graham shaking and quivering with suppressed neurotic rage… John is still tense and unrelaxed with people, which compounds his problems.” 
Out of tension comes creativity, and the film was a huge hit. Yet when Life of Brian was mooted a few years later, there were, again, severe disagreements. Cleese was angered by the group’s belief that Chapman was the right casting for the role of Brian, the man who is, notoriously, not the Messiah, and it did not help that Chapman himself was still drinking heavily during script meetings; Palin wrote that “He arrived at 10 quite ‘relaxed’ and has drunk gin throughout the morning. Everyone else is on the ball, but Graham can never find where we are in the script.” Eventually, Chapman abandoned drinking in December 1977, and played Brian entirely sober – a discipline which can be seen in his focused and hilarious performance. 
Monty Python sporadically reformed throughout the Eighties for benefit shows such as the Secret Policeman’s Ball and the much-acclaimed 1980 Live at the Hollywood Bowl performances, as well as the less successful 1983 film Monty Python’s Meaning of Life. Yet there was a sense that the momentum was running out behind them as a group rather than a series of individuals who could produce brilliant work separately, and occasionally together. It was noted that, when they were awarded the 1988 Bafta for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema, both Idle and Cleese were absent from the ceremony. 
Chapman, at the time, was suffering from cancer that would eventually kill him in October 1989, and his televised memorial service on December 3 became notable for two things: firstly, Monty Python’s members’ almost childish desire to say “f–k” during the service, and secondly Cleese’s eulogy, in which he (tongue in cheek) declared “I guess that we’re all thinking how sad it is that a man of such talent, of such capability for kindness, of such unusual intelligence, should now, so suddenly, be spirited away at the age of only forty-eight, before he’d achieved many of the things of which he was capable, and before he’d had enough fun. Well, I feel that I should say, nonsense. Good riddance to him, the freeloading bastard, I hope he fries!” It was irreverent and hilarious: the last gasp of Python united. Chapman, you suspect, would have loved it. 
By 1999, Monty Python no longer seemed to have a future as a group. Although they had united as a quintet the previous year in Aspen, to great acclaim, and had planned a lucrative thirtieth anniversary tour. But the idea was swiftly nixed by Gilliam, who said, according to Cleese, “he didn’t really want to do it, which is not what he said in the room. And then some weeks, months later, Michael decided he didn’t really want to do six or eight weeks, he really only wanted to do two. So trying to get everybody’s needs together has proved very difficult.” 
Gilliam, by then an acclaimed – if erratic – film director, commented “I can’t personally think of anything worse than getting up there and reciting that old stuff again.” An irritated Idle therefore refused to participate in the 1999 televised special Python Night on the BBC, featuring new sketches and material by the remaining Pythons, and it was widely regarded as a tired retread of former glories, rather than a particularly successful quasi-reunion in its own right. 
Idle had his greatest Python-related success in 2005 with Spamalot, the musical adaptation of Monty Python and the Holy Grail. It was an enormous hit on both Broadway and in the West End and continues to be revived to this day. Although the Pythons were initially supportive of the project, with Cleese serving as the recorded voice of God, and all of them appearing at the West End premiere, they offered their own candid opinions about the show. Gilliam dismissed it as “Python-lite” and says “it helps with the pension fund, and it helps keep Python alive… as much as we’d like to pull the plug on the whole thing it carries on”, and Jones alternated between saying that Spamalot was “terrific good fun” and complaining that “Spamalot is utterly pointless… regurgitating Python is not high on my list of priorities.” 
Palin was the most tactful of the quintet, saying “It’s a great show… it’s not ‘Python’ as we would have written it, but then none of us would get together and write a Python stage show… now we’re just proud to be associated with it, rather pathetically.” (In his diary, he pointedly refers to it as “Eric Idle’s Spamalot” rather than “Monty Python’s Spamalot”, although, ever-placatory, called it “pretty irresistible” in production.) Cleese said: “It’s the silliest thing I’ve ever seen and I think Eric did a great job.” 
Yet there were disagreements over money. In 2011, Idle said “I fired John Cleese – surgically removed him. It wasn’t mean – he’s had millions of dollars from it. He charges people a fortune for using his voice. He’s always been in financial crisis.” Cleese duly hit back, saying “I see Yoko Idle’s been moaning (again), about the royalties he had to pay the other Pythons for Spamalot. Apparently he paid me ‘millions’. Actual rough figures last time we checked – Yoko Idle $13m (£8.49m), Michael Palin $1.1m (£700,000), the others just under a million each… (around £650,000).” Once again, money became the defining cause behind a Python row. 
One unexpected but unpleasant side-effect of the Spamalot musical was that the group were sued for royalties by the producer Mark Forstater, who produced the Holy Grail film and successfully demanded £800,000 in unpaid earnings. As a result of this, Monty Python reunited for a series of 10 sold-out shows at the 02 in July 2014, named Monty Python Live (Mostly). They met with great acclaim from the hundreds of thousands of fans who saw the shows, but although Python were offered an enormous sum to tour worldwide afterwards – up to £20 million, according to reports – they turned down the opportunity, as, according to Idle, “When you get old, grumpy old men, you go ‘I don’t care how much bloody money, I’m not going out, I’m staying home.’” 
Palin confirmed in 2018 that there would no longer be any Python reunions. “All I want to do is continue doing new stuff,” he said. “The past is great but the future is more interesting to me at the moment.” He also confessed that a world tour would have “been a good way of making money but honestly, we’d have got bored stiff.” 
He was candid about their reasons for reforming in 2014 – “It came to a point where certain people needed large amounts of money fairly quickly. And within, I should think, about sort of five and a half seconds, we’d all agreed. Having been disagreeing for the last, sort of, 15 years!” 
This piece was first published in February 2024 and has been updated with the latest information
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