Early Channel 4 sitcom unearthed after almost 40 years | Crowdfunding drive to get wordless comedy The Optimist released on DVD

Early Channel 4 sitcom unearthed after almost 40 years

Crowdfunding drive to get wordless comedy The Optimist released on DVD

One of the first sitcoms made for Channel 4 could finally see the light of day again after almost 40 years

The Optimist starred comedian and original Spitting Image impersonator Enn Reitel as Nigel, everyday man who finds himself in extraordinary situations such as a Wild West gunfight, entering a mini Grand Prix, dancing in Swan Lake and international espionage.

Thirteen dialogue-free episodes were aired filmed in Mexico, America and the UK which aired on Channel 4 from April 1983 – five months after the broadcaster first took to the air – with the second series in 1985.

However, they have now been unearthed and a crowdfunding drive is under way to raised the £6,500 needed to digitally restore each episode bring out a two-DVD set  of all the episodes

Comedy fan Robert Brown, who is behind the project, said: ‘Very few people ever saw the series when it was first broadcast, as Channel 4's early viewing figures were so low, but we're sure people will enjoy watching this classic British comedy again and again.’

The virtually silent films came about five-years before  Mr Bean did the same thing – and Rowan Atkinson was originally lined up to play the lead role, as writer Richard Sparks reveals in the article below.

Guest stars in the series included  Martin Kove (Cobra Kai), Tracy Scoggins (Babylon 5)  and Olympic swimmer Sharron Davies.

Channel 4's first sitcom to make it to air was No Problem, created by the Black Theatre Co-operative, which aired in January 1983.  But Sparks says The Optimist was the first to be commissioned.

Here is a trailer:

The Origins of The Optimist
by Richard Sparks

I wrote the pilot, on spec, in 1979 or 1980.  I had taken up windsurfing and loved it – and, as with all beginners, there was a lot of comedy involved in learning how to do it.  I thought it would make a great short silent film.

It was originally titled The Wind, the Surf and the Moron.  I wrote it with Rowan Atkinson in mind, as we had done a revue together at the Hampstead Theatre in 1978, and I’d seen how incredible he was at physical comedy, so subject and actor naturally merged in my mind.  I wrote the Schoolmaster  sketch for Rowan, for that show. 

A year later I got a call from Rowan saying that John Cleese and Martin Lewis, the producers, had seen him perform it, and had asked him to do it in The Secret Policeman's Ball, which they were getting off the ground.  That launched Rowan to stardom. 

By the time Robert Sidaway found the script, and got The Optimist off the ground as a series, Rowan was famous, and busy.  He was also under contract to Not The Nine O'Clock News, (as was I, as one of the freelance writers), so was unavailable.  Robert and I thought the concept would make a good action-comedy series, in contrast to the more conventional sitcoms of the day.  We shot the pilot episode in Cabo San Lucas in August 1981, on 35mm.  Robert sold it to Channel 4, and I threw myself into writing the other six scripts for the first season, which we shot in the Los Angeles area the following summer.

It was my idea to cast Enn Reitel.  I had seen him in The Rivals at the Greenwich Theatre, playing Bob Acres.  He was amazing.  You couldn't take your eyes off him.  Enn was pretty much an unknown, so I had to sell him hard to Peter Ellis, the director, who, naturally, wanted a say in the casting.  I drove Peter up to York where Enn was in a play (Enn will remember the details.  It may even have been Leeds).  Peter liked what he saw, so we went backstage and introduced ourselves after the play.  I did not know either of them before the pilot was in pre-production.  Peter was hired by Robert.

For me, the great irony about The Optimist is that we cast one of our great impersonators and voice actors in a silent comedy.  I had no idea of Enn’s vocal talents until we were in Cabo, and he'd start doing Cary Grant or Michael Caine or Bogart or many others at mealtimes.  He kept us all entertained throughout the shoots.  I later introduced Enn to the producer John Lloyd, who used him a lot for voices on Spitting Image.

The Optimist was the first half-hour comedy commissioned by Channel Four.

Published: 4 Nov 2021

We see you are using AdBlocker software. Chortle relies on advertisers to fund this website so it’s free for you, so we would ask that you disable it for this site. Our ads are non-intrusive and relevant. Help keep Chortle viable.