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Men Behaving Badly

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Classic British sitcom written by Simon Nye, very loosely adapted from a not-particularly-successful novel he wrote in the late 80s. The main cast consists of Martin Clunes as Gary, Caroline Quentin as Dorothy and Leslie Ash as Deborah; the first season had Harry Enfield playing Dermot as secondary lead, while all the subsequent ones replaced him with Neil Morrissey as Tony. It's generally acknowledged that this second season was the moment when the showgrew its beard. There are several reasons for this - Tony was a more interesting character than Dermot, the show moved from ITV toBBC 1 and the lack of adverts meant that Nye had a few more minutes to play with, and it hit a moment of zeitgeist as the late 80s/early 90s New Man was being brushed aside by a resurgence of laddish masculinity.

Along withHave I Got News for You, it is probably the single most-referenced show title for British newspaper headline writers and has been shamelessly ripped off for the titles of countless documentaries.

The show lasted six seasons, with a follow-up trilogy of three extra-long episodes.

Came sixteenth inBritains Best Sitcom.


Tropes used inMen Behaving Badly include:
  • Adaptation Distillation: The US version lasted roughly thirty seconds.
  • All Men Are Perverts: Well, Gary and Tony without question but there are so many variations that they're worth mentioning too. Averted with minor characters like Ken and Les, inverted every so often with Deborah and Dorothy but the big inversion is with George; he and his wife,Marjorie, have a jar in which they must put 10p every time one of them has an unfaithful thought. In his several decades of marriage, George has only blown 50p while Marjorie has spent £2386.

George: ...Sometimes I feel I should say something, but ithas paid for three caravanning holidays.

  • Beard of Evil: A variation, Tony grows a moustache as part of his transformation into a boring postman in the last episode, and shaves it off again at the end when he returns to normal.
  • Cardboard Pal: When Tony and Gary have fallen out, Gary makes a fake Tony out of a sex doll and Tony's clothes so they can continue having their lager-fuelled conversations on the sofa.
  • Casanova: Tony, until he falls for Deborah, having slept with fifty women and at one point having three girlfriends at once. Gary wants to be one, but is more of aCasanova Wannabe.
  • Catch Phrase: In the script book, Simon Nye grumbles that he was never able to come up with a good one, his attempts including Tony's "Sod you, then" and "I feel like a king".
  • Christmas Special: Interpolated Dorothy's idyllic-perfect-Christmas fantasyImagine Spot with the grittier reality.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Ken. Simon Nye notes he was written as an over-promoted, incompetentPointy-Haired Boss, but John Thompson played him as being borderline mentally ill.
  • Continuity Nod: Quite a few in the episode "Sofa", all of them in flashbacks. Gary having shorter hair, teenage Tony having longer hair, Gary wearing "the suit" on one of his three unsuccessful dates and Gary wearing his trousers on his head when meeting Dorothy for the first time.
  • The Couch: Or rather sofa.
  • Crazy Jealous Guy: Played for laughs with Tony over Debra
  • Directionless Driver: Gary navigating in "Cardigan".

Gary: Hold on, this is a map ofDieppe!

  • Dirty Coward: Gary in the thematically titled episode "Cowardice". After failing to stand up for Dorothy to a road-rager, he hires a company to send an actor to insult her in the bar and he can then pretend to beat up to regain his image. However,Hilarity Ensues when anactual thug corresponding to the description insults, Dorothy and Gary manages to beat him up without realizing he's not the actor.
  • Embarrassing Nickname: In the last episode, all the postmen have nicknames - Tony's is "Nobby No-Mates". Another has one produced by a chain of logical connections:

Tony: He's been bitten by so many dogs, they call him Costello.
Gary: Er... why?
Tony: Abbott and Costello. Russ Abbott. Russ. Jack Russell, little dog.

  • Friend Vs Lover: The central focus of the show. One episode uses it as the title - "Your Mate y Your Bird".
  • The Ghost: Clive, "Gary's Only Other Friend". Often referred to, but never seen save for a brief glimpse in "Wedding" (where he's played by the writer Simon Nye in a cameo).
    • Also, George's wife Marjorie.
  • Gilligan Cut: Averted due to Simon Nye disliking them, save for a single example in the episode "The Good Pub Guide".
  • Ho Yay: There always seemed to besomething between Tony and Gary, for all they talked about girls.Word of Godconfirms it saying "Men Behaving Badly was about a same-sex relationship. Everyone latched on to the lad thing, but to me there was always a significant homoerotic content in the relationship between Gary and Tony. You always got the impression that they'd rather be left alone together, but that was something that they could never admit to themselves."
    • When Gary is soon to be married (later called off):

Tony: Gary...ifI was a girl...with a girl's bottom and everything... would you marry me?
Gary:(stares at him for a moment in an awkward silence, then answers instantly): Course mate!
Tony: Cheers mate!

  • I Coulda Been a Contender: Meta version: writer Simon Nye grumbled in the published script book that he inadvertently inventedThe Royle Family ahead of its time with the episode "Watching TV".
  • Inherently Funny Words: Simon Nye thought this about words such as "shed" and "cheese", inserting them wherever he could. Also, the names of the foreign beers in "The Good Pub Guide":

Gary: What's this Indonesian one called?
Tony: Er..."Binky".
Gary: It's not as good as Sod, but it's better than that Russian one, what was it?
Tony: Er..."Plop".

  • Jerkass: All of the main characters have their moments. Dorothy being the most prolific.
  • Medium Awareness: In "Sofa", Gary and Tony seem to be very aware of the flashbacks and knowingly trigger them by looking upwards towards the ceiling.
  • My Local: The Crown.
  • Non Sequitur: One of the main sources of humor.

(Gary and Tony have been discussing Dorothy's new boyfriend Jamie
Tony: What a bastard
Gary: Who, Jamie? Yeah!
Tony: No
Gary: My mate Clive? Yeah!
Tony: No
Gary: Les?
Tony: No - Tony Blackburn!

  • Porn Stash: At least three separate episodes (and possibly more):
    • Once in Season 4 when Tony's girlfriend dumps him when she finds it. The episode is evencalled"Pornography".
    • Once in the "Last Orders" trilogy where Gary and Dorothy are trying for a baby and Gary trying to overcome his impotence when trying to perform on demand is used as an excuse to "get a picture of the whole genre."
    • In the last episode, Dorothy, probably in athrowback to the Season 4 episode, finds Tony's old stash. Then, in the absolutely last scene...

Dorothy (to her newborn baby): This is Tony... you're going to have his old room where he's had lots of adventures... most of them involvingRazzle magazine!

Gary: I asked Dorothy to dress up as(sniggers)a nurse.
Tony: ...Sheisa nurse.
Gary: ...Yeah, it didn't work really. And she asked me to dress up as a farmer and come and rescue her.
Tony: ...Are you sure she didn't say "fireman"?
Gary: ...Yes, she did actually. Quite embarrassing really.I've still got the smock...

  • Stalker with a Crush: Tony towards Deborah.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Gary towards George and Anthea.
    • Dorothy towards Gary and Tony.
      • Deborah towards Gary and Tony.
        • Well, ANYONE towards Gary and Tony.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Averted when Ken replaced Les as the landlord of the Crown; they devoted an episode to the shift, and Ken was written as a very different character.
  • Terrible Interviewees Montage: In the first episode of the second series, where Gary's looking for a new flatmate. The interviewees include an incomprehensible Geordie, a catatonic man (played by writer Simon Nye) and a seemingly normal man who turns out to have a disturbing fetish.
  • The Unfair Sex: Diminished in the later series' but very frequent early on. One particular episode has Tony mending the fence in the back garden three times and Gary fetching something from the chemist to cure Dorothy's indigestion twice --in the middle of the night in their pajamas -- while the girls ignore their partners' devotion and sit on Deborah's bed to discuss how the prospect of marrying an elderly millionaire is looking more and more attractive.
  • Unwanted Glasses Plot: Not only does Tony refuse to wear them, due to mockery from everyone else, but he has equally huge problems with contact lenses. In the end, he simply decides to go without.
  • Waxing Lyrical: When Tony is persuading Gary he should get back together with Dorothy.
  • Weirdness Censor: Gary's office workers George and Anthea in the last episode. "No, I can't see that happening", constantly repeated when he tells them the office is closing down, in a faintly creepy, unthinking way.
The best British situation comedies as voted by BBC viewers in 2004
  1. Only Fools and Horses
  2. Blackadder
  3. The Vicar of Dibley
  4. Dad's Army
  5. Fawlty Towers
  6. Yes Minister
  7. Porridge
  8. Open All Hours
  9. The Good Life
  10. One Foot in the Grave
  11. Father Ted
  12. Keeping Up Appearances
  13. 'Allo 'Allo!
  14. Last of the Summer Wine
  15. Steptoe and Son
  16. Men Behaving Badly
  17. Absolutely Fabulous
  18. Red Dwarf
  19. The Royle Family
  20. Are You Being Served?
  21. To the Manor Born
  22. Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em
  23. The Likely Lads
  24. My Family
  25. The Office
  26. Drop the Dead Donkey
  27. Rising Damp
  28. dinnerladies
  29. As Time Goes By
  30. Hancock's Half Hour
  31. The Young Ones
  32. Till Death Us Do Part
  33. Butterflies
  34. The Thin Blue Line
  35. The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin
  36. Phoenix Nights
  37. Waiting for God
  38. Birds of a Feather
  39. Bread
  40. Hi-de-Hi!
  41. The League of Gentlemen
  42. I'm Alan Partridge
  43. Just Good Friends
  44. 2point4 Children
  45. Bottom
  46. It Ain't Half Hot, Mum
  47. The Brittas Empire
  48. Gimme Gimme Gimme
  49. Rab C. Nesbitt
  50. Goodnight Sweetheart
  51. Up Pompeii!
  52. Ever Decreasing Circles
  53. On the Buses
  54. Coupling
  55. George and Mildred
  56. A Fine Romance
  57. Citizen Smith
  58. Black Books
  59. The Liver Birds
  60. Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps
  61. The New Statesman
  62. Sykes
  63. Please Sir!
  64. Dear John
  65. Barbara
  66. Spaced
  67. Bless this House
  68. Love Thy Neighbour
  69. Man About the House
  70. Desmond's
  71. Duty Free
  72. All Gas and Gaiters
  73. Happy Ever After/Terry & June
  74. Only When I Laugh
  75. Brass
  76. The Rag Trade
  77. Sorry
  78. Kiss Me Kate
  79. Doctor in the House
  80. I Didn't Know You Cared
  81. Shelley
  82. Nearest and Dearest
  83. Fresh Fields
  84. The Army Game
  85. Robin's Nest
  86. The Dustbinmen
  87. Whoops Apocalypse
  88. My Wife Next Door
  89. Never the Twain
  90. Nightingales
  91. Early Doors
  92. Agony
  93. The Lovers
  94. Father Dear Father
  95. Hot Metal
  96. And Mother Makes...
  97. Life With the Lyons
  98. Marriage Lines
  99. A Sharp Intake of Breath
  100. No Problem
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