TRENDINGThe richness of characterisation, and indeed the number of vivid characters, leaves most other sitcoms looking sparse and under-populated.
Like most British comedy writers, I was already a fan of John’s when I first met him in 1989, on the set of my new comedy Birds Of A Feather.
The cast of Rock & Chips, Sullivan’s prequel to Only Fools And Horses, starring Kellie Bright as Joan Trotter and James Buckley (second left) as the young Del Boy
My co-writer Laurence Marks and I hit it off with him immediately, partly because our comedy sensibilities were very similar; we were all from modest backgrounds, and our scripts were mostly about working-class people trying to deal with the brickbats and pitfalls of everyday life.
It all started for John when a friend of his, Paul Saunders, showed him a newspaper article about how much money comedy legend Johnny Speight had earned for writing Till Death Us Do Part. The pair set about producing a comedy script set in a gentlemen’s convenience.
The BBC were unconvinced by this offering, but John — though not Paul — enjoyed the writing process enough to want to continue, later hatching an idea for a comedy series about a would-be South London communist revolutionary, Wolfie Smith.
When Citizen Smith, starring Robert Lindsay, hit the screens, John became an ‘overnight success’. It had taken him 15 years to achieve this. John’s perseverance is spoken of with awe when comedy writers gather, for in 1974 he managed to wangle a job as a scene shifter, moving furniture for the BBC.
His plan was to get inside the Corporation, where he could slip his scripts into the hands of likely performers and producers.
Though he had been instructed not to ‘bother’ people with his efforts, he ended up showing his sketches to Ronnie Barker, who offered him work on The Two Ronnies. He was then commissioned to write Citizen Smith, and it ran for four successful years.
Wolfie’s rallying cry ‘Power to the People’ was the first of many brilliant catchphrases which John created. He had an extraordinary facility for catchphrases, which I know are incredibly difficult to invent. Indeed, I’ve co-written a dozen comedy shows and haven’t managed to create a single one which has stuck in the collective consciousness — while he spawned a dozen.
Great catch phrases are founded in great characters, and it was Del Boy’s mixture of cockiness and clumsy aspiration that gave birth to so many of his classics, from ‘Lovely Jubbly’ (which became an advertising slogan for a frozen drink) and ‘Rodney, You Plonker’, to his brilliant misuse of French, with ‘It’s not goodbye, it’s bonjour’ and ‘Mange tout, mange tout’ — which Del apparently thought meant ‘my pleasure’.
Despite Del Boy’s linguistic disasters, we laugh with him, not at him, for we feel for all of John’s characters, even the intellectually challenged Trigger.
However, when the first series of Only Fools And Horses was transmitted, the reviews were lukewarm, and the ratings, averaging just over seven million, were nothing to write home about. (Today, a comedy show attracting that sort of audience would be considered a massive hit.)
Classic: Sir David Jason as Del Boy (centre), Nicholas Lyndhurst as Rodney (right) and Lennard Pearce as Grandad in Only Fools And Horses
In those days, the BBC would give a sitcom a second or even third chance to hit its stride, and the show was re-ordered after the first series. But the second, in 1982, had to compete for the public’s attention with the Falklands War.
Again, viewing figures were unimpressive. But when the series was repeated in the summer, suddenly the viewing public was on Del Boy Trotter’s wave-length, and the show became a copper-bottomed hit.
What’s true of Only Fools And Horses is true of John Sullivan’s other work. For as well as writing every episode of Only Fools, John found time to create further hits, such as Just Good Friends — the story of Penny and Vince, the man who jilted her at the altar (starring Jan Francis and Paul Nicholas) — and Dear John, a bittersweet series about the lonely misfits who meet at the 1-2-1 singles club.
John Sullivan’s greatest talent was to create characters that appeal to us viewers — and move us. Del Boy was a spiv, Rodney was a loser and Vince was a cad. Yet through all John’s characters and comic situations flows a strong tide of warmth and love.
His characters truly care about each other. For all his teasing, Del Boy would have died for Rodney, and in one memorable episode took a serious beating to defend his younger brother.
Much of today’s TV comedy aims for irony and ends up snide and charmless. Shows such as The Office and Extras were succesful because they were unique, but now everyone wants to make pseudo-documentaries without the talent of Stephen Merchant and Ricky Gervais, and the resulting shows just end up unkind.
John Sullivan’s work was full of genuine affection — an affection matched by the warmth which struck a chord with the British public and which is so tragically lacking in shows created today.