Now this was exceptional! I have always loved the Monty Python boys, and their work, but if hard pressed I would usually declare myself a Michael Palin girl. Palin's diaries of the Python years, by the way, are a great read as well.
But I may have to rethink my loyalty now as I come to understand how much of their truly great material was written by Idle. I had thought that more of it was a join effort, but a lot of my favorites, and a good chunk of the songs, were written by Idle, including both the titular Always Look On the Bright Side of Life, as well as The Lumberjack song. He's also the genius behind one of my favorite comedies as a youth: Nuns on the Run. (If you have not seen Nuns on the Run, starring Idle and Robbie "Hagrid" Coltrane as mobsters hiding in a convent, TREAT YO SELF.)
That's not to say that he's bragging. Oh, no, he's quite matter-of-fact as he recounts how the various songs and skits came about, how he came to write Spamalot (which was also almost entirely him), and other things. He's also had the MOST INSANE LIFE in that, almost by random chance, he has become friends with some of the most astonishing people. George Harrison was his dearest friend from their meeting at the premiere of Holy Grail until George's death. Robin Williams, Steve Martin, Joni Mitchell, Keith Moon, Harry Nilsson, Dan Ackroyd. His memories, his anecdotes, are absolutely a who's-who of comedians, actors, and musicians! He got Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford drunk on Tunisian alcohol he discovered during the filming of Life of Brian, and they are, according to him, still visibly drunk in the scene where they arrive at Cloud City to meet Lando Calrissian! Mick Jagger called him up one year as he was about to leave for Barbados for Christmas and asked if he could come along so that the Idles could "hide" Mick and Jerry Hall, whom Mick had just seduced away from an enraged Brian Ferry!
Basically, it's everything you could want from a celebrity tell all, and yet LOVELY. I can only think of one story that is unflattering to anyone (*cough*Deeprak Chopra is a prat*cough*). Instead Idle writes with love, with kindness, with admiration, and above all with humor, about the people and events that have shaped his life. He freely admits to his own mistakes, he brushes aside his own jealousies and frustrations in favor of telling the story that will make the reader smile, laugh, and even tear up. (I have never cared one way or the other about George Harrison, but I was ugly crying at the gym over his tribute to him.)
Absolutely a must-read for comedy fans, Python fans, or just celeb bio fans!