Mr. Chigger: Excuse me, I saw your advertisement for
flying lessons and I'd like to make an application.
Secretary: Appointment?
Mr. Chigger: Yes, yes.
Secretary: Certainly. Would you come this way, please.
(She gets up, clutching a file and trips off in a typical
efficient secretary's walk. Mr. Chigger follows. Cut to a river. She
goes straight in without looking to right or left, as if she does
this routine as a matter of course. Mr. Chigger follows. Halfway
across the river they pass a couple of business executives hurrying
in the opposite direction.)
Secretary: Morning, Mr. Jones, Mr. Barnes.
(Cut to a forest. They come past towards camera, passing a tea
trolley on the way with a tea lady and a couple of men round it.)
Secretary: Morning Mrs. Wills.
Mrs. Wills: Morning, luv.
(Arty shot. Skyline of a short sharp hill, as in Bergman 's
'Seventh Seal'. They come in frame right and up and over, passing
two men and exchanging 'Good mornings '. Cut to seashore. Tripping
along, they pass another executive.)
Executive: Take this to Marketing, would you.
(They disappear into a cave. We hear Footsteps and a heavy
door opening.)
Secretary's Voice: Just follow me.
Mr. Chigger's Voice: Oh thank you.
(Cut to a shopping street. Camera pans in close-up across road
surface.)
Secretary's Voice: Oh, be careful.
Mr. Chigger's Voice: Yes, nearly tripped.
Secretary's Voice: Be there soon.
Mr. Chigger's Voice: Good. It's a long way, isn't it?
Secretary's Voice: Oh, get hold of that - watch it.
Voice: Morning.
Secretary's Voice: Morning. Upstairs. Be careful, it's
very steep. Almost there.
(Camera reaches a GPO tent in middle of road.)
Voice: Morning.
Secretary: Morning. (they emerge from the tent)
Will you come this way, please. (cut to interior office, another
identical secretary at the desk) In here, please.
Mr. Chigger: Thank you. (he enters and first secretary
trips off he approaches the second secretary) Hello, I saw your
advertisement for flying lessons and I'd like to make an
appointment.
Second Secretary: Well, Mr. Anemone's on the phone at the
moment, but I'm sure he won't mind if you go on in. Through here.
Mr. Chigger: Thank you.
(He goes through door. Mr. Anemone is suspended by a wire
about nine feet off the ground. He is on the telephone.)
Mr. Anemone: Ah, won't be a moment. Make yourself at home.
(into phone) No, no, well look, you can ask Mr. Maudling but
I'm sure he'll never agree. Not for fifty shillings ... no... no.
Bye-bye Gordon. Bye-bye. Oh dear. Bye-bye. (he throws receiver at
telephone but misses) Missed. Now Mr. er...
Mr. Chigger: Chigger.
Mr. Anemone: Mr. Chigger. So, you want to learn to fly.
Mr. Chigger: Yes.
Mr. Anemone: Right, well, up on the table, arms out,
fingers together, knees bent...
Mr. Chigger: No, no, no.
Mr. Anemone: (very loudly) Up on the table! (Mr.
Chigger gets on the table) Arms out, fingers together, knees
bent, now, head well forward. Now, flap your arms. Go on, flap,
faster... faster... faster... faster, faster, faster, faster - now
jump! (Mr. Chigger jumps and lands on the floor) Rotten.
Rotten. You're no bloody use at all. You're an utter bloody
wash-out. You make me sick, you weed!
Mr. Chigger: Now look here...
Mr. Anemone: All right, all right. I'll give you one more
chance, get on the table...
Mr. Chigger: Look, I came here to learn how to fly an
aeroplane.
Mr. Anemone: A what?
Mr. Chigger: I came here to learn how to fly an aeroplane.
Mr. Anemone: (sarcastically) Oh, 'an aeroplane'.
Oh, I say, we are grand, aren't we? (imitation posh accent)
'Oh, oh, no more buttered scones for me, mater. I'm off to play the
grand piano'. 'Pardon me while I fly my aeroplane.' Now get on the
table!
Mr. Chigger: Look. No one in the history of the world has
ever been able to fly like that.
Mr. Anemone: Oh, I suppose mater told you that while you
were out riding. Well, if people can't fly what am I doing up here?
Mr. Chigger: You're on a wire.
Mr. Anemone: Oh, a wire. I'm on a wire, am I?
Mr. Chigger: Of course you're on a bloody wire.
Mr. Anemone: I am not on a wire. I am flying.
Mr. Chigger: You're on a wire.
Mr. Anemone: I am flying.
Mr. Chigger: You're on a wire.
Mr. Anemone: I'll show you whether I'm on a wire or not.
Give me the 'oop.
Mr. Chigger: What?
Mr. Anemone: Oh, I don't suppose we know what an 'oop is.
I suppose pater thought they were a bit common, except on the
bleedin' croquet. lawn.
Mr. Chigger: Oh, a hoop.
Mr. Anemone: 'Oh an hoop.' (taking hoop) Thank you,
your bleeding Highness. Now. Look. (he waves hoop aver head and
feet)
Mr. Chigger: Go on, right the way along.
Mr. Anemone: All right, all right, all right. (he moves
hoop all the way along himself allowing the wire to pass through
obvious gap in hoop's circumference). Now, where's the bleeding
wire, then?
Mr. Chigger: That hoop's got a hole in.
Mr. Anemone: Oh Eton and Madgalene. The hoop has an hole
in. Of course it's got a hole in, it wouldn't be a hoop otherwise,
would it, mush!
Mr. Chigger: No, there's a gap in the middle, there.
Mr. Anemone: Oh, a gahp. A gahp in one's hhhhhoop. Pardon
me, but I'm orf to play the grahnd piano.
Mr. Chigger: Look, I can see you're on a wire - look,
there it is.
Mr. Anemone: Look, I told you, you bastard, I'm not on a
wire.
Mr. Chigger: You are. There is.
Mr. Anemone: There isn't.
Mr. Chigger: Is.
Mr. Anemone: Isn't!
Mr. Chigger: Is!
Mr. Anemone: Isn't!
Mr. Chigger: Is!
Mr. Anemone: Isn't!
Mr. Chigger: Is!
Mr. Anemone: .Isn't!!
Mr. Chigger: Is!!!
Voice Over: Anyway, this rather pointless bickering went
on for some time until...
Caption on screen: 'TWO YEARS LATER' Interior cockpit of
airliner. Mr. Chigger and a second pilot sitting at controls.)
Mr. Chigger: Gosh, I am glad I'm a fully qualified airline
pilot.
(Cut to BALPA spokesman sitting at a desk. He is in Captain 's
uniform and has a name plate in front of him on the desk saying
'BALPA Spokesman)
BALPA Man: The British Airline Pilots Association would
like to point out that it takes a chap six years to become a fully
qualified airline pilot, and not two.
(Caption on screen: 'FOUR YEARS LATER THAN THE LAST CAPTION'
Interior cockpit. For three seconds. Then cut back to BALPA
spokesman.)
BALPA Man: Thank you. I didn't want to seem a bit of an
old fusspot just now you know, but it's just as easy to get these
things right as they are easily found in the BALPA handbook. Oh, one
other thing, in the Sherlock Holmes last week Tommy Cooper told a
joke about a charter flight, omitting to point out that one must be
a member of any organization that charters a plane for at least six
months beforehand, before being able to take advantage of it. Did
rather spoil the joke for me, I'm afraid. (phone ring) Yes,
ah yes - yes. (puts phone down) My wife just reminded me that
on a recent 'High Chaparral' Kathy Kirby was singing glibly about
'Fly me to the Stas' when of course there are no scheduled flights
of this kind, or even chartered, available to the general public at
the present moment, although of course, when they are BALPA will be
in the vanguard. Or the Trident. Little joke for the chaps up at
BALPA House. And one other small point. Why is it that these new
lurex dancing tights go baggy at the knees after only a couple of
evenings' fun. Bring back the old canvas ones I say. It is
incredible, isn't it, that in these days when man can walk on the
moon and work out the most complicated hire purchase agreements, I
still get these terrible headaches. Well . .. I seem to have
wandered a bit, but still, no harm done. Jolly good luck.
(Back in the cockpit of the airliner. The two pilots sit
there. Atmospheric noise of a big airliner in flight. Suddenly there
is a banging on the door at the back of the cockpit.)
Zanie: (off-screen) Are you going to be in there
all day? (the two pilots exchange a puzzled look, then shrug and
go back to flying; suddenly another series of bangs on door)
Other people want to go you know! (they exchange another look;
pause; a heavier bang on the door) The door's jammed, if you ask
me. (a crash as he attempts to force it; another crash and the
door flies open; Mr. Zanie enters) Ah. (suddenly realizing
where he is) Oh my God. Oh, I'm terribly sorry. I thought this
was the baby toilet.
Second Pilot: This is the control cabin.
Zanie: Oh I know. I'm a flying man, you know... oh yes...
Bally stupid mistake...
(A pause. Zanie remains sanding at the back of cockpit. The
pilots go on as if he is not there.)
Second Pilot: Cloud's heavy ... What's the reading?
Mr. Chigger: 4.8... Steady.
Zanie: If they had all those dials in the toilet... there
wouldn't be room for anything else, would there. (another nervous
laugh; not the slightest reaction from the pilots)
Mr. Chigger: (into intercom) Hello, Geneva this is
Roger Five-O ... What is your cloud reading? Hello, Geneva...
Zanie: I wouldn't fancy flying one of those sitting on the
toilet... I mean it'd take the glamour out of being a pilot,
wouldn't it, ha ha, flying around the world sitting on a toilet.
Radio Voice: Geneva here. 4.9 · ·. Heavy... Over.
Mr. Chigger: Serious?
Second Pilot: No, not if it keeps at that level, no.
Zanie: Mind you, if you did fly it from the toilet it
would leave a lot more space up here, wouldn't it. (finally he
realizes his attempt at small talk is not working) Well, I'd
better get back to the cabin, then. Sorry about the silly intrusion.
Bally stupid. (he pushes lever down on the door which opens
directly out of the plane) Door's jammed. (he gives it a
shoulder charge and flies straight out of the plane)
Aaaaaaaaaaaghhhhhh!
(Plane noise overhead Continue scream. Outside of a gent's
lavatory, there is a big pile of straw. Pause, then Zanie drops onto
the straw. He looks up at gent's sign.)
Zanie: Bally piece of luck...
(He brushes himself down and goes into gents. Cut back to
cockpit. A hostess enters from the passenger cabin.)
Second Pilot: Oh hello. Everything an right at the back?
Hostess: Yes, they're as quiet as dormice.
Second Pilot: Dormice?
(Door opens and a man in a neat suit enters. From beneath his
jacket he produces a revolver with silencer attachment. He points it
at the pilots.)