That Was The Week That Was

Album: TV Theme Songs (1962)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • That Was The Week That Was was a BBC television satire programme that ran from 1962-'63. The theme music was composed by Ron Grainer (1922-81). Every week it was performed as a song by the show's resident singer Millicent Martin with topical, and at times strained, lyrics, which were no doubt contributed by its various scriptwriters and presenters. >>
    Suggestion credit:
    Alexander Baron - London, England

Comments: 1

  • Bilge Rat from The BilgesI was 12 when TWTWTW (TW3) was first broadcast, late on Saturday nights. In the stuffy Britain of the early 1960's, it was regarded as scurrilous and scandalous in the extreme! I was never allowed to watch it, but one evening, my parents had been invited to the neighbours for dinner, and I was left alone!
    I put on my pyjamas, turned the lights off, and left the window open so that I would be able to hear my parents returning!

    I remember David Frost saying "The proportion of illegitimate children in Britain is no longer 'one in eight' it is 'one in three'!" He then handed over to the magnificent Millicent Martin, who sang a song which listed all the great men and women in history who had been "bastards". I wish that I could remember all the lyrics, but across the gap of 60 years all that I can remember is "and Hitler's father was a bastard through and through", and then in a "throw-away" line emphasized by an insouciant wave of her cigarette-holder, "And that reminds me, Leonardo was another!"

    It is unlikely that any of the "scripts" (if they ever existed, in this highly "improv" show) remain extant. Remember that TW3 was "live" TV, and much of it was improvised "on the run" by a brilliant cast. Had the magnificent Millicent Martin been offered the title of "Dame Millicent Martin" she would have told Garter King of Arms to "Piss off", but her smoke-darkened voice (not to forget her other notable "assets") deserves to be remembered. But no politically-correct modern TV station would dare to touch her material.
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Howard Jones

Howard JonesSongwriter Interviews

Howard explains his positive songwriting method and how uplifting songs can carry a deeper message.

Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne

Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of WayneSongwriter Interviews

The guy who brought us "Stacy's Mom" also wrote the Jane Lynch Emmy song and Stephen Colbert's Christmas songs.

Don Dokken

Don DokkenSongwriter Interviews

Dokken frontman Don Dokken explains what broke up the band at the height of their success in the late '80s, and talks about the botched surgery that paralyzed his right arm.

Jon Anderson

Jon AndersonSongwriter Interviews

Jon Anderson breaks down the Yes classic "Seen All Good People" and talks about his 1000 Hands album, which features Chick Corea, Rick Derringer, Ian Anderson, and many other luminaries.

Reverend Horton Heat

Reverend Horton HeatSongwriter Interviews

The Reverend rants on psychobilly and the egghead academics he bashes in one of his more popular songs.

Jon Oliva of Trans-Siberian Orchestra

Jon Oliva of Trans-Siberian OrchestraSongwriter Interviews

Writing great prog metal isn't easy, especially when it's for 60 musicians.