The Case of the Missing CD Plates

From The Goon Show Depository


"The Case of the Missing CD Plates"
The Goon Show episode
Episode: no.Series: 6
Episode: 5
Written bySpike Milligan
AnnouncerWallace Greenslade
Produced byPeter Eton
Music
Recording
Number
TLO 88477
First broadcast18 October 1955 (1955-10-18)
Running time30:36
Episode Order
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"Napoleon's Piano"
Next →
"Rommel's Treasure"
The Goon Show series 6
List of episodes

The Case of the Missing CD Plates (announced as A Strange Case of Diplomatic Immunity) is an episode from The Goon Show. It is the fifth show in the sixth series. The show was recorded at 9pm on Sunday 16 October 1955. The recording took place at the Camden Theatre, Camden Town, London.

The first British public broadcast was on the Home Service on Tuesday 18 October 1955 at 8.30pm. It reached a peak listenership of 3.0m.

The show's first repeat was the following Saturday at 7.30pm, 22 October 1955, on the Light Programme. It was listened to by 2.3 million. The next repeat came 42 years later on Monday 22 December 1997, at 3pm on Radio 2 in Classic Comedy: Pick of the Goons.

Synopsis

Neddie Seagoon, a rich young metal bagpipe player, is washing his overcoat in a brook in Trafalgar Square when he is mysteriously run over by a steam roller with CD plates. Neddie, always the opportunist, demands recompense from the Wanstead Embassy, the owners of the vehicle, who refuse to pay. On his way to a hearing of the case, our hero is mysteriously struck down by a foreign piano also bearing CD plates. He frees himself with the aid of a nearby string bladder and reaches the court just in time to lose his deposit. Suspecting the Embassy, he attempts to subpoena the piano which he finds in a mysterious bonded warehouse in the Balls Pond Road but as he arrives the piano is mysteriously blown up by a loaded cucumber. In desperation Neddie takes the next boat to Wanstead and it is there that the dénouement of the story takes place. Note: A special dénouement is available to the members of The Goons Steam Roller Club. Join now!

Music

Technical

Originally recorded on TLO 88477 (15 ips ¼" tape recorded at Broadcasting House).

This tape survived in TS, and was edited for the POTG issue. Not all the cuts were kept, so the version of the show included on Compendium Vol 3 was been compiled from the TLO, the TGS master tape and a domestic tape recording. An out-take of Ray Ellington's number, found on the TLO, appears on disc 7 of the compendium.[1]

References

  1. ^ Kendall, Ted (2009). The Goon Show Compendium Vol 3 (Booklet 2). BBC Worldwide. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4084-1044-8.