At the start of
World War II, "Colonel Bogey" became a British institution when a popular song was set to the tune: "
Hitler Has Only Got One Ball" (originally "
Göring Has Only Got One Ball" after the
Luftwaffe leader suffered a
groin injury), essentially exalting rudeness. In 1951, during the first computer conference held in Australia, the "Colonel Bogey March" was the first music played by a computer, by
CSIRAC, a computer developed by the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. The march first appeared in the film
No Lady (1931), then when it was hummed by
Michael Redgrave (playing the
cad Gilbert in his film debut) in
Alfred Hitchcock's
The Lady Vanishes in 1938. The 1957
David Lean epic film
The Bridge on the River Kwai popularized "
The River Kwai March", an orchestral march to accompany the Colonel Bogey March. In the 1961 film
The Parent Trap, the campers at an all-girls summer camp whistle the "Colonel Bogey March" as they march through camp, mirroring the scene from
The Bridge on the River Kwai. In episode 28 of
The Benny Hill Show from 1976, the march was used in the Sale of the Half-Century game show sketch during a
Name That Tune-style question. One of the contestants' answers was "After the Ball" after which the host (
Benny Hill) responded with, "well, you're sort of half-right" referring to the anti-Hitler slur. In
Doctor Who, the
fourth incarnation of the Time Lord whistled the tune in
The Face of Evil,
The Talons of Weng-Chiang,
The Invasion of Time and
Destiny of the Daleks.
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart also whistled it in
The Mind of Evil. In the 1985 film
The Breakfast Club, all the teenage main characters are whistling the tune during their Saturday detention when Principal Vernon (played by
Paul Gleason) walks into the room. It was also used in
Caveman,
Short Circuit and
Spaceballs. At the end of the
ChuckleVision episode
On the Hoof,
Paul and Barry have to put on a marching band for a pompous government minister at an MI7 camp only for it to go awry. The latter brother plays the tune on a kazoo while the former just hits a tambourine. The march has been used in German commercials for
Underberg digestif bitter since the 1970s, and has become a classic
jingle there. A parody titled "
Comet" is a humorous song about the ill effects of consuming
the cleaning product of the same name. In
Indonesia this march became the jingle tune for a medicine brand called
Bodrex. ==
The Bridge on the River Kwai==