Following
Monty Python and the Holy Grail the members of Monty Python worked on separate projects.
John Cleese made
Fawlty Towers,
Eric Idle Rutland Weekend Television,
Terry Jones and
Michael Palin Ripping Yarns,
Terry Gilliam Jabberwocky and Graham Chapman
The Odd Job. The concept originated as an episode of the
London Weekend Television/
ITV series
Six Dates with Barker in 1971, written by
Bernard McKenna, with
Ronnie Barker as Arthur Harris and
David Jason as the Odd Job Man (who plays the same role in the feature film). Chapman admired the play and commissioned McKenna to turn it into a feature film script. Chapman raised the budget, which he said was half a million pounds. The role of the odd job man was originally intended for Chapman's friend
Keith Moon. Finance came in part from members of the rock groups
Led Zeppelin and
Pink Floyd.
Steve O'Rourke, Pink Floyd's manager, was an executive producer; so too was band manager
Tony Stratton Smith. The original director was meant to be
Cliff Owen but he broke his thigh and had to be replaced.
Peter Medak was selected; it was Medak's first feature since
Ghost in the Noonday Sun. Two weeks before filming, Medak went to visit Keith Moon in hospital "drying out" so he would be ready for the film. Medak became convinced that Moon would not be able to finish the movie and pressed for him to be replaced. He wrote, "I knew how much Keith was looking forward to the part in the film: I knew that I was right and they were wrong but should I just wave goodbye to the £50,000 I had already spent or make the film and take a chance on it making money? I chose the latter and still wish I hadn't." (Moon died on 7 September 1978). The film was shot in early 1978 at
Shepperton Studios with
location shooting around London. ==Reception==