The League of Gentlemen (TV series)



''Welcome to Royston Vasey. You'll never leave.''

British Sketch Comedy/Sitcom, with a very dark tone of humour, and plenty of horror trappings.

Set in the town of Royston Vasey (or Spent, in the original radio version), the show focuses on the very strange lives of the inhabitants: their warped obsessions, quirks and relationships. Also notable in that almost all characters are played by one of only three actors: Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith, and Mark Gatiss.

Came forty-first in Britain's Best Sitcom.

Not to be confused with;
 * The League of Gentlemen, a classic Caper movie from 1960, after which the show was named.
 * The short lived band started by guitarist Robert Fripp that, through some excessively odd reason, share many qualities with this show...
 * The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen

"Herr Lipp "Er konnt kein Deutsch. Er ist meine junge." Lotte "Denn Gott hilfe ihn.""
 * Actor Allusion - the Mayor is played by Refuge in Vulgarity standup Roy "Chubby" Brown, whose real name is... Royston Vasey.
 * Aerith and Bob: Chloe & Radclyffe.
 * Affably Evil - Hilary Briss
 * All Devouring Black Hole Loan Sharks - Parodied with Mr. Lisgoe and his incompetent collectors.
 * And I Must Scream -  They do scream, actually, but no one can hear them...
 * Animal Motifs - Harvey Denton is obsessed with toads, and collects them. He also greatly resembles one, and the interior of the Denton home has a sort of a dull green colour scheme, like a lily pond.
 * Similiarly, Edward and Tubbs Tattsyrup (pictured above) both have piggy noses and live in filth. Tubbs has also been seen breastfeeding a piglet.
 * Attractive Bent Gender - Reece actually looks pretty good as Judee Levinson.
 * Not to mention Mr Gatiss as Mrs Denton.
 * Brother Chuck - None of the Dentons appear in Season 3. We can assume that Benjamin finally escaped from Royston Vasey, but the fate of Val and Harvey is left vague.
 * The Butcher - Hilary Briss, a literal butcher who sells some kind of very illegal and hideously immoral "special stuff".
 * Bilingual Bonus - Dialogue between Herr Lipp, Lotte and Justin at the climax of Lipp's attempts to seduce the schoolboy. Lotte tries to warn Justin about Lipp in German:

"Barbara: Have you heard what they're saying about the Beast of Royston Vasey? Mrs. Levinson: Now, Barbara, people can be very cruel."
 * Buried Alive - The fate of, although he is given a funnel through which to breathe.
 * But for Me It Was Tuesday - The Book of Wives
 * Call Back - Pop's line about wanting a daughter as well as sons can be seen as a callback to Chloe and Radclyffe's line about Val. Given the twins' implied psychic abilities, and the similar context of both lines, however, it may be that the girls were making deliberate reference to something that hadn't happened yet.
 * Calvin Ball - "Go Johnny Go Go Go Go"
 * Camp Gay - Herr Lip, Keith Drop.
 * Casanova Wannabe - Pop
 * Catch Phrase:
 * Tubbs: "Are you local?"
 * Edward "Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting? We'll have no trouble here!"
 * Both of the above: "This is a local shop, for local people. There's nothing for you here!"
 * Papa Lazarou: "You're my wife now!" and "Hello Dave!" The former has been subject to Catchphrase Interruptus.
 * Pauline Campbell-Jones: "Okey-cokey! Pig in a pokey!"
 * Geoff: "You knew I had this gun!"
 * Pop: "Call me Pop!"
 * Les: "It's a shit business. Glad I'm out of it."
 * Ernest Foot: "Was it something I said?"
 * Christopher Frost: "Chalk 'em up!"
 * Alvin: "Home is the hunter!"
 * Cats Are Mean - Cat enthusiast Dougall Siepp is a scary guy.
 * Caught with Your Pants Down - Parodied and inverted. Harvey Denton has a peculiar paranoia about walking in on his nephew, Benjamin, and has an entire, Spit Take-inducing collection of Unusual Euphemisms ready. There has never been any concrete evidence of Benjamin actually masturbating.
 * Celebrity Paradox - Mick McNamara claims that an episode of Tom Baker-era Doctor Who was filmed at the Stump Hole caverns. So why does Mick, and approximately one third of the town, look exactly like that guy who played Dr. Lazarus in "The Lazarus Experiment" and wrote the episode "The Idiot's Lantern"? And why does another third of the town so greatly resemble the guy who played Strackman Lux in "Silence in the Library" and "Forest of the Dead?" And why
 * Characterization Marches On - In Series 2, Herr Lipp was essentially a creep and a sociopath; in the Christmas Special, though still a nasty pederast, he at least shows some compassion and sacrifices himself to save Matthew. By the time we get to the Movie, he is a kind and caring guy (even his turn to violence is intended to save the locals from what he believes to be endless misery) who is incidentally campy, a far cry from the selfish date-rapist he originally was.
 * Cheshire Cat Grin - Hilary Briss gives these a lot.
 * Chess with Death - The stage show has a man gambling his soul against an ambiguously diabolical figure. However, the devil figure doesn't want to play chess; he wants to play.
 * Christmas Special, complete with Bad Santa
 * Corpsing - Shearsmith, with Pauline, during the live show.
 * Creepy Twins - Chloe and Radclyffe Denton, who also fulfil...
 * Creepy Child
 * Cringe Comedy
 * Comic Trio - Most of the characters are divided into groups of three, mirroring the actors themselves.
 * Continuity Nod - At the end of Season 2  escapes to the Caribbean. During Season 3, a newspaper headline can be seen declaring "Mysterious Nosebleed Outbreak In Carribean!"
 * Corrupt Hick - Edward and Tubbs Tattsyrup who also supply some Brother-Sister Incest
 * Cult - Solutions, Inc. in the Christmas Special.
 * A Day in the Limelight - Most episodes of Season 3 focus on previously-minor characters.
 * Dirty Old Man - Pop
 * The Ditz - Mickey, who is clearly mentally handicapped.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything? - In the Christmas Special, Matthew Parker's denouncement of Herr Lip as a vampire uses the phrase "I know what you are! You're trying to turn me into one of you!"
 * Dumb Is Good - Tubbs is shown to be not entirely responsible for the crimes she commits with Edward, because she is obviously mentally unsound. It's probably genetic.
 * Easily Forgiven - In the stage show,
 * Emotionally Tongue-Tied - Harvey Denton refuses to say "The F word", which is, of course,.
 * Erotic Asphyxiation -
 * Evil Hand -.
 * Exposition of Immortality: When Papa Lazarou is going through his Book of Wives in Season Three, some of the photos are clearly old, sepia ones that heavily imply that he's a lot older than he appears. There are more on the wall of his room, too.
 * Eye Scream - Hilary Briss is seen scaring children with a pair of sheep's eyes, which he then eats.
 * Fag Hag - Deconstructed with Tish, who unintentionally offends the hell out of all her fairly Straight Gay friends. Mark Gatiss (who is gay) was probably very angry when he wrote her scenes.
 * Fan Disservice - Tubbs torturing the construction men while dancing around nude "The Road to Royston Vasey."
 * Fat Idiot - Barry Baggs, the debt collector. Also a Big Eater. In the live show "The League of Gentlemen Are Behind You", his idiot status is subverted--and may even have been Obfuscating Stupidity--when he outwits and (in the epilogue) replaces his boss.
 * Freudian Excuse - The Christmas Special reveals that Rev. Bernice is so cynical and hateful because when she was a little girl,  on Christmas Eve.
 * Freudian Slip - Ollie Plimsoles' wife, Linda, has left him for another woman. And he will never let you forget it, no matter how he tries.
 * Friend to All Living Things: Subverted with kindly, accident-prone vet Mr. Chinnery.
 * Full Name Ultimatum - "Don't you do it, Hilary Briss!"
 * Generation Xerox - In The Christmas Special, we see a bit of Royston Vasey in the 1890s, including Victorian versions of Harvey, Barbara, Chinnery, Pauline, Mickey, and Ross
 * Gender Bender - Barbara the transgendered cab driver.

"Mickey: Pauline... she's worse than you!"
 * Grotesque Gallery - Because almost all of the characters are played by the same three actors, a variety of prosthetics are used, some of which are profoundly hideous. Of particular note are Edward, Tubbs, Iris, Harvey, Bernice, Mickey, Stella, Vinnie & Reenie, Ally, and Herr Lipp.
 * Have You Told Anyone Else? - Subverted in the Job Center storyline, when Ross admits no one else knows about his report on Pauline, even adding that all the information is within a single folder he has right there--but Pauline accepts defeat anyway.
 * In the original radio series, this trope was played straight, but the writers gave it a more creative spin for the TV version.
 * He Who Must Not Be Seen - "that Merrill." Frequently mentioned by Vinnie and Reenie, but never actually appears.
 * David Tattsyrup becomes a The Voice variant after Tubbs and Edward take him back in.
 * Hoist by His Own Petard - Harvey--or rather hoist by his own.
 * Homage - Edward frequently references The Wicker Man, and Chloe & Radclyffe obviously parody The Shining. Papa Lazarou's introductory episode features a few quotes from Freaks, and Geoff's subplot in Season 2 parodied Deliverance. In fact, at least one horror Movie gets referenced per episode.
 * Hospital Hottie - One of the few times an actual woman appeared on the show was when Al brought home a nurse named Patricia as a date. Unfortunately, Pop ruined everything by loudly talking about how great the film version of Watership Down is, discussing porn, and trying to steal Patricia.
 * Human Resources - The obvious assumption as to the identity of Hilary's "special stuff", although the creators have Jossed this, pointing out they would never come up with something so unoriginal. It's something even worse...
 * Hypocritical Humour - Ollie tells an audience that he is not going to patronize them, because they aren't children. He then proceeds to explain what "patronizing" means in very... uh, condescending tones.
 * Also, after Chris Frost outlines his Knight Templar security guard policies to a group of recruits, a lot of merchandise falls out of his sleeve.
 * I Love the Dead - Mortician Owen Fallowfield puts a bit too much of himself into his work.
 * Incoming Ham - Both Edward and Pauline must announce their presence every time they enter a room.
 * Innocent Innuendo - One scene starts as though Benjamin is being forced to perform oral sex on Harvey. It turns out he's just cleaning a scrub-brush.
 * Another episode has one woman afraid that her doctor is trying to extort sex out of her in exchange for treatment. It turns out that
 * I Take Offense to That Last One - When Pauline is described as a "psychotic fifty year-old lesbian," she only objects to one of those accusations. ("I'm forty-eight!")
 * Jerkass - Ollie Plimsoles
 * Karma Houdini - Papa Lazarou. Hilary Briss escapes, but
 * Killed Off for Real -
 * Kubrick Stare - Both Hilary and Papa Lazarou give these a lot.
 * Lamarck Was Right - Mr. Chinnery inherits his ancestor's curse.
 * Laser-Guided Karma - after awful restart officer Pauline is sacked, she has to sit through restart sessions of her own, with an even worse one.
 * Laser-Guided Karma - after awful restart officer Pauline is sacked, she has to sit through restart sessions of her own, with an even worse one.


 * Laughably Evil - All of the villainous characters. It is a comedy, after all.
 * Little People Are Surreal - Papa Lazarou's circus.
 * Looks Like Orlok - The true form of the vampire in the Christmas Special. Herr Lip also gets to recreate Orlok's famous staircase scene.
 * Malaproper - Herr Lip, who keeps making not-so-Innocent Innuendo
 * Manipulative Bastard - Edward convinces Tubbs that there is no world beyond the local shop, and even turns her own son against her just to make her stay with him.
 * Meaningful Name - Ernest Foot is always "putting his foot in his mouth", so to speak, and Henry Portrait is obsessed with slasher movies.
 * Monster Clown - Papa Lazarou has some fairly clownish trappings, and runs a Circus of Fear.
 * Mood Whiplash - The ending of the Christmas special.
 * My Name Is Not Dave
 * Neat Freak - Val and Harvey Denton.
 * Nice Guy - Mr. Matthew Chinnery, the worst vet ever.
 * No Dead Body Poops: Then again, considering the nature of the film, it's probably for the best.
 * Not a Mask - Papa Lazarou's face. That's his natural skintone.
 * Obfuscating Stupidity - Papa Lazarou uses this frequently, calling people by the wrong name and flat-out ignoring what people say to him. This is his way of confusing them enough to hand over their personal items (which can sometimes overlap with marriage).
 * Only Sane Man - Benjamin Denton is the only sane man in the Denton home. Ross is the only sane man at the Job Centre,
 * Oop North
 * Parodied in Live at Drury Lane with Legz Akimbo's openly exploitative foray into grown-up theatre.
 * Paper-Thin Disguise - Except even the audience is fooled, due to Economy Casting. We know that the two characters are played by the same actor, but we think nothing of it.
 * Parental Incest - Hinted at with "a son as well as daughters"/"a daughter as well as sons" in series two.
 * Punny Name - Herr Lipp.
 * Precision F-Strike - "Yeah... cunt."
 * Psychotic Smirk - Hilary Briss does this from time to time.
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old - Papa Lazarou.
 * Hilary Briss describes himself in Season 1 as having spanned "great oceans of time."
 * Recursive Crossdressing - Pauline (Steve Pemberton in drag) attends a Gender Bender Costume Party dressed as Charlie Chaplin.
 * The Reveal - The biggest would probably be the one in the series finale. Keith Drop has an interesting secret.
 * Scary Scarecrows
 * Serial Killer - The Tattsyrups
 * She's All Grown Up - In the wrongest way possible.
 * Shout-Out
 * Mark Gatiss based his performance of Mr. Chinnery on Peter Davison's as Tristan Farnan in the BBC production of All Creatures Great and Small.
 * In episode two of Season 1 The Road To Royston Vasey, two construction workers visit the Local Shop and end up being abducted by Tubbs and Edward. Their names? Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd.
 * "Royston Vasey" is the real name of comedian Roy "Chubby" Brown, who appears in a Cameo as the mayor. The mayor's name is Larry Vaughn, which is also the name of the mayor in Jaws. Recursive Shout-Out!
 * Show Within a Show - The plays of the Legz Akimbo theatre troupe...
 * Stylistic Suck - ...are awful.
 * Slasher Smile - Papa Lazarou and Edward, on occasion.
 * Slap Slap Kiss - Pauline's love life.
 * Sound to Screen Adaptation
 * Speaking Simlish - The gibberish language Papa Lazarou sometimes speaks. When other characters play along by babbling, he somehow understands them.
 * Special Guest
 * The Spook - Papa Lazarou.
 * Such a Lovely Noun - "Perhaps you should have paid more attention to her. I know I did."
 * Suspiciously Specific Denial - "We didn't burn him!"
 * Take Our Word for It - We never find out what is in Hilary Briss's "special stuff". His surname may be a clue...
 * There's No B in Movie - Meaningfully named Harry Portrait and Ally Welles, who are obsessed with horror movies. However, some of the films they watch are quite good, such as The Shining, Alien, and Stephen Loncraine's version of Richard III, starring Sir Ian McKellen. As long as it has killin's, they're happy.
 * Throw the Dog a Bone - The end of Season 3 has, among other things, Geoff Tipps finally able to make people laugh. Similarly, the stage show gives Les McQueen a successful solo career,
 * Tomato Surprise -
 * Too Dumb to Live - Basically the premise of the "crime-fighting supercar" skit.
 * Too Much Information - Much of Barbara's shtick is telling people all the details of her operation. Similiarly, Iris tells a few too many things about her and Ron's sex life.
 * Torches and Pitchforks -
 * Town with a Dark Secret - Several secrets.
 * Transparent Closet - Herr Lip reveals to Justin that "I am a queen." Justin pretends to be astounded out of politeness.
 * The Twink - In Season 2, Herr Lip has a crush on a not-quite-legal schoolboy named Justin Smart. In the Christmas Special, he has a similiar crush on a boy named Matthew Parker.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome? - The entire Job Centre plot thread. Includes Internal Affairs, The Mole, Heel Face Turn, Becoming the Mask, and other things you'd expect to see in a spy movie. Except it's about unemployment.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Heinous? - Pop disowns his son Richie for failing to prevent a handful of Maverick bars from being stolen from the news stand.
 * Write Who You Know - The Legz Akimbo theatre troupe are based on the League members' experiences in community theatre, and Pauline is based on an actual restart officer Reece Shearsmith had. Papa Lazarou and Pop are Shearsmith's and Pemberton's respective reinterpretations of Peter Papalazarou, a Greek landlord they once shared, who was always unwilling to speak to Reece and would always demand to talk to Steve, even when he wasn't there, hence Papa Lazarou's eternal quest to speak to Dave.
 * Tyrant Takes the Helm - Cathy Carter-Smith, who is even crueller to the jobseekers than Pauline was.
 * The Unintelligible - Pam Doove is like this, but only while acting.
 * Unusual Euphemism - Harvey Denton has a wide variety of euphemisms for masturbation.
 * Urine Trouble - Tubbs is able to power a van with her urine.
 * Yank the Dog's Chain - Any scenes with Chinnery.
 * You Are Not Ready: Hilary Briss' house special.

Also see the 2005 film, The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse, which contains examples of:

 * All Up to You - "You're the hero, Geoff."
 * Author Existence Failure - A major plot point.
 * Biggus Dickus - "Geoff Tipps, a clever man with a big cock, comes in and stops the king from being killed. He is a Hero. His cock is big."
 * Character Development - Geoff stops being a one-note character and becomes The Hero. Herr Lip, however, is outraged that his character is so predictable.
 * Enemy Mine - Geoff and Herr Lip are forced to work with Hilary, Tubbs, Edward, and Papa Lazarou.
 * Eye Scream - Mr. Pea pulls out the eyes of one of Shearsmith's characters.
 * Heel Face Turn -
 * Heroic Sociopath - Hilary becomes one of these. He's on the same side as Geoff and Herr Lip, but he's still an amoral killer.
 * The Movie
 * No Fourth Wall - The main plot has characters escaping Royston Vasey to prevent the writers from cancelling the show.
 * Refugee From TV Land
 * Trapped in TV Land -
 * Redemption Equals Death -
 * Road Apples - "Edward, I've made a little brown fish!"
 * Shout-Out - "The League of Gentlemen? Extraordinary!"
 * Also, Mr. Pea looks a lot like Vincent Price in Witchfinder General.
 * The king thanks the guys for saving him from a "deadly assassin".
 * The two maids who secretly mother/daughter/employer/men are a reference to the film "The Maids".
 * The King's Evil is pretty much a parody of every film Ken Russell made in the seventies and eighties.
 * Show Within a Show - Steve Pemberton is working on a screenplay for a new movie, The King's Evil, about a plot to assassinate William III (played by Bernard Hill, aka Theoden. Naturally, it's just as real as Royston Vasey.
 * The King's Evil itself is an example of The Dung Ages.
 * Sliding Scale of Comedy and Horror
 * Sorry I Left the BGM On - Used as a Running Gag when the League theme music is repeatedly revealed to be mobile phone ringtones.
 * Special Guest - David Warner (aka Evil, aka Dillinger/Sark,Ra's al Ghul, aka Jon Irenicus, aka Lord Downey, aka The Lobe) as Mr. Pea.
 * Talking to Himself - There's one scene where Geoff, Edward, and Papa Lazarou all discuss the fact that they are played by the same actor.
 * Throwing Your Bardiche Always Works
 * We Can Rule Together - Mr. Pea invites Hilary Briss to join him in the King's Evil setting.