Smashie and Nicey, the End of an Era (TV Movie 1994) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
6 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
"I've just eaten a whole packet of Toffos!"
ShadeGrenade9 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Two of the most popular characters on 'Harry Enfield's Television Programme' were 'Smashey' ( Paul Whitehouse ) and 'Nicey' ( Enfield ), ageing disc jockeys with colossal egos who engaged in mindless banter during the change over from one show to another. The sketches ended usually with Smashey playing 'You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet' by Bachman Turner Overdrive. Smashey was based on Tony Blackburn, while Nicey's inspiration was the late Alan 'Fluff' Freeman. They caught the public's imagination, even getting to host 'Top Of The Pops' one week! Radio 1, however, was not amused. Feeling the characters' represented a kind of stinging criticism, new bosses Matthew Bannister and Trevor Dann sacked disc jockeys en masse and brought in new blood, such as Danny Baker and the detestable Chris Evans.

In 1994, 'Smashey' and 'Nicey' went the 'Kevin Turvey' route and got their own spoof documentary. Beginning with the pair rushing to a press conference to inform the world they had just quit 'Radio Fab F.M' ( in fact, they had been sacked by controller Johnny Beergut ), it told the story of their meteoric rise to fame. As was the case with Enfield's award-winning Channel 4 programme 'Norbert Smith - A Life?' ( 1989 ), archive footage was seamlessly matched with new material, such as Smashey playing policemen on 'Dixon Of Dock Green', 'Z Cars' and 'Dr.Who', and Nicey dancing with Freddie & The Dreamers on 'Blue Peter'.

The format allowed for greater character development. Both men lived in mansions. Nicey is clearly gay, while Smashey is haunted by the break-up of his marriage ( Enfield later apologised to Tony Blackburn for making fun of his marital breakdown to actress Tessa Wyatt ) and makes chutney. Nicey thinks the 'Swinging Sixties' was all down to him and his friend ( Alan Freeman appeared as himself, tottering about on a Zimmer frame ).

Most of the jokes work, particularly good is Nicey chatting to the Beatles and attempting to get fresh with Paul McCartney. On the down side however, a spoof of 'The Kenny Everett Television Show' in which Nicey ripped off girls' clothes while dressed as 'Gizzard Puke' was in incredibly poor taste. Everett was dying of AIDS at the time. The item should have been deleted.

The director, Daniel Kleinman, went on to design title sequences for Bond movies.

These days, Enfield and Whitehouse cannot make a hyena laugh, luckily we have programmes like this to remind us how good they once were together.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Cruelly funny
davidxryan11 August 2003
Broadcast when BBC Radio 1's new controller was merrily axing half of his star presenters for being too old and stuffy for a pop station, the most effective parts of this show are the thinly disguised reminders of British DJs' most embarrassing moments. At times it's more cruel than funny, and Enfield later apologised for his parody of Tony Blackburn's marital breakdown, which a distraught Blackburn shared with listeners in the 1970s.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
When Harry and Paul ruled the world
jimpayne196714 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I had not seen this show for twenty years until the BBC rebroadcast it in 2015 and it brought back memories of the era when this show was made in early 1994.

The two stars of this programme were riding high at that time. Enfield had broken nearly a decade earlier, first at the kebab selling philosopher Stavros, then as the signature character of 1980s greed 'Loadsamoney' and in the exquisite South Bank Show pastiche 'Norbert Smith,a Life' before his sketch show was aired on the BBC from 1990 onward. Whitehouse had been a writer for Enfield and wrote for that BBC show but in it he also appeared in front of the camera in a variety of the show's characters. One of these characters was as the blonde, relentlessly cheery but essentially humourless, ludicrously self important DJ Mike Smash (Smashie) in a series of skits with fellow DJ Dave 'Davenport' Nice (Nicey) - a ludicrous, pompous, oaf played by Enfield.

That Enfield show was the best thing either man ever did- it was certainly better than the slightly later 'Harry Enfield and Chums'or the much later 'Ruddy Hell! It's Harry and Paul' and it starred characters like the Old Gits and the irritating man who would announce 'Only Me!' but it was those two prattling, inane disc jockeys who provided the shows funniest moments - and for the first time since Monty Python provided sketches which young men in pubs could recite verbatim.

Smash and Nice worked at the fictional Fab FM which was a very thinly disguised take on the BBC's flagship pop music station Radio 1 which had been on the air since 1967. Radio 1 was very popular - it was the only truly nationwide show broadcasting pop music in what was a glorious epoch for British pop music and the station's DJs were very well known and, for a time, very popular. But the station was never 'hip' and many of its biggest names were by bywords for all that was naff and patronising about a broadcasting organisation that had a very ambivalent attitude to pop and rock music and those who listened to it. Millions listened to Edmunds, Bates, Read, Travis and the rest but only because there was precious little alternative on the airwaves.

Enfield and Whitehouse were very much part of that generation who had listened to but also slightly despised Radio 1 and Smashie and Nicey were their 'tribute' to the station. Smash is superficially based on Tony Blackburn - the man who was the very first voice heard on the station- and Nice on Alan Freeman but in truth the characters are an amalgam of the most long serving DJs on the station like Steve Wright, Noel Edmunds ( both Smash) and Dave Lee Travis, Simon Bates, Mike Read and to a lesser degree Tommy Vance (Nice)- interestingly Blackburn and Freeman appear in 'The End of an Era'but the others did not. I recall the wretched Travis - an endlessly wacky but utterly humourless buffoon sounding off about Enfield and Whitehouse's creations in Q Magazine.

Radio 1 overhauled itself in 1993 with many of the above named being ditched as if in reaction to Smashie and Nicey. Enfield and Whitehouse had already tried to drop their two alter egos but the demise of so much of what they plainly despised seemed to good an opportunity to miss as well as allow the pair to draw a line under their own most famous characters.

Some of the jokes and the skits in 'The End of an Era' work better than others. The 'Top of The Pops' send ups are bang on the money and Nicey's spoof ad for 'Deptford Draylons' although an obscure reference for anybody born after 1967 or so is very funny. The intermingling of the two characters with archive film mostly works too but really Bill Grundy interviewing the Sex Pistols is funny enough in its original version and whilst taking the mick out of Kenny Everett at the time the man was dying is on the boundaries of taste it would surely have been Smashie who would thought he was a great comedian and not Nicey . The 'Peeping Tom' style footage from Smash's childhood are excellent and although the 'Tessa!'reference caused Enfield to apologise to Tony Blackburn it is nevertheless very, very funny. Overall far more comes off than not and unexpected depths are found for both men.

Enfield and Whitehouse were at their zenith here and never worked together quite as well again and in this show there are suggestions that their partnership was only slightly less fraught than the two characters they mock here. In one scene the DJs -supposedly 'great mates'- score points of each other by claiming to be slightly more popular than the other. In the early nineties there were suggestions in the media that Enfield was less than happy that his underling was thought to be funnier and more talented than the headline star. This may or not have been true but it is worth remembering that Whitehouse' next project was 'The Fast Show' which did not feature Enfield and was considered to be superior to Enfield's own show (which still had Whitehouse in it) that was broadcast in the weeks before Whitehouse's project. Near the end of 'The End of an Era' a sozzled, whisky sipping Nice tells us he hates 'Smashey' and it was easy for some to think that this was Enfield speaking and not Dave Nice.

'Smashie and Nicey - the End of an Era' is very much of its time I suppose - many of the jokes and characters spoofed will mean nothing to anybody under the age of 40. But if you were there at the time it was one of the climax of a gloriously funny, sarcastic send up of an institution that was so deserving of ridicule.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The best Mickey take...EVER
leigh_albrigt27 June 2006
I remember well the birth of radio 1 and how the DJ's of that era became more famous than their true talent ever really warranted. The ego, name dropping and self publicity was totally shameless. What Enfield and Whitehouse achieve here is a superbly made and well deserved re-balancing of the books. The more you remember of of the 60's to 90's radio 1 the more you'll see it's relevance. The script and acting is out of this world and I'm currently trying to source this on DVD. I have a very old VHS copy of this but would panic if it ever got lost or the the tape broke :)) Check out cable TV schedules, this is a not to be missed Mickey take of the very very highest order. Well done guys, it's right up there with Norbert Smith - A Life.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Not now Daniel
colinrogers127 January 2023
I just remembered this line whilst watching a drama series that had a very similar situation. So incredibly funny and fantastically written by the chaps at the top of their game. Enfield is dreadfully underused these days. His writing and acting is now sadly overlooked. Nineties comedy and it's writing is becoming forgotten. It was such a rich seam, a perfect storm and whatever other platitude you can think of. This exemplifies how good artists, producers, writers, directors and ensemble casts bro g together such good comedy. Whitehouse is now being himself and reappraising his success. Never a bad thing. This is so great and needs protecting! Thankyou BBC archive for letting it be available via YouTube. DANIEL?
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
''I don't think people were ready for an entirely black music show!''
Rabical-9118 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Though Smashie and Nicey were never my favourite characters from 'Harry Enfield's Television Programme' ( in fact, I often used to press the fast forward button on my remote whenever they came on ), I did find this one-off special - 'Smashie & Nicey - The End Of An Era' - quite amusing. Filmed without a studio audience, this mockumentary focused on the downfall of the careers of DJs Mike Smash ( Paul Whitehouse ) and Dave Nice ( Harry Enfield ) after they were sacked from Radio Fab FM.

Dave Nice is portrayed here to be a vain and selfish man ( he even goes as far to fly by helicopter to the newsagent near his home ). He is also gay. Mike Smash ( in a blatant dig at the break-up of Tony Blackburn's marriage to Tessa Wyatt ) lives a reclusive lifestyle following his marital break up and spends his days making chutney.

Some bits drag on more so than others but all in all it helps to pass a cheery hour. The dig at Tony Blackburn caused some controversy. Indeed, Enfield is quoted to have said in his book 'Harry Enfield & His Humorous Chums' that he is now deeply ashamed and embarrassed by this item.

This was indeed the last viewers saw of Smashie & Nicey. They did not return for 'Harry Enfield & Chums' which came out the same year as this.

Funniest bit - cringe making archive footage showing Smashie & Nicey's years of presenting 'Top Of The Pops!
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed