Producer Ed Bye chats with Paul Tanter ahead of Bottom: Exposed, a new documentary which delves into the history and popularity of the anarchic ’90s sitcom.

By Paul Tanter

Published: Thursday, 18 April 2024 at 07:00 AM


When Ed Bye took on directing and producing duties for the pilot of Rik Mayall and Ade Edmondson’s Bottom in 1990, then-BBC2 Controller Alan Yentob wasn’t convinced he was up to the job.

“He said, ‘Who’s in charge of this?’ I said, ‘I am.’ He said, ‘No, who’s really in charge?’ I said, ‘Me,’ and he replied, ‘Oh s**t,’” laughs Bye, who helmed series 1 and 2 of the groundbreaking sitcom in the early 1990s.

Having worked with the pair on seminal ’80s smash-hit The Young Ones, Bye had faith in Mayall and Edmondson’s abilities, though hesitancy manifested until the first laughs during the studio recording.

Speaking exclusively to RadioTimes.com, the director says: “Like all shows that are groundbreaking, there were doubts. Nobody quite knows how it’s going to go down or what it’s going to be like. So, you just have to have the courage of convictions to go, ‘Look, this is going to work. We’re going to give it our full blast.’

“There were reservations from the BBC, particularly because it was very edgy comedy. But the audience went nuts and it went really, really well. We thought, ‘Great. Now we have the confidence.’”

From small acorns grow mighty oaks and Bottom was no exception, with audiences loving the exploits of sex-starved Richard Richard (Mayall) and violent drunkard Eddie Hitler (Edmondson), living together in a squalid Hammersmith flat and eking out an existence of petty crime and poverty.

Adrian Edmondson as Eddie and Rik Mayall as Richie in Bottom. Richie is wearing an apron and ironing his underpants, while Eddie is talking to him, wearing a dark coat and hat.
Adrian Edmondson as Eddie and Rik Mayall as Richie in Bottom.
Don Smith/Radio Times

The show ran for three series and spawned five sellout live tours and even a feature film spin-off, Guest House Paradiso. More than three decades since that pilot, Bottom’s popularity endures as new fans discover its mix of existential angst and cartoon violence, laced with toilet humour. Bye enjoys the continued affection for the show.

“It’s a huge compliment that people still take an interest in it. Things get very popular when they get repeated. Some of those people taking an interest in it aren’t even 30 years old, discovering it through late night repeats and the Talking Bottom podcast.

“When you’re making something, you hope that it’ll be the best you can make, but I would never have expected it to have such a lasting effect that it has done. Although, it’s never been bettered, as it’s a hard show to copy. It’s got a uniqueness to it which is impossible to replicate.”

Is that uniqueness the key to its longevity, I wonder? Bye agrees.

“You’ve got two really brilliant writer-performers there who work together in a unique way that created Bottom and it came out of their brains. It’s that combo; their writing skills that are impossible to repeat.

“The scripts were always in really good shape. There was very little that we had to do before we started. We tweaked a bit in rehearsals, the odd line change here or there, and nailed the action, which was an important part of the series.

“What was great about that show, more than any other, was that we were left to our own devices and we just got on with it. In those days, there was very little interaction with executive producers or commissioners or anyone else. Not so now. But it was perfect for us.”