The Cheese Shop


The cast:

     CUSTOMER
          John Cleese
     WENSLYDALE
          Michael Palin


The sketch:

     Customer walks in the Henry Wenslydale's Cheese shop and walks past the bazouki player.

     Customer: Good Morning.

     Wenslydale: Good morning, Sir. Welcome to the National Cheese Emporium!

     Customer: Ah, thank you, my good man.

     Wenslydale: What can I do for you, Sir?

     Customer: Well, I was, uh, sitting in the public library on Thurmon Street just now, skimming through "Rogue Herrys" by Hugh Walpole, and I suddenly
     came over all peckish.

     Wenslydale: Peckish, sir?

     Customer: Esuriant.

     Wenslydale: Eh?

     Customer: 'Ee, Ah wor 'ungry-loike!

     Wenslydale: Ah, hungry!

     Customer: In a nutshell. And I thought to myself, "a little fermented curd will do the trick," so, I curtailed my Walpoling activites, sallied forth, and infiltrated
     your place of purveyance to negotiate the vending of some cheesy comestibles!

     Wenslydale: Come again?

     Customer: I want to buy some cheese.

     Wenslydale: Oh, I thought you were complaining about the bazouki player!

     Customer: Oh, heaven forbid: I am one who delights in all manifestations of the Terpsichorean muse!

     Wenslydale: Sorry?

     Customer: 'Ooo, Ah lahk a nice tuune, 'yer forced too!

     Wenslydale: So he can go on playing, can he?

     Customer: Most certainly! Now then, some cheese please, my good man.

     Wenslydale: (lustily) Certainly, sir. What would you like?

     Customer: Well, eh, how about a little red Leicester.

     Wenslydale: I'm, a-fraid we're fresh out of red Leicester, sir.

     Customer: Oh, never mind, how are you on Tilsit?

     Wenslydale: I'm afraid we never have that at the end of the week, sir, we get it fresh on Monday.

     Customer: Tish tish. No matter. Well, stout yeoman, four ounces of Caerphilly, if you please.

     Wenslydale: Ah! It's beeeen on order, sir, for two weeks. Was expecting it this morning.

     Customer: 'T's Not my lucky day, is it? Aah, Bel Paese?

     Wenslydale: Sorry, sir.

     Customer: Red Windsor?

     Wenslydale: Normally, sir, yes. Today the van broke down.

     Customer: Ah. Stilton?

     Wenslydale: Sorry.

     Customer: Ementhal? Gruyere?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Any Norweigan Jarlsburg, per chance.

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Lipta?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Lancashire?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: White Stilton?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Danish Brew?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Double Goucester?

     Wenslydale: (pause) No.

     Customer: Cheshire?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Dorset Bluveny?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Brie, Roquefort, Pol le Veq, Port Salut, Savoy Aire, Saint Paulin, Carrier de lest, Bres Bleu, Bruson?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Camenbert, perhaps?

     Wenslydale: Ah! We have Camenbert, yessir.

     Customer: (suprised) You do! Excellent.

     Wenslydale: Yessir. It's..ah,.....it's a bit runny...

     Customer: Oh, I like it runny.

     Wenslydale: Well,.. It's very runny, actually, sir.

     Customer: No matter. Fetch hither the fromage de la Belle France! Mmmwah!

     Wenslydale: I...think it's a bit runnier than you'll like it, sir.

     Customer: I don't care how fucking runny it is. Hand it over with all speed.

     Wenslydale: Oooooooooohhh........!

     Customer: What now?

     Wenslydale: The cat's eaten it.

     Customer: (pause) Has he.

     Wenslydale: She, sir.

     (pause)

     Customer: Gouda?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Edam?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Case Ness?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Smoked Austrian?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Japanese Sage Darby?

     Wenslydale: No, sir.

     Customer: You...do *have* some cheese, don't you?

     Wenslydale: (brightly) Of course, sir. It's a cheese shop, sir. We've got--

     Customer: No no... don't tell me. I'm keen to guess.

     Wenslydale: Fair enough.

     Customer: Uuuuuh, Wensleydale.

     Wenslydale: Yes?

     Customer: Ah, well, I'll have some of that!

     Wenslydale: Oh! I thought you were talking to me, sir. Mister Wensleydale, that's my name.

     (pause)

     Customer: Greek Feta?

     Wenslydale: Uh, not as such.

     Customer: Uuh, Gorgonzola?

     Wenslydale: no

     Customer: Parmesan,

     Wenslydale: no

     Customer: Mozarella,

     Wenslydale: no

     Customer: Paper Cramer,

     Wenslydale: no

     Customer: Danish Bimbo,

     Wenslydale: no

     Customer: Czech sheep's milk,

     Wenslydale: no

     Customer: Venezuelan Beaver Cheese?

     Wenslydale: Not *today*, sir, no.

     (pause)

     Customer: Aah, how about Cheddar?

     Wenslydale: Well, we don't get much call for it around here, sir.

     Customer: Not much ca--It's the single most popular cheese in the world!

     Wenslydale: Not 'round here, sir.

     Customer: and what IS the most popular cheese 'round hyah?

     Wenslydale: 'Illchester, sir.

     Customer: IS it.

     Wenslydale: Oh, yes, it's staggeringly popular in this manor, squire.

     Customer: Is it.

     Wenslydale: It's our number one best seller, sir!

     Customer: I see. Uuh...'Illchester, eh?

     Wenslydale: Right, sir.

     Customer: All right. Okay. 'Have you got any?' he asked, expecting the answer 'no'.

     Wenslydale: I'll have a look, sir... nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnno.

     Customer: It's not much of a cheese shop, is it?

     Wenslydale: Finest in the district!

     Customer: (annoyed) Explain the logic underlying that conclusion, please.

     Wenslydale: Well, it's so clean, sir!

     Customer: It's certainly uncontaminated by cheese....

     Wenslydale: (brightly) You haven't asked me about Limburger, sir.

     Customer: Would it be worth it?

     Wenslydale: Could be....

     Customer: Have you --SHUT THAT BLOODY BAZOUKI OFF!

     Wenslydale: Told you sir....

     Customer: (slowly) Have you got any Limburger?

     Wenslydale: No.

     Customer: Figures. Predictable, really I suppose. It was an act of purest optimism to have posed the question in the first place. Tell me

     Wenslydale: Yessir?

     Customer: Have you in fact got any cheese here at all.

     Wenslydale: Yes,sir.

     Customer: Really?

     (pause) Wenslydale: No. Not really, sir.

     Customer: You haven't.

     Wenslydale: Nosir. Not a scrap. I was deliberately wasting your time,sir.

     Customer: Well I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to shoot you.

     Wenslydale: Right-o, sir.

     The customer takes out a gun and shoots the owner.

     Customer: What a *senseless* waste of human life.