Gourmet Night
- Episode aired Oct 17, 1975
- TV-PG
- 29m
IMDb RATING
8.7/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
In an effort to appeal to a more discerning clientele, Basil organizes a 'Gourmet Night' - but the chef's drinking problem, and a spot of car trouble, ensure the evening quickly unravels.In an effort to appeal to a more discerning clientele, Basil organizes a 'Gourmet Night' - but the chef's drinking problem, and a spot of car trouble, ensure the evening quickly unravels.In an effort to appeal to a more discerning clientele, Basil organizes a 'Gourmet Night' - but the chef's drinking problem, and a spot of car trouble, ensure the evening quickly unravels.
Michael Dalton
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
Steve Kelly
- Lorry Driver
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
8.72.3K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
rating the episodes from 1-12, this one ranks number 7!
This episode is very well put-together, not to mention very funny. Basil, as he does in many of the episodes, tries to raise the stature of Fawlty Towers by staging a gourmet evening and turning away any so-called "riff-raff." So the big night arrives and Kurt, the chef, has decided to get very drunk. In a memorable sequence, Polly tries to tell Basil without saying the word "drunk." The fate of the evening now rests with Basil delivering the gourmet meal promised to the guests. He calls Andre, the owner of a restaurant in town, and asks for his help. But the only suitable dish he can offer is duck. When informed of the change in the menu, one of the guests asks "what do you do if you don't like duck?" Basil replies "well, if you don't like duck, you're rather stuck." The rest of the episode consists of the staff trying to make the evening go as smoothly as possible without letting on about the chaos in the kitchen. One of the best scenes in the whole series is when Basil beats his car with a tree branch after it stalls when he is on the way back to the hotel with the duck from Andre's.
Recipe for disaster
Fawlty Towers has a new chef and Basil thinks it's a perfect opportunity to invite a higher class of guest for some fine dining.
This is another episode where Basil's attempt at social climbing ends in complete disaster. You know this will be the case from the off, but as usual the intricately plotted series of disasters are all hilarious.
Basil Fawlty going into a situation where he wants everything to go perfect is a funny enough concept in itself, but watching him react and deal with everything that goes wrong is a brilliant.
My favourite parts are how he deals with an unruly child and when he has to introduce the guests to each other. The car breakdown is good but it's not my favourite part of the episode let alone the series as it is often regarded.
John Cleese is brilliant as always and is well supported by the other cast members, particularly Andrew Sachs and Connie Booth.
This is another episode where Basil's attempt at social climbing ends in complete disaster. You know this will be the case from the off, but as usual the intricately plotted series of disasters are all hilarious.
Basil Fawlty going into a situation where he wants everything to go perfect is a funny enough concept in itself, but watching him react and deal with everything that goes wrong is a brilliant.
My favourite parts are how he deals with an unruly child and when he has to introduce the guests to each other. The car breakdown is good but it's not my favourite part of the episode let alone the series as it is often regarded.
John Cleese is brilliant as always and is well supported by the other cast members, particularly Andrew Sachs and Connie Booth.
The one with the car thrashing.
This episode features one of the most well recognised scenes in the history of British TV comedy: a desperate Basil Fawlty giving his broken down car a damn good thrashing. Actually, it's just one of many great moments in yet another classic episode of Fawlty Towers.
This time around, Basil is trying to give his establishment some class by organising a gourmet night (no riff raff!), but problems arise when his new chef gets seriously sozzled and is unable to prepare anything on the menu.
My favourite moment (car thrashing aside) is when Basil introduces a couple, Mr and Mrs Twitchen, to Colonel Hall, who has a repetitive neck spasm, but there are many other great scenes guaranteed to have your sides splitting, including Basil cuffing an obnoxious brat, and Manuel getting his foot stuck in a roast duck.
This time around, Basil is trying to give his establishment some class by organising a gourmet night (no riff raff!), but problems arise when his new chef gets seriously sozzled and is unable to prepare anything on the menu.
My favourite moment (car thrashing aside) is when Basil introduces a couple, Mr and Mrs Twitchen, to Colonel Hall, who has a repetitive neck spasm, but there are many other great scenes guaranteed to have your sides splitting, including Basil cuffing an obnoxious brat, and Manuel getting his foot stuck in a roast duck.
10oceanave
They're in a Terrible Fix!
The episode with the famous 'Basil gives the car a "damn good thrashing" with a tree branch' scene, "Gourmet Night" offers some spectacular comedy. This is another of the Fawlty's efforts to raise the hotel's status and level of clientèle. Their idea is to have 'gourmet nights' where the chef will serve haute cuisine to a group of VIPs in the Torquay area. On the debut evening, they find out that Curt the chef, is gay and has been rejected by Manuel, then he gets plastered and can't cook the meal. The hotel staff is left to fend for themselves, with their usual 'cover-up' routines that backfire badly (check out the dining room scene where Manuel, Polly, and Sybil try to distract the guests with their own entertainment!)
This episode was one in particular that had perfect casting of the guest stars - Allan Cuthbertson as the brash Colonel Hall, who suffers from a constantly-twitching neck muscle, with Ann Way as his diminutive wife. Also great are Steve Plytas as the drunken chef Curt, and the very French Andre Maranne as the local restaurant owner and consultant to the Fawlty Towers kitchens.
"Gourmet Night" is probably the best for Cleese's physical comedy. The scene in the kitchen where he derisively hurls the duck at Curt is side-splittingly hilarious. But who can forget the scene with Basil attacking the car with the tree branch, and the sight of him running up the driveway carrying the evening's meal... Who's for trifle?!
This episode was one in particular that had perfect casting of the guest stars - Allan Cuthbertson as the brash Colonel Hall, who suffers from a constantly-twitching neck muscle, with Ann Way as his diminutive wife. Also great are Steve Plytas as the drunken chef Curt, and the very French Andre Maranne as the local restaurant owner and consultant to the Fawlty Towers kitchens.
"Gourmet Night" is probably the best for Cleese's physical comedy. The scene in the kitchen where he derisively hurls the duck at Curt is side-splittingly hilarious. But who can forget the scene with Basil attacking the car with the tree branch, and the sight of him running up the driveway carrying the evening's meal... Who's for trifle?!
Did you know
- TriviaJohn Cleese did not learn to drive until a year after this episode was broadcast. A double was needed to drive the car.
- GoofsWhen Basil impersonates the duck, the sound effect used continues when his mouth is closed.
- Quotes
Sybil Fawlty: [with only four people attending the grand opening of Gourmet Night] I should never have let you write that advert. Fancy putting "no riff-raff."
- Crazy creditsThe Fawlty Towers sign is re-arranged to spell Warty Towels (the "F" is missing).
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Car's the Star: Austin Allegro (1994)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Filming locations
- Mentmore Close, Harrow, Middlesex, England, UK(Car thrashing scene)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content






