Ben Elton shares disappointing replace on Blackadder reunion sequence

Ben Elton has provided an update following rumours of a Blackadder reunion series.

The acclaimed sitcom starring Rowan Atkinson, saw the star play various descendants of the scheming Edmund Blackadder throughout different points in history. The show ran for 4 series, and 24 episodes, between 1983 and 1989.

Although it was revived for a Red Nose Day 2023 sketch in aid of Comic Relief, and actor Tony Robinson previously teased the prospect of a 40th anniversary reunion that never materialised, Elton has poured water over the prospect of a fifth season.

Asked if there would be a fifth season, potentially set during the Russian Revolution, Elton said, “We could do any period. It would be a lovely thing to do,” in a new interview with The Guardian.

He added, “I recently did Upstart Crow, which was a Shakespeare sitcom set in the political world of the 16th century.”

However, he confirmed, “But there will not be a fifth series of Blackadder, I think that’s pretty much a certainty. I have no interest in doing it. I don’t think any of us do, with the possible exception of Tony [Robinson].

“But if we did, the world would be our oyster. We could have fun with any period.”

Atkinson starred in the acclaimed sitcom
Atkinson starred in the acclaimed sitcom (BBC/Blackadder)

Elton added that he and his fellow cast members remained close and in touch.

“We’re all still very good friends,” he said. “I saw Rowan [Atkinson] only a couple of days ago, Richard wrote to me yesterday. I still see Stephen [Fry] and Hugh [Laurie]. We’re all very close.”

He explained that the rehearsal process could be frustrating with the constant rewriting of jokes.

“There was a certain tension – an endless sort of deconstructing that tended to be very frustrating. There would be 20 minutes of discussion on a single syllable, or debate over something like, is a vole or a gerbil the funniest small animal to have a degree from Cambridge?

“Richard and I always wanted them to rehearse the script as written before debating whether a certain line worked,” he said.

“We’d have the first read-through and they’d all light up cigarettes and Stephen and John Lloyd would look slightly pained over certain bits and pieces.

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“I just stepped away in the end but Richard sat through it all. And, of course, Richard went on to write Four Weddings and a Funeral and Love Actually, so I don’t think we need to question his writing ability.”