915 Columbus Ave
San Francisco, California 94133

Tickets --- $25
Back by popular demand ? the fabulous Neil Innes. Join us for another fun filled night of music and humor with one of Britain?s living legends.

Neil Innes is a British writer and performer of comic songs, best known for playing in the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band and later The Rutles. Innes was born in Essex, and studied at the Norwich School of Fine Art, from which he was thrown out around 1963, allegedly for "spending all day playing music, instead of making things". In the period 1962 to 1965, Innes and several other art school students started a band which was originally named The Bonzo Dog Dada Band after their interest in the art movement Dada, but which was soon renamed the Bonzo Dog Band. Innes, with Vivian Stanshall, wrote most of the band's songs, including "I'm the Urban Spaceman", their sole hit, and "Death Cab for Cutie" (which inspired an American musical group of the same name), which was featured in the Beatles' film Magical Mystery Tour.

In the 1970s, Innes joined with Eric Idle, of the Monty Python team, to create the television comedy series ?Rutland Weekend Television?. This show spawned The Rutles (the "prefab four"), a Beatles parody band, in which Innes played the character of Ron Nasty, who was loosely based on John Lennon. Innes played Nasty in ?All You Need Is Cash?. Innes also contributed to the Pythons' final BBC TV series in 1974 - he wrote a squib of a song called "George III" (sung by a pastiche black American girl group) which appears in the episode "The Golden Age Of Ballooning", he wrote the song "Where Does A Dream Begin?" (included in the episode "Anything Goes: The Light Entertainment War") and he co-wrote the "Most Awful Family In Britain" sketch in the last episode, "Party Political Broadcast".

Innes appeared in ?Monty Python and the Holy Grail?, playing a head-bashing monk and the leader of Sir Robin's minstrels, and in Terry Gilliam's ?Jabberwocky?. He also appeared with the Pythons at their legendary Hollywood Bowl concert. Because of these long-standing connections, Innes is often referred to as "the Seventh Python".

Official Website: http://cobbscomedy.com/calendar.html

Added by misterpockets on May 3, 2006