Yes
Minister Series
International Herald Tribune
Monday, May 2, 1988
"LET'S HEAR A 'YES' FOR JIM HACKER"
By Mary Blume
LONDON-The names of other politicians may come more readily to
mind in the heat of the French and American elections, but only
Prime Minister Jim Hacker is a regular on television screens in
nearly 50 countries, including China.
Hacker, the invention of Jonathan Lynn and Antony Jay, began with
the decade as they newly appointed Minister of Administrative Affairs
in the BBC series "Yes, Minster." The series has won a
record number of British awards and a book called "The Complete
Yes, Minister" is headed into its third year on the best seller
lists. Two volumes of Hacker's "diaries" as prime minister
have sold the way votes used to in Chicago.
"Last Christmas we were numbers one, three and four on the
lists," Jonathan Lynn says. "I was absolutely furious
when Dick Francis got the number two spot."
As his name suggests, Hacker is an amiably opportunistic politician
who could belong to any party and whose sayings sometimes strike
an uncomfortably familiar chord. "I had to establish whether
or not this lie was true," he notes in his diary.
The series is less about politics than about government. Hacker
may have influence but he has not power. Power is in the hands of
the civil service represented by Hacker's antagonist and occasional
accomplice, Sir Humphrey Appleby, whose duty is to keep politicians
out of such serious matters as governing and who regards language
not as a window into the mind but as a curtain to draw across it.
All of Sir Humphrey's motives, as someone remarks, are ulterior.
The series is a study of what paralyzes the process of government.
"Somebody once said that the British government has the engine
of a lawnmower and the brakes of a Rolls-Royce," Jonathan Lynn
says.
"The thing which makes the British government grind to a halt
is the relationship between the elected representative, Jim Hacker,
and his permanent official, Sir Humphrey.
"Politicians are seen by civil servants as squalid, vote-grubbing
people who will do anything for short-term political advantage.
The politicians see themselves on the other hand as the people's
representatives and it is their duty, they would argue, to do what
people want. The civil service is obstructive because it is interested
in continuity rather than change. The civil service would argue
that continuity is essential to protect people from the politicians."
British though the series is, it has had great success abroad, and
excerpts from "The Complete Yes, Minister" have been published
in a Russian literary magazine prior to publication of the book.
Hacker and Appleby, says Lynn, are especially popular in countries
that were part of the British Empire.
"It's very popular in India, for example, and I'm told that
Robert Mugabe watches it. None of that surprises me because most
of the political leaders in today's Commonwealth had some educational
contact with Britain, and most of the middle classes probably did.
What they make of it in Saudi Arabia or Libya I cannot imagine."
In the United States that program became a surprise hit on Public
Broadcast television and "The Complete Yes, Minister"
was hailed in The New York Times as "the funniest, wittiest
and truest piece of political satire to be published on either side
of the Atlantic in the post-Evelyn Waugh era."
An American adaptation of the series called "All in Favor"
is under way. "I think Americans are relatively uninformed
about the real process of government, just like the British,"
Lynn says.
"What made 'Yes, Minister' accessible to the public was not
politics but government and this series would be about the processes
of government that have nothing to do with running for election.
They're the same no matter who is elected."
The problem, easily resolved, was to identify the chief road block
in American government.
"The answer is the relationship between Congress and the White
House," Lynn says. "Because whereas we got to this situation
by dreadful historical accident, the American constitution actually
created on purpose the doctrine of the separation of powers which
insures that the American government will also grind to a halt.
And it's for the same reason: A lot of people have the power to
say no, to stop things happening. Almost no one has the power to
make things happen."
Jonathan Lynn read law at Cambridge and went straight into show
business with "Cambridge Circus," a revue featuring future
members of the Monty Python gang, in 1964. In addition to writing
and acting, he had a three-play season as a director last year at
the National Theatre.
Antony Jay is also a Cambridge man ("Yes, Minister" characters
tend to be Oxonians) who went into broadcasting and management training
films, and wrote such books as "Management and Machiavelli"
and "The Householder's Guide to Community Defense Against Bureaucratic
Aggression."
Lynn and Jay industriously read all memoirs by politicians and civil
servants as they come out and they have as sources several moles.
They divide the two main characters between them.
"The way Tony puts it is that ultimately he's the guardian
of Sir Humphrey's soul and I'm the guardian of Jim Hacker's. We
both of us do a pretty poor job in that respect because they both,
I'm afraid, will compromise themselves out of existence when necessary."
If the theme of the series is the immobility of government, the
details of how it malfunctions are copious and convincing. Hacker,
as a politician, is skilled at not answering questions (one ploy
is to reply with another question, another is to say, "That's
really two questions" and then fearlessly and honestly to ask
yourself two questions you want to answer and answer them). Sir
Humphrey knows how to read between the lines: If something is under
consideration, he explains, it means we've lost the file. Under
active consideration means we're trying to find it
Right now in real life Britain is fighting against standardizing
its three-pronged electric plug in conformity with EEC two-pronged
plugs. Hacker had an analogous crisis over the Eurosausage, an attempt
to standardize the British banger. "Our European enemies, or
partners as they are referred to in public," Hacker notes,
wish to refer to his favorite breakfast dish as the Emulsified High-Fat
Offal Tube.
No politician can complain that "Yes, Minister" or "Yes,
Prime Minister" cut too close to the bone without admitting
the justice of Lynn and Jay's approach. Margaret Thatcher has praised
the series in words Sir Humphrey might have chosen: "It's closely
observed portrayal of what goes on in the corridors of power has
given me hours of pure joy."
Jonathan Lynn is closing a deal on a Beverly Hills house and writing
a script for Bette Midler to be produced by the Disney corporation.
It's about time to move Hacker up to the House of Lords, but Lynn
and Jay aren't quite ready.
"We write about government, not politics, and when he's in
the Lords he won't be in government anymore," Lynn says. "So
we won't send him to the Lords unless we want to stop writing him
forever. It's the equivalent of the Reichenbach Falls in Sherlock
Holmes."
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