The Trip to Italy
Hello?
- Steve?
- Yeah.
Who's this?
- It's Rob.
- Oh, hey.
Hey.
How are you?
- Good.
How-how are you?
- Yeah, good.
How is the show going?
- Uh, just finished.
Just starting the hiatus.
Yeah, I know.
I-I spoke to your agent.
to do more restaurant reviews,
another six lunches.
- Really?
- But this time in Italy.
Ma belle Italia, yeah?
Beautiful countryside,
beautiful wine,
beautiful women, beautiful food.
What do you think?
Well, um...
- And they?! fly you
to Europe.
First class?
- Or business
or upper-class Virgin.
This is according to
The Observer-
"Nowhere in Italy
compares with Piemonte
a combination of fine wines,
"gastronomy,
and beautiful countryside.
"The area to explore
"is just an hour's drive
down the autostrada"
"from Turin, from Bra,
through Alba, then Asti,
"takes you through
a panoply of vineyards
"producing Italy's greatest"
Batch, Barbaresco, Barbara. "
Hanna-Barbara.
Sufferin' succotash!
I did!
Pbbt!
uh, which is where
we're going-
"is set in rolling hills
clad with vineyards.
"This elegant trattoria
is the ideal place
for a romantic evening. "
- You know I'm not a homosexual,
don't you?
- No, we're not having
a romantic evening.
We are gonna have
a stimulating lunch.
- Good.
Good.
we'll deal with it
as it happens.
- The only time
I'd ever snuggle up to you
is if I was on the side
of the Eiger, on a shelf,
and not to do so
would mean I'd freeze to death.
Well, in that situation,
you know
what you're meant to do.
You're meant to get as close
to each other as you can.
- I know.
You have to spoon.
- Spooning, yeah, yeah.
- I know.
- Can wee on each other as well,
and that's-
- Well, that's where recreation
meets survival, isn't it?
Yeah.
I've also sorted out the music,
the iPod.
I've gone for a-
a broad selection,
a lot of Italian stuff,
a lot of, um, opera, obviously.
- Good. Good.
- Don Giovanni.
Rigoletto...
Uh, Verdi.
Then a smattering of Wales
and the Welsh
to tie in
with the beautiful countryside.
- Right, Verdi's sounding
very, very appealing
right now, I have to say.
- I've got some Stereophonics
and some Tom-
Jones.
- We're not gonna be doing
any impersonations, are we?
- No.
If I sing along,
that's not an impersonation.
It just so happens
I bear an uncanny resemblance,
vocally and physically, to Tom.
- What?
'Cause you look 75?
Why is this-
Ohh!
- I promise you I haven't
sabotaged the sound system
because of my aversion
to your karaoke inclination.
- Why is-
there's nothing at all.
"Mm!
Bane.
That's actually-
That is-that is nice.
I'll take your word for it.
No, no, no, no.
Grazia.
- Grazia.
Seriously?
You're not drinking?
- No.
When did this come about?
- I've not drunk
for about nine months.
- So you're not gonna drink
at all on the trip?
Wow.
- I'm surprised The Observer
wanted you to do this again.
I mean...
- Well...
- Neither of us
know anything about-
with respect-know anything
about food, really.
- I know a little bit
about food.
Well, yeah, but you don't-
- But when I wrote
the last ones,
I concentrated
not so much on the food.
It was more a journey.
It was the culture.
It was-it was Wordsworth
and Coleridge.
Now it's gonna be Byron
and Shelley.
- It just feels odd doing
something for a second time.
You know, it's like
second album syndrome, isn't it?
Everyone has this amazing,
expressive first album,
where they
put everything into it,
and the second album's
a bit of a damp squib.
it's like trying to do a sequel,
isn't it?
as good as the first time.
Godfather ll.
- Which is the one
when they try to search
for an example
of a sequel that's as good as...
Just when I thought I was out,
they pull me back in.
- What's this licking thing
you always do?
You look like some sort of...
It's what Pacino does.
Small gecko.
That's what he does.
Just when I thought
I'd made two
terrific movies,
they go and make another!
I'm back in.
- it's okay; he's just doing
an impersonation.
it's fine.
Look at Byron.
You know, Childe Harold made him
the most popular poet
in all of Europe,
and when he wrote that, he did
the first two cantos, right?
And he said, "if this is a hit,
I'll write more. "
If it's not a hit,
I won't do any more. "
- You should do the same
at the end of your shows-
promise the audience
you won't do any more
if they don't like it.
- At the end of my successful
tours and live shows?
- Oh.
- Okay.
Oh, gosh.
Grazia.
- Grazia.
- Pnego. Bon appetite.
- Grazia.
- Molto grazie.
Mmm.
That is lovely.
Childe Harold,
Byron wrote, was a thinly veiled
self-portrait.
I was aware of that.
Childe Stephen,
follow you
on your travels and-
- Well, it wouldn't be
a pseudonym, would it?
'Cause I'm called Stephen.
Byron wasn't called Harold.
- No.
- Was he?
- He was actually
George Gordon Lord Byron.
Gordon.
Understandably, he, um-
Ditched the Gordon.
He ditched the Gordon.
It's not a romantic name.
- it's not a poet's name,
Gordon, no.
it's not.
Gordon Byron on line three.
Oh, God, tell him I'm not in.
He does my head in.
So Childe Stephen-
we'll do it as an article,
turn it into a Sunday night
serial on BBC One.
Who plays you?
- A Sunday night costume drama
about my life?
- Yeah.
Who plays you?
It could happen.
Who plays you?
Play myself.
- You couldn't do that-
It's "childe. "
It's meant to be
like a young marl.
You could have Jude Law.
Jude Law's 40-plus.
He doesn't look it, does he?
He hasn't aged like you and I.
Well, he's balding.
- Yeah, but he's got that face,
he does.
- He's got that really young
bald look.
- When you played
Alan Partridge-
you know,
when he was popular-
you-he was more known
than you.
And, of course,
he was older than you.
But with me,
with The Rob Brydon Show,
my name is in the title.
I sort of push that.
- Yeah.
- If I were in a bar in a hotel
in Britain, right,
and I wanted to have a drink
with a girl,
I couldn't do it,
an assumption-
"Oh, what's he doing?"
- Go and chat to Rob Brydon?
- Yeah.
People think I'm affable.
Affable.
That's what I-
- Well, you are.
- I'm affable. I'm affable.
- I'm not disagreeing with you.
- I'm an affable man.
I'm not disagreeing with you.
But my public persona
is even more affable
than I actually am.
I'm not as affable
- You've made an affable rod
for your own back.
Yes.
Yes, and I'm not saying
I'm not affable.
I am affable.
We're agreed there.
But I'm not as affable
cause to think.
Crystal clear.
- So out here,
I can be off the leash.
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"The Trip to Italy" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_trip_to_italy_21508>.
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