The Funny Faces of Mr. Bean – Strange Facts about this Oddly Hilarious Character

Richard Curtis co-created him


Also attending Oxford was Richard Curtis, who went on to write and direct movies such as Four Weddings and a Funeral, and Love Actually. When he met Atkinson, it led to a fruitful collaboration on TV shows Not The Nine O’Clock News and Blackadder amongst others.


In 2018, Atkinson spoke to People TV about the initial sketches he wrote with Curtis that proved invaluable to the character. “We didn’t call them ‘Mr Bean’ sketches, but they effectively were,” he said. “And I’d discovered by then that I could express myself visually once I’m asked to tell a comedic story, without words.”
When Mr Bean arrived in sitcom form, Curtis was in the co-writer’s chair.
He was inspired by a French genius


Bean is pure slapstick, and delights fans of physical comedy around the world. But what viewers might not know is his debt to a French master of big screen comedy.
Jacques Tati (1907-1982) is famous for movies such as 1953’s Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday, which features his title character’s clumsy antics. Atkinson paid tribute to this with Mr Bean’s Holiday in 2007.
Talking to the New York Times in 2018, Atkinson revealed, “I saw ‘Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday’ when I was 17, and it just had a tone and an attitude and a slowness that I had never seen in a comedy movie before. That idea of expressing yourself entirely visually rather than verbally was inspired by him as much as anything else.”
Atkinson’s working style is unconventional


Mr. Bean began with the actor looking at himself in a mirror and pulling some funny faces. Yet strangely, Atkinson hasn’t revisited his reflection for reference since.
In a 2015 Mental Floss piece celebrating Mr. Bean’s 25th anniversary, it’s said that “Atkinson decided to put faith in what he was doing with his face following that first successful performance at Oxford.”


Quoting the star from a BBC World Service interview, it goes on to reveal “since then, I’ve hardly ever looked at my face … I hope it’s doing what I think it’s doing.” That may also be the point at which he trained his ears to wiggle, another Bean trademark which it turns out is no special effect.
Atkinson is also renowned for the extensive thought he puts into his work, no matter how light the end result appears. Blackadder saw Atkinson and the cast engaging in long debates over how the material should be presented onscreen. For a funny business, he takes it very seriously.
There aren’t many helpings of Bean


Just as Fawlty Towers only has 12 episodes, there is a limited supply of classic Bean on the small screen. 14 instalments exist in total, with a 15th acting as a compilation show.
Bean returned at the cinema, in adverts for brands such as Snickers and also in several sketches for Comic Relief, most recently in 2015. His newest appearance is for telecoms company Etisalat, where he “flips through the channels as action leaps off the screen and onto his couch,” according to The Gulf Today.


He then “takes on multiple characters: a Scottish warrior, a gentleman and a lady from the Victorian era, a football player, a jungle man, a man revving up a chainsaw, a racing car driver, and a masked sword-wielding Spanish vigilante.”
In terms of a fully-fledged comeback, Atkinson is ambiguous. “I doubt he will ever reappear,” he told The Graham Norton Show recently. “There does come a point when you’ve done all you can. But, never say never.”
When a character captures the public’s imagination as much as Mr Bean, it’s

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The Funny Faces of Mr. Bean – Strange Facts about this Oddly Hilarious Character