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American reacts to 'Dinner for One' (first time watching) 

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Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to Dinner for One
Original video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5n7VI0rC8ZA.html
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Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS

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29 дек 2022

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Комментарии : 1,1 тыс.   
@freakvomdienst
@freakvomdienst Год назад
Normally this is explained by a narrator in the beginning. Miss Sophie used to celebrate her birthday on new year's eve with her four dearest friends, but sadly they all passed away. So James has to fill in for all of them.
@oqqiv
@oqqiv Год назад
the comedy part about this is that he has to drink for the 4 friends too, making him drunk and funny.
@frakturfreak
@frakturfreak Год назад
He watched the Swiss reproduction.
@lordofkoala146
@lordofkoala146 Год назад
Yeah and the camera is normally fixed and not moving
@vivica4645
@vivica4645 Год назад
My horse is called Mr. Winter bottom 😂 And the narrator in the beginning speaks German
@red.aries1444
@red.aries1444 Год назад
The production of the NDR isn't available on RU-vid.
@ian.blackwoodgwent.walesgb5668
I spent many a New Year in Germany and had to watch this with my German friends...they loved it..it is shown multiple times on the evening of December 31st on all the German public broadcasting services..SWR, NDR, etc. The explanation is that it is her 90th birthday celebration dinner but unfortunately all her close friends have long since passed away, so the butler plays their characters... Ps guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr 2023 nach Deutschland 🇩🇪
@arnodobler1096
@arnodobler1096 Год назад
Dir auch
@yvonnek.2027
@yvonnek.2027 Год назад
Danke :) Euch da du rüber auch alles Gute und ein guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr,das es euch Kraft,Liebe und Gesundheit schenkt
@Sciss0rman
@Sciss0rman Год назад
This and "Die Feuerzangenbowle" are somewhat Christmas and New Year's Eve staples. Feuerzangenbowle usually gets kinda messy, since people acting out stuff from the movie in RL as they happen. Really fun, though. :D Dir auch einen guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr, viel Gesundheit und Kraft.
@Wolf-ln1ml
@Wolf-ln1ml Год назад
@@Sciss0rman Aber jeder nur einen winzigen Schluck! 😄
@Ynox54321
@Ynox54321 Год назад
What do you mean "I HAD to"? :(
@silkebower1977
@silkebower1977 Год назад
This is a classic in Germany. It is shown on multiple German TV channels at different times throughout New Year's Eve. It was filmed in black and white in 1963 for the North German broadcasting station. The circumstances of the 90th birthday and the set up is explained in German. The play itself is in English. Freddie Frinton was known in Britain for doing stage plays at seaside towns. You can get booklets or Internet pages with the English text and German translation. There are various remakes in different German dialects. There is also a tinted colour version of the original out. This play is hardly known in Britain despite being played by British actors. It is famous in Germany and has cult status.
@silkebower1977
@silkebower1977 Год назад
@@ichbinbluna3504 sorry, you are right. I corrected that mistake.
@manub.3847
@manub.3847 Год назад
If I remember correctly, it was mentioned in an NDR (= Norddeutscher Rundfunk) documentary that this was a play that the NDR director at the time saw in England. He had the play re-produced for German television with the actors. First broadcast March 1963-> since 1972 the classic New Year's Eve sketch.
@stirlingmoss4621
@stirlingmoss4621 Год назад
that's fascinating. Why would Germans find this entertaining? Because it's harmless, maybe?
@MrSeedi76
@MrSeedi76 Год назад
​@@stirlingmoss4621 we like to drink? I'm not sure but Miss Marple was also quite a success here (the old black and white version) and I think I have read somewhere that Monty Python was more successful in Germany than in the UK. Not sure that's true. As a German I think British humor is (or was) just very popular here.
@chronischgeheilt
@chronischgeheilt Год назад
That is so interesting, thanks for the Info!
@feluno
@feluno Год назад
To explain what's going on and how this became a household stable: This is a British theatre production by Freddie Frinton and May Warden, the actors in this video. It was very popular in Britain in the time after WWII. Peter Frankenfeld, a famous German TV producer, comedian and show host, happened to sit in the audience at one of their performances. He recognised the success of this show piece and convinced German TV station NDR, a part of the German national TV broadcasting service, to invite Freddie Frinton and May Warden to Hamburg. They played some shows there, some with audience, some without, and all of which were recorded by NDR. This is why, even of the original, many versions exist. The German national broadcaster ARD/Das Erste screened one recording on new year's Eve around the 60's, probably 1963. The version they used featured a host, introducing all the character and reoccurring phrases in German. This piece is also popular in Denmark, Switzerland, Scandinavia, Austria, South Africa, Australia and many other countries, all of which show some version of those that were once recorded by NDR. There are versions without audience, without the host and even a shorter version that's only about 11 minutes long. This version is particularly successful in Switzerland and probably the one that you watched. Dinner for one at the moment holds the Guinness world record as most-screened TV production worldwide. The story is about miss Sophie, an old lady celebrating her 90th birthday with her dearest friends. Sadly, she is last remaining of them, having carried the last of them to his grave a mere 25 years ago. This is why they are all impersonated by her loyal Butler James. Every year he does his best to give miss Sophie the impression that she can spend this one dinner a year with her old friends, hence the phrase "same procedure as last year? - same procedure as every year." This is pretty much the whole story behind "dinner for one" or "the 90th birthday" Edit: some last thing I forgot: It became so popular that there are many spin-offs and/or local variants created. Firstly there's a colored version, in which - frame by frame - the whole thing was colored by hand (this is where you see the importance this piece actually has for German television, there are nearly no hand-coloured black-and-white films other than dinner for one). There's a version by German comedian Otto Waalkes There's a north German Version on Plattdeutsch There's a version in the regional dialect of Cologne. There's even a new version produced by netflix.
@RustyITNerd
@RustyITNerd Год назад
A very god summary! As a side note: In the version commonly shown in German TV, the wife of the director is laughing so hard, the recording was almost stopped/interrupted. At least, that's the story I heard - and there are so many different stories. The British still don't really understand why this piece is so popular in Germany. I don't know too, but I'll laugh anyway - same procedure as every year. 😂
@xaverlustig3581
@xaverlustig3581 Год назад
Are you sure they didn't use a computer to make the colorised version? I think that was done in the 90s when computer assisted colorisation was all the rage.
@seeskabel4561
@seeskabel4561 Год назад
es gibt ne otto version?!? und ne platte
@voyance4elle
@voyance4elle Год назад
Thank you so much for all the background info! :D
@jupamoers
@jupamoers Год назад
@@seeskabel4561 klar, such auf youtube mal danach xD Ralf Schmitz ist der Butler
@runningwild.flowerxoxo6296
@runningwild.flowerxoxo6296 Год назад
Don't know if the disclaimer is only in the German version (we watch the whole thing in English, but the disclaimer is a guy explaining the setting in German), but it's Ms. Sophies 90th Birthday and the people who should be sitting there were her closest friends, but she outlived them all. It's really a classic and as I can't watch it this year, I'm happy I could watch it with you this morning 😄 Edit: the last procedure you only get as an adult, as a child I never got this 😄😄
@Dekamusic07
@Dekamusic07 Год назад
exactly
@Anson_AKB
@Anson_AKB Год назад
for all versions (except the german dialect remakes) the language is english since Freddy refused to speak german. that intro was done on the NDR version, but not on this swiss tv version which was filmed shortly afterwards. and the full title of "Dinner for One" has the addendum "or the 90th birthday" which explains half of it: she is quite old and thus her four best friends have passed away and have to be reenacted by her butler. "the same procedure as last year?" ... "the same procedure as EVERY year!"
@godkillmeplease
@godkillmeplease Год назад
Oh and let me add, it's not as old as one might think, it's from 1963
@tristanvoltaire2058
@tristanvoltaire2058 Год назад
@@godkillmeplease soon 60 years old, don't forget that.
@godkillmeplease
@godkillmeplease Год назад
@@tristanvoltaire2058 😭😭😭
@vanoldivanoldi8391
@vanoldivanoldi8391 Год назад
I'm born 1966 and as far as I can remember, we watched "Dinner for one" since my parents had a television. Silvester does not start before "Dinner for one" has been watched.
@beatecsm1183
@beatecsm1183 Год назад
I'm German. I ALWAYS watched this with me parents as a kid and teenager. It was a tradition set in stone. I watched and understood it long before I learned English at school. I don't know why, but it really is a typical German thing to do on the last day of the year.
@stirlingmoss4621
@stirlingmoss4621 Год назад
I learning German now...Gott! you make life difficult.
@beatecsm1183
@beatecsm1183 Год назад
@@stirlingmoss4621 Viel Glück!
@TierchenF95
@TierchenF95 Год назад
I watched it so often and still have to laugh. Some old things don't ever get old.
@freibier
@freibier Год назад
It is a comforting new year's staple because everybody has seen it so many times that you THINK you know exactly what will happen, but then you still wonder "is this the time he does NOT stumble over the tiger?". Plus, the catchphrase "same procedure as last year?" - "same procedure as EVERY year!" is known to everybody. Watching it has become a tradition, like "first we sing christmas songs, THEN we open the presents" or similar stuff.
@TheBadassTonberry
@TheBadassTonberry 6 месяцев назад
I *always* get the time when he doesn't stumble wrong.
@Neonblue84
@Neonblue84 Год назад
fun fact: the actor wouldn't play in germany in the first hand (ww2 issues). But he didn't know how big this story become in Germany. And the laughtings are not from a maschine or tape. They are real (the regiseurs wife) laught so loud you can hear it. One time every Sylvester is that tradition and an unwritten rule to watch it.
@ohauss
@ohauss Год назад
A friend of mine once played the butler in an amateur production. In the rehearsal, they had always used water for the drinks. Much to his horror, he realized during the actual performance, knowing he could take a drink or two or three... , his friends had pranked him and provided bottles with the real thing. He actually pulled through the performance but the last thing he remembers of that night is "Well, I'll do my very best" - the rest is lost to history and probably one or the other toilet bowl...
@oberoneledthar3782
@oberoneledthar3782 11 месяцев назад
Well, thats probably the last thing James remembered too from that night. So you can say he stayed very true to the original ^^
@calise8783
@calise8783 Год назад
I moved to Germany from the US in 1999 and have watched this every year since. I always get a chuckle at it.
@SushiElemental
@SushiElemental Год назад
So "same procedure as every year", huh? That's why we watch it every year. It had its own marketing baked into the performance. 😁
@thetallestdwarf7041
@thetallestdwarf7041 Год назад
@@SushiElemental Same procedure as every yurr, James.
@dennislittau6320
@dennislittau6320 Год назад
In Denmark they show this on new years eve every year.. I'm 43 now, and I think I started watching it when I was 9 or 10 years old 🙂 I may have missed it a couple of times when I was a teenager and was out drinking with my friends, but other than that, I have seen it every year 🙂
@TierchenF95
@TierchenF95 Год назад
Amazing! Didn't know it made it's was abroad ❤️
@EEmB
@EEmB Год назад
@@TierchenF95 Same in Sweden! It's been shown in Sweden since 1969 and are since 1976 (when they made it a permanent part of New Year broadcasting) a important New Year's Tradition here!
@TierchenF95
@TierchenF95 Год назад
@@EEmB so nice ❤️
@Xlaminator
@Xlaminator Год назад
Same in Austria too. I´m 58 now and can remember it being that way my whole life...
@AudunWangen
@AudunWangen Год назад
Same procedure in Norway... as last year.
@vomm
@vomm Год назад
It's funnier when you watch it drunk with friends on New Year's Eve, who are also all annoyed that you're watching it for the hundredth time and didn't find it funny since the first time.
@alayikamartinez2133
@alayikamartinez2133 Год назад
yup
@aussiejojo73
@aussiejojo73 Год назад
This is a new years tradition for me and hubby.
@GeschichtenUndGedanken
@GeschichtenUndGedanken Год назад
Heard it, understood it and almost approve of it.
@mellertid
@mellertid Год назад
Airs on Swedish tv since 1976 😁
@anonymus8565
@anonymus8565 Год назад
The Background story of Dinner for one is that its the ladys 90th birthday and unfortunately all her friends already passed away. But she is still celebrating and her butler has to act as all of her friends
@petergeyer7584
@petergeyer7584 Год назад
Just finished watching this a couple of times on a couple of channels. As an American who has lived in Germany for almost a decade, this has become part of our New Year‘s Eve tradition. Germans are very sentimental, and this addresses the sentimentality of being the last one left from your circle of friends, but still being able celebrate life - even if only with memories.
@AvonacoTV
@AvonacoTV Год назад
I've been watching this every New Year's Eve for decades. It's just part of it and never gets boring.
@Hendricus56
@Hendricus56 Год назад
I usually watch a different version, that has a German intro explaining the setting (and since back then few people here spoke English (or understood it) translated some key phrases). But it's just a classic and everyone here understands "Same procedure as last year? Same procedure as every year"
@bufanda
@bufanda Год назад
Yeah the Original TV Version was produced by the NDR and has the introduction. This is a WDR production I belive and they simply filmed the original stage play in England.
@Stormtrooper_LP
@Stormtrooper_LP Год назад
@@bufanda No Iam sry but its not a WDR Version. Its the Swiss Version and it is produced by the swiss TV Station SRF in switzerland itself.
@bufanda
@bufanda Год назад
@@Stormtrooper_LP ah ok. Thx. I knew it was a different TV station. But always thought it was the WDR. Thx for clarifying.
@robfriedrich2822
@robfriedrich2822 Год назад
I also figured out, it's the Swiss version. I had no idea, that it is so close and produced with television cameras.
@twinmama42
@twinmama42 Год назад
in the 1960ies, famous German TV-host Peter Frankenfeld saw Mr Frinton and Ms Ward in Blackpool. They toured the British sea coast spa towns like Blackpool and Brighton with little theater sketches like this one. He invited them over to Germany to do a live performance on German TV. The performance was also captured and rebroadcasted ever since on New Year's Eve. Most Germans at the time didn't speak enough English to understand what was going on, therefore a presenter explained the circumstances (Ms Sophie outlived all her friends and butler James does his very best to fill in for them) and I can't imagine New Year's Eve without it. I first saw the show as a little kid and didn't understand a single word that was said. But that wasn't necessary as the fun is in the physical comedy. And later on the fun was to speak with James all the dialogue.
@GeschichtenUndGedanken
@GeschichtenUndGedanken Год назад
Prima, Dankeschön! My parents danced in Peter Frankenfeld's show along with friends. It was one of the top-shows. Du bist lieb, doch wie erklären wir "Ein Herz Und Eine Seele" und den "Sylvester Punsch"? Die Tetzlaffs sind definitiv Kulturgut.
@oceanmythjormundgandr3891
@oceanmythjormundgandr3891 Год назад
I think what I like about this is that the viewer is doing the same procedure every year too. Everyone sits down every year to watch it (at least in Norway and if I have understood it right, Germany too).
@nmmknh8997
@nmmknh8997 Год назад
I remember watching this as a child on ever new years eve with my entire family. Now, that all my older siblings have moved out and my father has passed away it's just me and my mom. I somehow feel like Miss Sophie. Same as every year just with less and less people. Yet, every single time I watch it I feel like everyone is there again. It makes me instantly happy.
@cryptogroupie5372
@cryptogroupie5372 Год назад
not only in germany ... I am from austria, and this is the every years end-sketch since I was a little child. Even though no one of my family spoke english in those days, this sketch was presented on television the last minutes of every year (in those days there where only 2 tv-stations available in austria) ... and after this view minutes the bumering rang and the vienna ballet started dancing to welcome the new year. To this day, I always watch this original sketch ... every year, in the last view minutes of the year
@Xlaminator
@Xlaminator Год назад
same here, at 58 now i can remember it being that way my whole life.
@bloodhoundgang1642
@bloodhoundgang1642 Год назад
I moved to Austria 10 years ago from the UK and had never seen it before ..Watch at Christmas every year now and its just as hilarious...
@nunilp2055
@nunilp2055 Год назад
Theres also 'Dinner fro Brot' where this scene is played by 'Bernd das Brot'. It's that white bread with small arms and a face which some should know. It's like the Dinner for One, but for kids. Truly a masterpiece.
@Nelsathis
@Nelsathis Год назад
He saw Bernd das Brot in a meme some videos ago and was very rude to him! However i dont know this scene and would definitely like to change that!
@Stormtrooper_LP
@Stormtrooper_LP Год назад
To everyone who is confused bcs of the missing german narrator. The Narrator is not there because the Version Ryan reacts to is not the Version that is broadcasted in German TV on Silvester. The Version he reacts to is the Swiss version, an after-recording that misses a few jokes, (and therefore is 7 Minutes shorter, german version goes 18 minutes) and is played a little bit different by Freddi Frinton. The Version that is broadcasted every Year in Germany is the Original German Version that was recorded, by the german Tv Station NDR, in front of a german Audience. Most other Versions are not recorded in front of any audience at all. Also there was no english Version before bcs it was played in theatre, not on TV. So the german version in english Language with the german Narrator is in fact the Original TV-version. The Actors are both british and the german Director Peter Frankenfeld saw the Sketch on one of his Theatre-visits in England. He enjoyed it so much that he wanted to bring it to Germany as a TV production. Freddie Frinton agreed but he outright refused to play the sketch in german language bcs he actually hated germans bcs of WW2. So the german TV Station NDR, produced it as a TV-sketch in 1961, in germany, and this is the exact Version that is still played in Germany every year. Also the version with the German audience is so successfull because one member of the Audience, a woman namend Sonja Göth, was so entertained by the sketch that her laughter is clearley, and very loudley, heard troughout the entire Sketch. Rumors go that this was a reason why Freddie took the Sketch to a whole new level, because he was so exited by the laughing noise. The NDR Version, that is broadcasted in germany, is actually very hard to find on youtube. This is to Copyright Reasons. But here is a link to the german website, of the TV-Channel NDR, were you can watch the Original NDR Version. At least if u use a VPN you should be able to watch it outside of Germany as well. www.ndr.de/fernsehen/Dinner-for-One-Das-Original,dinnerforone191.html And lastly, not every german has that tradition or even knows or likes Dinner for one. Its just many of us who have that Tradition. In fact i do not know a single soul personaly that doesnt watch Dinner for One every Year.
@Anson_AKB
@Anson_AKB Год назад
NDR is the tv station that produced it first after Peter Frankenfeld (a famous german showmaster at that time) had seen it in england and could convince them to record it live with an audience in germany. Since they rejected speaking german that version got that short intro. but copyright for that version is more strict and thus you will mostly/only find this swiss version available that has somewhat worse quality for production, scenery/stage and video quality.
@berlindude75
@berlindude75 Год назад
Unfortunately, the NDR version isn't available on YT. And Mediathek access is usually geo-blocked for people abroad.
@Stormtrooper_LP
@Stormtrooper_LP Год назад
@@berlindude75 Unfortunately yes. But bcs many people use VPNs they are able to circumvent that problem. I hope Ryan does too.
@Stormtrooper_LP
@Stormtrooper_LP Год назад
@@Anson_AKB And, at least for me, this version doesn't feel the same as the NDR Version with the audience. I like the NDR Version way more.
@bufanda
@bufanda Год назад
@@berlindude75 VPNs to the rescue. ;)
@norkannen
@norkannen Год назад
This one is on TV in Norway as well every year but on Lill Xmas eve 🤗🇧🇻
@julzHappy0
@julzHappy0 Год назад
This made me (as a German) so happy. Thank you for reacting Xxx
@carolinejonsson1593
@carolinejonsson1593 Год назад
They show this in Sweden on TV every New Year eve too. Very popular.
@nettcologne9186
@nettcologne9186 Год назад
The show was produced in Hamburg (with English actors in English) and is now also a cult film for New Year's Eve in Scandinavia and I believe also in the Netherlands.
@Anson_AKB
@Anson_AKB Год назад
the version shown on german tv was done by tv station NDR, but this is the version from swiss tv (which seems to have less problems with copyright)
@Xlaminator
@Xlaminator Год назад
in Austria too
@dmschoice2571
@dmschoice2571 Год назад
Awesome! You really did that! Thank you! Yeah, it's a bit of mystery how this one became such a firm New Year's Eve tradition in Germany. I think it's about the catchphrase "same procedure as last year/every year" that feels somewhat reassuring to the "German soul", that the years may change, but some things still remain the same and that you can hold on to that - like watching Dinner for One on New Year's Eve ;) And wishing a Happy New Year before New Year's Day is totally fine - you're just wishing well for the coming year. We also usually wish a "Guten Rutsch" - a "good slide" - before the year changes, basically wishing that you "slide well" into the new year and have a good start. In that sense: Guten Rutsch!
@charpost62
@charpost62 Год назад
in Denmark as well
@dasmaurerle4347
@dasmaurerle4347 Год назад
I was always wondering why this silly, yet very funny sketch is so popular in Germany. It has almost become a cultural feat, hasn't it? I really like your explanation to why that is. Thank you, and Guten Rutsch👍🎉🍻
@tristanvoltaire2058
@tristanvoltaire2058 Год назад
in Austria somehow as well
@stefanb4375
@stefanb4375 Год назад
the "Rutsch" namely originally from Hebrew and found its way into the German language via Yiddish. "Rosh" means "the beginning." The good slide is therefore simply the good beginning of the year, which one wishes for.
@RealCodreX
@RealCodreX Год назад
Could also come from the Old High German "rūtezzen" (to do something hastily), as in hastily ending the "Raunächte" (nights of bad omens at the end of the year) and beginning a new year.
@EEmB
@EEmB Год назад
In Sweden this is a MUST to watch this every New Year's! 🎆 It's just part of New Years, like Champagne and fireworks, and the reading of the Swedish version of Tennyson poem Ring Out, Wild Bells at the stroke of midnight. It's just not New Years Eve without it!! I watched it my whole life, since I was a child. It's been on tv here in Sweden since 1969, (it was apparently bought in in 1963, but it was shelved until '69 cause of it containing so much alcohol). It was shown several times before it got a fixed "forever" part of our New Years schedule tradition in Sweden since 1976. (Norway on the other hand, watching this is a Christmas tradition for the 23rd instead of New Year's one.)
@nirutivan9811
@nirutivan9811 Год назад
I‘m just curious: Do you watch exactly this version (the Swiss version) in Sweden or do you watch the slightly longer German version?
@EEmB
@EEmB Год назад
@@nirutivan9811 We watch this version! I didn't actually know there was an other one until recent! From what I know, Sweden, Norway and Switzerland watches this version. :) An other comment said it has to do with copyright, but I don't know!
@nirutivan9811
@nirutivan9811 Год назад
@@EEmB yeah, until recently I wasn’t aware that the Germans had a different version either. It‘s kinda weird that our TV (I’m Swiss) and the German TV produced a different version of the same English language clip. I was just curious now which version is watched outside of Germany and Switzerland.
@suzannelacy8093
@suzannelacy8093 Год назад
I'm an Anglo Irish mother and grandma 🍀 who just watched your reaction to the old b & w film . The thing that absolutely had me in stitches was the fact that ( when I was laughing my socks off ) you had a blank look on your dear little face .
@ockertbrits6907
@ockertbrits6907 Год назад
Have mercy. He is American. If it isn't extremely simple with full explanations added he. just. doesn't. get. it. I saw it as a non-German for the first time and understood it and had a good laugh at the comedy. I am thoroughly frustrated at Ryan being completely and utterly dense. He should not react to anything non-American.
@bookllama8158
@bookllama8158 Год назад
@@ockertbrits6907 You do not have to watch his videos if you don’t enjoy his reactions.
@KriZZ-1985
@KriZZ-1985 Год назад
The goal of Miss Sophie is to get her Butler to the point where is very drunk and do the deed as every year when they „retire“ and „go to bed“. That‘s why he does the wink and says that he‘ll do his very best.😂😂😂
@nctpti2073
@nctpti2073 Год назад
And keep in mind that he is not just there as himself, but it is implied he will be there as the whole dinner contingent.... same procedure as every year :D
@SaridenChan
@SaridenChan Год назад
@@nctpti2073 In my little world he is the stand in for the "dear friend" or for himself in this procedure 🤫
@oskarasvalt1965
@oskarasvalt1965 Год назад
I believe part of the fun is that us watching it year after year is the same procedure as last/every year on a meta level...
@adamryan977
@adamryan977 Год назад
While he is tipping her chair "She's an old lady hes going to break her hip"...foreshadowing of the evening entertainment 😂
@schlaumensch
@schlaumensch Год назад
Yes, we do actually watch this original version, which is in English. My local small town theatre in Southern Germany actually performs "Dinner for One" every New Year's Eve - but in Bavarian dialect! It's a wonderful play which attracts basically the whole culturally inclined part of the town population. They play it like a dozen times on New Year's Eve - every single show is always sold out.
@bellathemusicaddict
@bellathemusicaddict Год назад
Wia hoaßt eier Dorf wo ma des live auf boarisch sehen ko und derf ma do als “auswärtiger” a zuaschaung?
@miztazed
@miztazed Год назад
I am german and I can't answer the question why we watch this every NYE again and again. But yeah it`s a German tradition.
@tanjasajovitz2935
@tanjasajovitz2935 Год назад
i watched this every single year with my family in germany, and i missed it so much after moving to the states many years ago. i was so happy once i found it on youtube several years back, and now my husband and i watch it each new years eve-or as we call it in germany: silvester . it's a true tradition to watch this!
@deliaconny
@deliaconny Год назад
Swiss here, and yes, we also watch (this exact production in English) at least once, sometimes multiple times on NYE, because almost every TV channel will have it on at some time 🤣
@proto_carl8404
@proto_carl8404 Год назад
I remember watching this as a kid and it’s still played on tv nowadays, it’s just a classic…. I don’t know why though, it just is
@Miristzuheiss
@Miristzuheiss Год назад
Und danach Ekel Alfred 👍 der Weihnachtspunsch
@catonkybord7950
@catonkybord7950 Год назад
It took me well into my teenage years to get what that last joke really is about 🤣😏 By the way, it's also an Austrian tradition.
@JohnHazelwood58
@JohnHazelwood58 Год назад
ah, you can't miss this on german television! on silvester day it's aired on nine different german channels ... i think 13 times (!) next saturday in total, from 15.30 to 23.35 ... *joy
@GruniLP
@GruniLP Год назад
Don't know.... i was born and all i can remember is tht someday at new years eve we all watched Dinner for One. And since then....every year. mSo u get born in this tradition :D Love Dinner for One
@TTDahl
@TTDahl Год назад
You must tell Tyler about this. This is one of the most Norwegian hardcore Christmas traditions.
@qwertyTRiG
@qwertyTRiG Год назад
Weird that it's a New Year's Eve tradition in so many countries (including South Africa), but a Christmas tradition in Norway.
@TTDahl
@TTDahl Год назад
@@qwertyTRiG completely.
@jenniferharrison8915
@jenniferharrison8915 Год назад
An excellent Butler, every house should have one - but one who's hopefully a teetotaler! 🤣 This reminds me of "Arsenic and Old Lace", an old movie with Cary Grant in it! 😁👍😄
@sharkking9679
@sharkking9679 Год назад
i am 46 now and can remember at least 44 years of watching it. Never gets old and my kids love it as well already
@Drinni81
@Drinni81 Год назад
I'm 41 and we watch this every year on new years eve since I was a little child 🤩 greetings from Luxemburg
@Steffe
@Steffe Год назад
I always used to watch this on new year's eve with my parents. A long standing tradition in Sweden.
@Melisendre
@Melisendre Год назад
I watch this with my family since I was a child in the 70ties. My grandmother also had so much fun even if she didn't speak a single english word.
@MrJueKa
@MrJueKa 7 месяцев назад
This type of comedy doesn't need many words and that's exactly the great art of it.
@englishrose1957
@englishrose1957 Год назад
I have watched this for nearly 50 years every New years eve. Without it the new year cannot start.
@xinosa1933
@xinosa1933 Год назад
We also look at it every New Year in Sweden. It's tradition and something we've grown up with.
@DidrickNamtvedt
@DidrickNamtvedt Год назад
This sketch is part of our tradition on December 23rd, the night before Christmas Eve, here in Norway. The TV channel NRK has been airing the 11 minute Swiss version every December 23rd since 1980 and we somehow discover new details in the sketch although we've all watched it a quadrillion times over the years. I think you'll understand it the more you watch it. In Norwegian the sketch is called "Grevinnen og Hovmesteren", which translates to "The Countess and The Butler".
@Drademdar
@Drademdar Год назад
And to explain how popular this is here in Norway. This show is broadcast yearly at about 9 o'clock in the evening on 23 December, but one year NRK sent it too early, and many missed it. The TV channel got so many complaints that they had to send it a second time later that evening.
@moatl6945
@moatl6945 Год назад
This is the Swiss TV version. It's a little bit shorter than the German TV version.
@simonmachutt
@simonmachutt Год назад
Thank you so much for making the video greatly enjoyed the switch between laughing and what exactly am i watching here :-D keep up the good work. And have a good slide ( einen guten rutsch) with the family into the new year!!!
@corunax3212
@corunax3212 Год назад
That's the one! As a kid I understood nothing, but now I enjoy it every year. Such a classic.
@Sepa1984
@Sepa1984 Год назад
Story: The annual birthday dinner for the elderly Miss Sophie is coming up. Unfortunately, the invited guests have all passed away and so butler James has to take over their roles. The main thing is to have a glass with Miss Sophie. So it's not surprising that over time the good butler gets more and more drunk and his game more daring - much to the delight of Miss Sophie, who is clearly enjoying her dinner
@t3ss33
@t3ss33 Год назад
...and her retirement later that night ;)
@ockertbrits6907
@ockertbrits6907 Год назад
And then there is the sting at the end when James clearly is not as drunk as Miss Sophie thinks, suddenly speaking clearly and even able to wink as he escourts her to her bedroom.... Old but not cold yet...
@jowilson3619
@jowilson3619 Год назад
I'd say it's pretty hard to understand the meaning of this tradition by watching it only once. You have to watch it a few times to see all the details and the bigger meaning behind it and it most likely will become better and better everytime you watch this. BTW I'm from Germany and we watch this every year since I was a kid and I love it.
@ricolync
@ricolync Год назад
It's a classic in Finland too! Usually comes on TV every New Years.
@Hidder2012
@Hidder2012 Год назад
in germany we say bevor new year "guten rutsch" literally translates to good slip. With it you wisch that the other person "has a good slide" into the new year and after midnight its "frohes neues (jahr) (happy new (year)) most people i know just say frohes neues and leaf the year part as kind of silent implication
@steffikapunkt6281
@steffikapunkt6281 Год назад
It’s the version from the „Peter Frankenfeld Show“ they show on German TV, not this one. It’s more funny because the audience laughs so hard. They explaine that all the guests have passed away but they still do the Birthday Party. He means he‘s giving her his special Bday gift 🥰
@TheItalianoAssassino
@TheItalianoAssassino Год назад
He's watching the original version
@steffikapunkt6281
@steffikapunkt6281 Год назад
@@TheItalianoAssassino I know. But that‘s not the version we are watching here in Germany.
@MrZillas
@MrZillas Год назад
Okay, I am german and I try to explain this (my theory): As you can see, this is a very old clip. It's at least 50 years old, maybe older. It was shown on german television, when there were not many TV-channels. Today you have like 40-80 TV-channels, but back than you had like 2 TV-channels in East Germany or something and maybe 5-6 in West Germany, I dont know. So they just did grab something they had not to produce on their own, same with "Sesame Street" which was dubbed american versions in the 70s or something, before they started german versions in the 80s; there exist also german characters on Sesame Street that do not exist in the US-version. Second: The English used in this clip is very simple. Nowadays many people in Germany learn English in school and a lot speak it more or less good. But back then, not many people in Germany spoke good English, and this clip here lives by 90% of the stage-action and 10% of the text, where "Yes" and "No" and "port" for "port vine/Portwein" and "white" for "white vine/Weißwine" or "fish/Fisch" is easy to understand. It's the same with "Mr Bean". You don't need much English to understand it. So this tradition came up like watching "Home Alone" on X-mas (and other X-mas-movies). It does not take long to watch, it's simple to understand and watching it once a year is enough to keep it funny.
@AHVENAN
@AHVENAN 6 месяцев назад
It's also broadcast every new years eve on swedish television!
@kamikazebine4656
@kamikazebine4656 Год назад
In Germany we usually say before the new Years has startet: „Ich wünsche dir einen guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr! That means something like: „ I wish you a good „slide“ into the new Year!“ Sometimes we just say“good slide“ in these days and everyone unterstand it. 😉So have a nice time all together, today, tomorrow and always! 🤗🍀
@JSmellerM
@JSmellerM Год назад
It is not bad luck to wish a happy new year in advance. In German we say "Guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr" which roughly translates to "Have a good slide into the new year".
@xPrimusGamer
@xPrimusGamer Год назад
It's a tradition in Denmark as well :D
@stepomuk9783
@stepomuk9783 Год назад
Absolut new years eve Tradition in Germany!!!!! I know it since 43 years 🤗🤣 Its a must!!!
@AeonSaint
@AeonSaint Год назад
Happy New Year, Ryan! Welcome to one of our most beloved traditions.
@frakturfreak
@frakturfreak Год назад
What you've watched is the abbridged version made for Swiss TV. The version usually shown in Germany differs in some points: There is an introduction by a man explaining what's the occasion of this event in German and they don't play Happy Birthday at the beginning. Also the camera in the German version is straight and shows the full long side of the table and not this weird diagonal angle. Lastly James doesn't say good night at the end of our version.
@rakischmidt7032
@rakischmidt7032 Год назад
And everytime before he clicks his heels ay Admiral von Schneider he asks "must I say this year?" and she answers "just to please me, James"
@michaelazimmermann301
@michaelazimmermann301 Год назад
In the German Version James peeps around the corner, grins at us and gives a thumbs up. I didn't understandthis hint until I was almost an adult ;-)
@wombora
@wombora Год назад
This is so engrained in german culture that tey even did a version in cologne dialect, in low german, and even a version for kids calles "dinner for brot" made with puppets (Bernd das Brot / Bernd the Bread - The puppet you insulted in your meme video about weather girls)
@vrenak
@vrenak Год назад
Some years ago we had some danish actors do the prequel. Der 80. Geburtstag. When the 4 guests are still alive.
@magiv4205
@magiv4205 Год назад
Dinner for One and Mr. Bean are the two things that unite all of Germany, Austria and Switzerland on New Year's Eve.
@particle7926
@particle7926 Год назад
This is shown every year here in Swedish state TV as well at new years :) We always gathered around the TV for this one in my family.
@BigSilly98
@BigSilly98 Год назад
Thank you for reacting to this! I am German and this was my first time watching "Dinner for One" too :D
@lisas4293
@lisas4293 Год назад
I love this. It ain’t New Year’s Eve without watching dinner for one at least once haha
@ftyutru
@ftyutru Год назад
Hi, we allso watch this in Norway. But we see the show at the evening 23 of december. The little Christmas evening as we call it
@Mucke454
@Mucke454 Год назад
As a German im confused why we watch Dinner for one too but I still do it every Year with my dad xD
@arianajuni
@arianajuni Год назад
Such a good idea, it's a must here, at least for my family 😄
@graziellaacquarola7450
@graziellaacquarola7450 Год назад
Fantastic I never saw this
@ExtremeTeddy
@ExtremeTeddy Год назад
Regarding the "I'll do my very best" ... well, as her friends passed away and he is the only male person in the household ... it is his special duty to give dear Miss Sophie some birthday night joy 😅
@Remmelken
@Remmelken Год назад
You got the swiss version of the sketch. It was produced by SRG. The legendary german version was produced by NDR and has a additional introduction in german narated by Heinz Pieper. The skech itself is in english. There also some additional gags in the german version.
@wordsmithgmxch
@wordsmithgmxch Год назад
This skit is in the Guinness Book of Records as having been re-broadcast more than ANY OTHER in the history of television. It is popular viewing on New Year's Eve probably because of the references to drinking and (maybe) sex. And from the first, most Germans have been viewing it in the ORIGINAL LANGUAGE, which makes them feel sooo sophisticated. The phrase "Same procedure as last year (week, month, etc.)." is encountered frequently in German life as an ironic answer to any explanation that something will again be done as it's always been done. Some jokes just never get old.
@scotishpatriot
@scotishpatriot Год назад
I am a 49 year old german and as far as I can remember I watched Dinner for one every year. Love it.
@emilymoore.
@emilymoore. Год назад
Dear Ryan, I've watched Dinner for One as long as I can remember. Till today, I had no idea, that Americans don't know this show. In my family we always watched the show and had Fondue, every new year's eve.
@oanaivancea6775
@oanaivancea6775 Год назад
It's famous, I've seen it many times in the version in my country.
@HH-hd7nd
@HH-hd7nd Год назад
2:18 No, they are very dead. The version you watched misses the very short introduction which explains the setup: This is Miss Sophie's 90th birthday and she hosts a dinner party for her best friends. Unfortunately the last of them died 25 years before, but that does not stop Miss Sophie from hosting this party every year. This version is also played on 1.5 times the normal speed - the original version is 18 minutes long.
@HH-hd7nd
@HH-hd7nd Год назад
@@ichbinbluna3504 yep
@LisaMaierLiest
@LisaMaierLiest Год назад
Probably something you need to know about German and British humor. Germans LOVE the British humor. I guess there are more Germans who can quote Monthy Python phrases than native English speakers. It was so huge Monthy Python even came to Germany and they even did one scetch exclusivly in German. A collegue of mine told me: This is the holy waterbottle and sandal of our job. Later I told him: Oh the canteen food cannot be that bad. Or do they sell otter noses? (Both references to Live of Brian. I got his, without further explanation. He was a little bit confused about the otter noses though ;D)
@alcar32sharif
@alcar32sharif Год назад
Rachel from "MEET THE GERMANS" explains in detail what the origin of "Dinner for one" is and why we Germans watch this at new year's eve.
@danilopapais1464
@danilopapais1464 Год назад
Yeah, the butler has to do a lot of work upstairs as well, you got the hint right.
@littlelostlune2220
@littlelostlune2220 Год назад
Have an expanation from a german. The reason why he drinks all of those drinks is that the friends from the old Lady already passed away and now he "pretens" to be them. Fun fact: He hated the no-no germans. Kinda karma like feeling when he hates germans but it's most famous in germany.
@clemstevenson
@clemstevenson Год назад
Although I recall the name 'Freddie Frinton', it is a distant memory. This is unsurprising, considering the time period. Freddie Frinton (born Frederick Bittiner Coo; 17 January 1909 - 16 October 1968) was an English comedian, and music hall and television actor.
@Malakina1964
@Malakina1964 Год назад
We watch it every year at the 31, of December at about 17 Uhr and still can laugh about it....and if we are old we know all words and making more fun off
@toecutter3100
@toecutter3100 Год назад
I love this piece of TV history! And in my age of 63 i have watched it quite e few times. I remember as a teen i was the best in acting like Freddie Frinton in my school. The version you're reacting to is not the one that's shown in german TV and which we germans love so much. Fun fact: Freddie Frinton with this scetch was well known im Britain for playing in theaters at the english seabaths. But the highest level of popularity he reached with this scetch in germany and other countries around. It seems to me, germans have a special relation to british kind of humor like this. I myself love some of the british comedy productions like Monty Python. If you can laugh about black chaotic humor, give some clips from the movie "Life of Brian" a try. I recommend "Schwanzus Longus" which in english means "Biggus Dickus" (for you the english version is better to understand the jokes), or the part where s.o. is stoned to death, or the most famous clip that contains the hit single "Alway look on the bright side of life". I watched this and other movies with this special british humor a thousand times, stil laughing my a.. off! 🤣Happy new Year!
@blackcormoran2035
@blackcormoran2035 Год назад
Germans have a passion for English humour and the “English style”. For instance the 60’s tv series Avengers by BBC or Edgar Wallace by German TV having been blockbusters at that time still are watched with pleasure. Especially around Xmas and New Year!
@Salige150
@Salige150 Год назад
Yes and Miss Marble from Agatha Christie
@Nils.Minimalist
@Nils.Minimalist Год назад
Black Books (my all-time fave!!!), Benny Hill, Monty Python ... Brits are blessed with a good sense of humor.
@lelebla1714
@lelebla1714 Год назад
I saw the title with first time watching and im like uuuhhh how can you NOT have watched that? Its tradition here in germany, that we watch this every silvester.
@sabinereimer7809
@sabinereimer7809 Год назад
She had very CLOSE friends... so what you would expect at the end?!🤣🤣🤣
@berlindude75
@berlindude75 Год назад
Yes, Ryan, as I said, watch the DW Euromaxx video with Rachel from "Meet the Germans" explaining the "Dinner for One" obsession in Germany (and some other European countries). The version you watched is the only one freely available on YT that is not geo-blocked for people outside Germany (or maybe the German-speaking countries).
@DJone4one
@DJone4one Год назад
But i see, that is a other Version of Dinner for one. Because the Stairs are smaller than in the version we see on TV. But otherwise everything is the same. The northgerman Radio Service (Northdeutscher Rundfunk produced and broadcast this sketch in 1961.) The first and second version are in english. Only in the german version is in the intro a german speaker to tell about the little background from Miss Sophie.
@sabinesteil4690
@sabinesteil4690 Год назад
Also it was a student tradition, when I was young, to equal every drink...
@ZZwhitezzgirlZZ
@ZZwhitezzgirlZZ Год назад
Its also shown on Austrian television, the same procedure as every year since 62 years! We just like our traditions 😅
@biancawichard4057
@biancawichard4057 Год назад
the wink at the end really means what you think. btw we watched it every new years eve in the nethjerlands too, in germany its dubbed, in the netherlands theres a dutch version with a dutch comedian (in the netherlands noting is dubbed with subtitles) happy new year and keep up the good work i enjoy your channel a lot
@steffahn
@steffahn Год назад
No, it’s not dubbed.
@TheItalianoAssassino
@TheItalianoAssassino Год назад
As an Austrian, I have never seen the dubbed version. I think it's not dubbed on most TV channels.
@arnodobler1096
@arnodobler1096 Год назад
I never saw a dubbed version in Germany.🤔 Happy New Year 🙋‍♂
@ninieh5336
@ninieh5336 Год назад
No, I've never seen a dubbed version in Germany. However, with the narrator who explains the background beforehand, as already mentioned in many comments 😊
@T0MT0Mmmmy
@T0MT0Mmmmy Год назад
No dubbed version in Germany!