The series took several years to be developed. The original idea is credited to graphic designer Martin Lambie-Nairn, who proposed the idea of a satirical television show featuring puppets to Fluck and Law, two illustrators and sculptors who worked mostly in print media. As none of the three had prior TV experience, they turned to others to actually produce the show. Fluck and Law brought in comedy writer and National Lampoon editor Tony Hendra, who they had met previously while working in America. Hendra in turn brought in John Lloyd, producer of the satirical sketch show Not The Nine O'Clock News. They were joined by Jon Blair, a documentary producer. They then hired (Muppet puppeteer) Louise Gold. The initial development of the show was funded by entrepreneur Clive Sinclair. At the start in 1984 and 1985 the show wasn't doing well in the ratings and nearly got cancelled.
Several of the politicians found their characterisations offensive, although in subsequent interviews many were glad of the attention. Though an appreciation of the programme's humour required more than a passing knowledge of British politics, it aired on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation late on Sunday nights in the late 1980s. The American NBC network aired several prime-time specials adapted from the series in the same period.
As the show progressed, Britain's political landscape altered. Particularly, in the early 1990s, many of the characters who had proven so popular were retired from real-world politics, particularly Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, whilst others such as Michael Heseltine and Norman Tebbit became much less prominent.
When Thatcher resigned at the end of the 1980s, her successor was her third Chancellor, John Major. This marked a decline in the show's fortunes. In fact, the writers of the show found John Major so boring, that they decided to invent an affair between him and Virginia Bottomley, a Cabinet Minister. (This was not a million miles from the truth, as it was revealed much later that Major had had an affair with Edwina Currie who they had considered in the role as John Major's mistress .)
The show ended in 1996, missing Labour's 1997 election victory (though the last ever episode featured a segment entitled The Last Prophecies of Spitting Image in which, among other things, The Party moved into Number 10).
Along side Thatcher, was Former Deputy Prime Minister William Whitelaw who was portrayed as a zombie, greedy Chancellor Nigel Lawson, bland and boring Foreign Secretary Geoffrey Howe, Former Home Secretary Douglas Hurd (whose spiralling hairstyle resembled a "Mr Whippy" ice cream), leather-clad "Bovver boy" Norman Tebbit, manic and back-stabber Defence Secretary Michael Heseltine who also went by the alias of Blondeman, the 'invisible man' Tom King, bumbling Leon Brittan, constantly grinning Norman Fowler and the discontent Peter Walker, vamp-like Edwina Currie, lecherous Cecil Parkinson, Former Education Secretary Kenneth Baker who was portrayed as a slug, Former Channcellor, Norman Lamont who was portrayed as useless and crap, blink-minded David Waddington, childish Paul Channon, cigarette-craving Nicholas Ridley, John MacGregor always shown wearing a brown paper bag over his head, strange and emotional John Moore, drunken and fat Health Secretary Kenneth Clarke, in-denial Edward Heath, never-elected David Young, puny Colin Moynihan, camp Harvey Proctor, thoughtless William Waldegrave, vampire Michael Howard, military general Michael Portillo and Enoch Powell who had campaigned against immigration, shown as black.
When Thatcher resigned at the beginning of the 1990s, her successor was her third Chancellor, John Major, who was portrayed as a dull, boring and all-grey character who enjoyed nothing better than a nice meal of peas with his wife Norma.
Prior to Thatcher's resignation, John Major had been portrayed as being robotic with a spinning antenna on his head, standing behind Thatcher in the crowd of sycophant cabinet members, eager to repeat whatever insane rambling the Thatcher puppet screeched.
On the other side of the House were, Former Leader of the Labour Party, Neil Kinnock portrayed as Welsh Windbag and gasbagging, the senile Michael Foot, the actually spitting Former Deputy Leader and Former Shadow Home Secretary Roy Hattersley, Former GLC leader Ken Livingstone portrayed as hard-left, the small-minded Peter Shore, the big eyebrow Former Chancellor, Denis Healey, Former Prime Ministers Welsh gardener James Callaghan, Yorkshireman Harold Wilson, goofy-glasses Jack Straw, pip-squeak Robin Cook and the Former Shadow Foreign Secretary Gerald Kaufman portrayed as creepy and psychotic.
After Kinnock and Hattersley resigned following the 1992 general election, they were replaced by Shadow Chancellor John Smith and Margaret Beckett, who was portrayed as having Blackpool accent.
When Smith died in 1994, he was replaced by Tony Blair, who appeared in the last few series as a grinning puppet hypnotised by a Peter Mandelson snake and the Deputy Leader, John Prescott.
On the third benches there was short-lived SDP-Liberal Alliance before the merger into Liberal Democrats with the two leaders: election-losing, populist, arrogant and undecided David Owen, complete with whining, bed-wetting David Steel in his pocket. After the Social and Liberal Democrats Party was formed David Steel and David Owen resigned as joint Leaders and were replaced by Paddy Ashdown, whose stance of "equidistance" from the two larger parties was satirised by his frequent appearance at the side of the screen during unrelated sketches, saying: "I am neither in this sketch nor not in it, but somewhere in between".
Religious Ian Paisley, trouble-making Gerry Adams, François Mitterrand (President of France), Francois' successor nuclear-testing Jacques Chirac, Helmut Kohl, Chancellor of West Germany, Erich Honecker President of East Germany, ancient Konstantin Chernenko who was General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union until his timely death after two series, who was succeeded by the hip and swinging Mikhail Gorbachev (President of the then Soviet Union), and the post-Soviet Union Russian president, the drunk Boris Yeltsin, Robert Mugabe (who was Prime Minister of Zimbabwe), P.W. Botha (Then Prime Minister of South Africa after President of South Africa) who was succeeded by Frederik Willem de Klerk, and the post-apartheid President Nelson Mandela, Idi Amin Dada (Former President of Uganda), Colonel Muammar al-Gaddafi (Head of State of Libya), Indira Gandhi (Prime Minister of India), Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (Supreme Leader of Iran), Saddam Hussein (President of Iraq during the invasion of Kuwait which led to the Gulf War) and more.
In earlier episodes, a corrupt and big-headed Arthur Scargill caused trouble for the Tories and was shown as ignorant about mining, for example, calling shafts corridors and confusing coal with crispbread.
The other songs released by Spitting Image were "I've Never Met A Nice South African" (which was on the B-Side of "The Chicken Song" and was a savage indictment of the apartheid-ridden country), "Santa Claus Is On The Dole", "The Atheist Tabernacle Choir", "No More Christmas Singles" and "House Of Commons, Commons Of House". "The Chicken Song" was by far the most successful of all of their music and not-so-subtle references were made to it in subsequent sketches in the show itself. An LP "Spit In Your Ear" was produced, featuring some of their sketches over time along with a few of their songs.
Another song Spitting Image was famous for is the notorious "We're Scared of Bob" in 1986.
Other musical parodies featured Michael Jackson, Kylie Minogue, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, The Monkees, Pet Shop Boys, Andrew Ridgely, ZZ Top, Grace Jones, Prince and Barbra Streisand
The end of the 1987 election featured a young boy, dressed as a city banker, singing Tomorrow Belongs To Me, a parody of the ending of the film Caberet, when a member of the Hitler Youth starts singing the same song.
In one instance Sting was persuaded to sing a re-worded version of "Every Breath You Take" to accompany a video showing the Spitting Image puppets of world leaders and political figures of the day, usually with the figure matching the altered lyrics "Every wall you build, Every one you've killed, Every grave you've filled, all the blood you've spilled, I'll be watching you." The video ended with the grim reaper appearing in front of a sunset.
The Chicken Song hit number 1 in the charts for 3 weeks from 17 May 1986 – 3 June 1986 and VH1 US named it as one of the worst number 1 nominations.
Spitting Image did the music video for "Land Of Confusion" by Genesis.
Most notable was the use of a studio audience for the 1992 Election Special, and a couple of 1993 editions. This was for a segment in each of these shows which featured a spoof Question Time, hosted by the latex Jeremy Paxman, and had the actual audience asking the puppets questions.
This was noteworthy as the very first episode, on 26 February 1984, had been shown to an audience and was aired with a laugh track (the producers, at the time, were unsure whether to use one or not). The idea of using a laugh track was quickly dropped, and the only shows to feature one thereafter were the 1992 Election Special and the two "Question Time" editions.
By 1995 however, with viewing figures in decline, Spitting Image was cancelled. The final series was aired during January and February 1996.
In 2005, the 1996 F.A to Fairplay VHS was reissued on DVD. Made specially for video, it provided an alternative look at the 1996 European football championship held in England.
In February 2008, Paramount Comedy 2 started showing regular repeats of Spitting Image from 9 p.m. on Tuesday evenings, with a whole weekend's worth of evenings devoted to the first two series.
Another Spitting Image video that was released in 1988 was a title called "Rockin' Ronnie", but did not mention Spitting Image on the box. This special was made exclusively for video and cannot be found anywhere else.
Video 5 released in 1989 by Central Video, was a video that contained the specials "Bumbledown: The Life & Times Of Ronald Reagan" & "The Sound Of Maggie". Next was a video containing a collection of the music videos from the programme, titled "The Classic Music Video Vol 1", released in 1991, but never continued to make a second volume. Released under Central Video under The Video Collection Ltd. (VCI or 2entertain).
A compilation of sketches from 1990 & 1991 (series 11-14) was released next, titled "Is Nothing Sacred?". Released in 1992 under Surprise Video limited.
A DVD of the complete first series was released by Network DVD on 18 January, 2008.
Series 2 was released on DVD on 28 July.
Series 3 is due to be released on 29th September 2008,There is confirmation on the Network DVD site.
Voices: The voices were provided by prominent British impressionists, including:
Performers: The puppets were operated or voiced by popular British performers, including:
Writers:
Producers:
Production Assistants:
Archive Researchers:
Costumes:
They also released a video with the satirical documentary "Bumbledown: The Life and Times of Ronald Reagan" and a musical based very loosely on West Side Story called "The Sound Of Maggie".
Argentina: A political satire program called Kanal K was aired by Canal 13 during the early 1990s. The show was (theoretically) cancelled after a serious row with the Catholic Church over Kanal K's puppet of Pope John Paul II saying "va fangulo" (meaning "fuck you" in Italian). Unofficial rumors say that Kanal K was cancelled on behalf of former President Carlos Saúl Menem because the program depicted him in a derisive manner. However, this version was never officially confirmed.
Australia: Rubbery Figures (Fast Forward Series 1 (1989))
Brazil: Agildo no País das Maravilhas (Rede Bandeirantes, 1987-1989); Cabaré do Barata (Rede Manchete, 1989-1990)
Canada (Quebec): * Et Dieu créa… Laflaque
Chile: During the 90s, an imitation of the Spitting Image show, called Los Toppins, was aired on the television network Megavision More successful, although oriented to a younger audience was the 31 Minutos show, which aired on TVN.
Colombia: Los reencauchados (Cenpro Televisión, 1995)
Czech Republic: Gumaci (TV NOVA)
France: Le Bébête Show (TF1), Les Guignols de l'info (Canal Plus)
Finland: The Autocrats
Germany: Hurra Deutschland (ARD, RTL 2), Zak (WDR, ARD)
Greece: ΦΤΥΣΤΟΥΣ with George Mitsikostas, (SKAI TV)
Hungary: Uborka (MTV 1)
Ireland: Bull Island (RTÉ)
India: Double Take (NDTV)
Israel: Chartzufim (Channel 2)
Mexico: Hechos de Peluche (TV Azteca)
New Zealand: Public Eye - aired in the 1980s and followed the same format as Spitting Image but satirised NZ politicians instead. Facelift (tv show)
Poland: Polskie ZOO (Telewizja Polska)
Portugal : Contra Informação (Rádio e Televisão de Portugal)
Romania: Animat Planet (Antena 1)
Russia: Kookly
Serbia : Nikad Izvini (RTV Pink)
Spain: Las noticias del guiñol (Canal Plus), Txokolatex (Euskal Telebista)
Sweden: Riksorganet (SVT)
United States: There were some attempts to produce a U.S. version of the show, with a 45-minute 'made for market' show by the original Spitting Image team. The plot involved a conspiracy to replace Ronald Reagan with a double (actually actor Dustin Hoffman in disguise). This plan was hatched by the Famous Corporation, a cabal of the ultra-rich headed by Johnny Carson's foil Ed McMahon (in the show, Carson was his ineffectual left-hand man) who met in a secret cavern hollowed out behind the facade of Mount Rushmore. Eventually, their plot foiled, the famous corporation activated their escape pod - Abraham Lincoln's nose - and left Earth for another planet, but (in a homage to the beginning of the Star Wars movies) were destroyed during a collision with 'a nonsensical prologue in gigantic lettering'. The show was successful, attracting great praise from US critics, and a homegrown variant was attempted. D.C. Follies had a passing resemblance to Spitting Image, but owed more to Sesame Street (human participants trying to talk sense to the puppets) and was not considered as funny. See also List of British TV shows remade for the American market.