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It seems strange to think that when it was released in 1979, Monty Python's Life of Brian scandalised church leaders, prompting criticism from bishops and family values campaigners.
There were boycotts, protests and furious debates over the film's allegedly blasphemous content.
But the world has moved on and Brian is now one of the best-loved films of all time.
Now, inevitably, comes the musical. Former Python Eric Idle has announced he will follow the international success of Spamalot, the musical version of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, by turning the Life of Brian into a "comic oratorio" titled Not The Messiah (He's A Very Naughty Boy).
The show will have its world premiere in Toronto in June as part of an arts festival to promote tourism in the Canadian city.
Idle, who played characters ranging from Harry the Haggler to the Woman Who Cast First Stone and the Intensely Dull Youth in the original, was giving little away when he spoke to film industry magazine Variety.
The 63-year-old said: "I promise it will be funnier than Handel, although probably not as good."
Fans will be desperate to know whether they can look forward to the return of much loved characters like Biggus Dickus, Jesus the Christ and of course Brian himself.
They will also be wondering whether the film's most famous song, Always Look On The Bright Side of Life, will make an appearance despite having been borrowed for the earlier musical. Spamalot won three Tony awards including best musical after opening on Broadway in March 2005 and has brought in US$100 million ($143 million) in ticket sales. A national tour and a West End production followed.
Not The Messiah was commissioned by the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, whose music director Peter Oundjian is Idle's cousin.
But the comedian insisted that had nothing to do with his decision.
"Who would want to work with their relatives, anyway?" he asked. "They're usually unpleasant, dishonest and slow to pick up the cheque."
But he conceded: "He's got a bit of class, which is something my family has always desperately needed."
Spamalot co-composer John Du Prez will collaborate with Idle again.
The show's debut will be at Toronto's inaugural Luminato Festival of the Arts. Other high-profile names announced last week include Philip Glass, Leonard Cohen, Atom Egoyan and Isabel Bayrakdarian.
Organisers hope to attract half a million tourists to the city for the 90-event festival that will run from June 1-10.
The Life of Brian was re-released in 2004 to "cash in", says former Python Terry Jones, on the success of Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ. Despite achieving respectable box office receipts - US$26,000 on its first weekend - it failed to do as well as Holy Grail which was re-released in the US three years earlier.
- INDEPENDENT