Long ago, when I was a young lad at university, I discovered some of Wodehouse’s works in the library. I knew of Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, but had never actually read any of the stories. I plucked one of the volumes from the shelf and sat on one of the settees in the library lobby to sample it. Thirty minutes later, I had quite literally fallen off the settee - twice - from laughing, and I was asked to check the book out and read it elsewhere because I was creating a nuisance for other library users.
Patrick Ellis me too, I love the music and animation and have even slowed ot down on youtube so I can see how the images change, it is a work of art! A perfect match for the actual episodes of course!
Delightful morality comedy going on with Jeeves in this episode. He informs Bertie that he will not risk his freedom safe-cracking but then shows no compunction in whacking the explosives expert Bobby Oates . Genius television from start to finish. The books are brilliant but this is one of the few cases where the show outdoes the novels. In these odd 21st century times i find am incorporating elements of Jeeves and Wooster into my persona to feel the best of British🧐😞🤗
Just when you think that there are only so many ways that one can misinterpret the name "Jeeves", the subtitles pull another fresh one out of the kitchen like a shambolic waiter who can never get the order right. 1:04 - "The time, Bees." 1:45 - "Actually more that cheap chime, Jeans." 3:12 - "You don't disapprove, Jeez?" 12:52 - "That'll be all, Jesus." 13:11 - "Your Hardman, James." 43:37 - "Well, T's..." 45:11 - "Thank you, Chief." 47:55 - "Jeet!" 48:33 - "This is very sad, Cheese."
really spode is so perfectly portrayed. A pompous hot headed toad like Mussolini the one moment and all friendly and nervously driveling the next xD "oh you say such amusing things wooster" haha cracks me up every time. Love's how Wooster plays of on him to. "it isnt all a bed of roses trying to be a dictator wooster" "why don't you give it up then" "I can't well how can I people expect it of me, my mother..." Reminds me of Kevin Spacey somehow.
Madeleine: “Augustus isn’t a man of action like you.” Bertie: blush blush... Madeleine: “He is a man of intellect.” 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Great timing and what a punch!
"I took the liberty of glancing through the volume and thought it might make an excellent remedy for insomnia" This has to be among the best ways of saying a book is boring as hell
Another episode!!! !! The brains behind the contents, timing, splendor and energetic entertainment. Entertainment extremely rare. I shall return! > BRAVO!
Thanks for these-whenever I am feeling a bit down, I turn to "Wooster and Jeeves"-somehow their silliness brings me back up. British Comedy and Drama rule-none better ! If you want melancholy-turn to the Scandanavians- high state of the art egoism-go American. There you have it !
I also detect a hint of Lady Mary Crawley's personality as well. I wouldn't mind seeing a crossover series featuring both of them just to see who will win in a battle of banter and wits.
You remember me asking you if Lady Florence reminded you of anyone Jeeves? Indeed I do sir. Well I just realized who it is, my aunt Agatha. that one had me cracking up :D
The actress did an excellent job of evoking that feeling from the moment she showed up. The later Florence was a bit softer than this one, I see why they called her Lady Caligula.
I really enjoyed this series. There is only one issue that I have and that's the actor's playing some of the recurring character's, changed. Madeleine, Fink Nottle, Steph, Florence etc. and some not for the better. Other than that, top notch stories and plenty of humour!
This is made even funnier because certain things are presented seriously - for example the violin playing woman was pretty good and the keyboard player. Which meant the joke was how the crowd reacted rather than making the playing farcically bad.
Highclere has been a popular filming location for a LOT of TV shows. It was also used in some Miss Marple TV episodes. You see the famous main staircase in "4:50 from Paddington".
the contrast between "today's" Drones and all these lords is becoming pretty obvious , if it wasn't so earlier. meaning that they are the future version of Biffys, Bingos and what not. bertie has fine taste indeed jeeves won't destroy a manuscript but will thump a police officer?
Now, just who came first, the comedy character of "Mr. Bean" or Hugh Lauri's "Wooster" interpretations? P. G. Woodhouse is such a delight and so hilariously funny at times. So good for the soul
well well, in comparison to Florence, Madeline here appears as being the sweet, charming, reasonable lady. I do recall Florence's character being the most awful out of the lot of women Bertie has been involved with - even surpassing that of Honoria. In fact, not even Honoria treated Bertie with such a demeaning attitude.
It takes a certain man to love a dominatrix such as Florence. Some men however find a scary domineering woman as her incredibly endearing, like a terrifying goddess such as Athena or Ishtar.
I always had a slight soft spot for Honoria. A friendly athletic country girl type with none of the horrific deviousness of Stiffy or Florence or Bobbie, and not a catastrophic dippy drip like Madeline.
@@risenshine2783 A chamois cloth woven from the soft throat hair of goats from the mountains of cashmere (Kashmir) will achieve the required effect, I believe sir.
the one true doddze - not me. I would never have made it to Berty's age as I almost died when I was a child of a disease. Were it not for antibiotics - which did not exist in the form I required - I would have died at 2 or 3 years of age. When people pine for the 'good ole days', they usually gloss over the reality of the time. But I get your meaning. It does look like a fun kind of life.
Vikram Radhakrishnan Jeeves is the most calculating and manipulative character in the series, but I suppose that's different, isn't it? How dare that evil woman want to marry the man she's in love with? Manipulation should only be used for noble ends, like convincing your master to get rid of a hat you don't like.
It is part of the comic conceit of Wodehouse's novels that upper-class men are all gormless dullards who are consequently open to manipulation by scheming or imperious women (aunts, wives, fiancees, etc.) and by their social inferiors. A comic inversion of social realities, if you like.
duccio agreed, this rather mildly sexist outlook of fans of this show on women in this series annoys me when in fact near all individuals have their flaws, regardless of genitalia
The women and the girls in the Wooster-Jeeves canon tend to be real ball-busters. They own the guys. They rule. And to think in other works, particularly the earlier pre-farce stuff, Wodehouse created some admirable, resilient, women protagonists full of character.
Yes, they do serve their purpose. And. even compared to the women in his early work, they are admirable in a way. They are tough. They know what they want, and they aim to get it.
@@LoneKharnivore They are not ‘evil to the core’! Just funny, shallow and self-absorbed. But go to the Drones, and you will see they have no monopoly on that.
@@rachelr-j96 To be fair he did portray men as one dimensional as well. It's a comedy series, you see, meant to parody the two sexes. And in this sense he captured it very well, not just the over-emotional girls or the overbearing bitches, but also the smug twats and cowardly cunts among the men. Great portrayals, I should say.
Lady Florence dressing down the staff at 48:30. Are you a Footman or an Osler? Oslers where also mentioned in an episode of Rumpole Of The Bailey ...G...
Oh Jeeves how could you - one surely does NOT dust a car without water: You are runining the laquering - and you SHOULD know better!! And why does Floence not wear her hair as it was it was customary in nice waves? She looks like she experienced a perm gone bad.
the video stopped at 7:44 and will not continue. There is a circular sort of thingy going round and round, but even though I click it, it won't go. What to do?
Does anybody know what the piece of music played by the violinist at 51:06 is? It appears to be called 'Destiny' but I'm finding it hard to read the name of the composer/arranger, or anything else on the cover.
I do not know the name of this piece but, it sounds remarkably similar to the theme of "Around The World In Eighty Days", the David Niven version. And I would also like to know its title and who composed it. I dont think it is called Destiny as the book of music on the stand is quite thick and appears to have many scores in it. I'm also interested in the piece played on the piano immediately before the violin piece. It is familiar. Pity it's not in the credits. I bet Stephen Fry or Hugh Laurie could identify them. Any J & W fans who know. Cheers
Yes, that's the same house used as the exterior of the house in "Downton Abbey". It is really Highclare Castile, the home of Lord Carnarvon of Pharaoh Tutankamen's tomb discovery fame
Wasn't Bertie's uncle the one who was writing the memoirs, how did it change to Bassette? Also, didn't know Florence and Bassette were cousins. The way they keep changing the characters, it's really difficult to get a continuity. Bertie's voice is really wonderful and although the story isn't the same as in the book, this version is really funny
just love deze gyz....da best comedians r frm england...in doze times....da black adder series,fawlty towerz,are you being served,jeeves nd wooster....mind your language..,,later on da thin blue line...ohh i cant forget allo allo....thank you for uploading diz one....u got good taste...
LoneKharnivore You can also stop acting like you are the Gatekeeper of the RUclips comment section. You don’t know why they wrote the comment that way, they perhaps chose to write in short-hand to save time or English may not be their native language . Whatever the reason may be your comment was uncalled for.
By listening attentively to Wooster and Jeeves (in that order of importance), I now know how Elizabethan English actors sounded on the stage. It's Shakespeare revived!!!
Long ago, when I was a young lad at university, I discovered some of Wodehouse’s works in the library. I knew of Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, but had never actually read any of the stories. I plucked one of the volumes from the shelf and sat on one of the settees in the library lobby to sample it. Thirty minutes later, I had quite literally fallen off the settee - twice - from laughing, and I was asked to check the book out and read it elsewhere because I was creating a nuisance for other library users.
this is the only show where I can binge watch it and still enjoy listening all the way through the intro and outro every time.
Good point!
Patrick Ellis Same!
I couldn't agree more !
Patrick Ellis me too, I love the music and animation and have even slowed ot down on youtube so I can see how the images change, it is a work of art! A perfect match for the actual episodes of course!
Patrick my question is unrelated to the video here. I was wondering which country does the flag in your profile image represent?
Jeeves walking past shaking his head while Wooster plays the piano… priceless 😂😂😂
My god what a delight is to hear Hugh sing and play the piano
These adaptations and the books are my happy place. Pure pleasure.
Delightful morality comedy going on with Jeeves in this episode.
He informs Bertie that he will not risk his freedom safe-cracking but then shows no compunction in whacking the explosives expert Bobby Oates .
Genius television from start to finish.
The books are brilliant but this is one of the few cases where the show outdoes the novels.
In these odd 21st century times i find am incorporating elements of Jeeves and Wooster into my persona to feel the best of British🧐😞🤗
Just when you think that there are only so many ways that one can misinterpret the name "Jeeves", the subtitles pull another fresh one out of the kitchen like a shambolic waiter who can never get the order right.
1:04 - "The time, Bees."
1:45 - "Actually more that cheap chime, Jeans."
3:12 - "You don't disapprove, Jeez?"
12:52 - "That'll be all, Jesus."
13:11 - "Your Hardman, James."
43:37 - "Well, T's..."
45:11 - "Thank you, Chief."
47:55 - "Jeet!"
48:33 - "This is very sad, Cheese."
Your comment adds even more value to this already superb series 😂😂😂👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
really spode is so perfectly portrayed. A pompous hot headed toad like Mussolini the one moment and all friendly and nervously driveling the next xD "oh you say such amusing things wooster" haha cracks me up every time. Love's how Wooster plays of on him to. "it isnt all a bed of roses trying to be a dictator wooster" "why don't you give it up then" "I can't well how can I people expect it of me, my mother..." Reminds me of Kevin Spacey somehow.
Spode - the only side character they couldn't recast :) He's too iconic.
Far too many recasts.
Especially when he is Lord Sidcup.
Hugh Laurie is an absolutely topping singer, what?
The dining room is over there. You can't miss it... There are people having dinner in it.
Madeleine: “Augustus isn’t a man of action like you.”
Bertie: blush blush...
Madeleine: “He is a man of intellect.”
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Great timing and what a punch!
"Yes...well, I've thought seriously about your future, Jeeves, and I think you could continue very much in the vein of your immediate past."
"I took the liberty of glancing through the volume and thought it might make an excellent remedy for insomnia"
This has to be among the best ways of saying a book is boring as hell
indeed,sir.
"...saying a book is soporific."
Another episode!!! !! The brains behind the contents, timing, splendor and energetic entertainment. Entertainment extremely rare. I shall return! >
BRAVO!
I actually cheered out loud when I saw Spode again - I'm 42! Wonderful stuff.
He's my favourite. I'm 62!
The transcript is hilarious. So when I've seen it once normally I can follow the transcript and laugh again.
I love how Jeeves didn’t get a speck of dust on him in the blast
These episodes always leave a warm feeling in my belly. Thank you so much for uploading them.
They even recast the dog xD
Will that be all, sir?
"I don't recall a 'Battle of Raisin'"....
"Perhaps it was in the 'Grape War'!"
Good old England when the servants could offhandedly make references to Caligula.
"One only wishes one had advanced notice of this kind of form, Mr Fink-Nottle's ankle work was extremely convincing"
Early in, 2:50, “that seems scarcely possible, sir” ... then the wait, the music and Bertie comes back in a third time. Such good comedy! 🎉
I can appreciate the time and effort to produce such treats for the masses. Thank you Loreal....
Thanks for these-whenever I am feeling a bit down, I turn to "Wooster and Jeeves"-somehow their silliness brings me back up. British Comedy and Drama rule-none better ! If you want melancholy-turn to the Scandanavians- high state of the art egoism-go American. There you have it !
If it is vulgarity you require, turn to the Australians.
Bertie: "Trying to improve my mind, I dare say."
Jeeves: "That seems scarcely possible, sir."
OFGS, can the sarcasm drip any more smoothly?
Florence and her bossy ways immediately reminded me of Bertie's Aunt Agatha
I also detect a hint of Lady Mary Crawley's personality as well. I wouldn't mind seeing a crossover series featuring both of them just to see who will win in a battle of banter and wits.
Refer to Bertie/Jeeves dialogue @06:54
...it would be quite interesting to compare Sir Watkyn's Book of Recollections with the Ganymede's Book of Records...
You remember me asking you if Lady Florence reminded you of anyone Jeeves?
Indeed I do sir.
Well I just realized who it is, my aunt Agatha.
that one had me cracking up :D
what's better; that's exactly whom I thought of when I saw the character.
And she's a theosophist.
The actress did an excellent job of evoking that feeling from the moment she showed up. The later Florence was a bit softer than this one, I see why they called her Lady Caligula.
"The dining room is over there. You can't miss it. There are people having dinner in it" Lol
Spode: Can I call you "Bertie"?
Bertie: No
so cute how they're all swaying side to side along with the music XD
What song is it? It's very lovely
@@hannahvasby-burnie2477 don't know, but I'll try and find out!
@@thunder8bunny did you find out? I imagine it’s not listed...
@@Reuben_95 The album is on Apple Music. All the songs and more.
I say, that large Manor looks frightfully familiar.
Hugh has such a nice voice~~~~~~~ love him very much!
‘’Gussie you’re such a help’ she said to me, and I intend to be worthy of those words!’ 😂😂😂
Jeeves's brilliant catch at 41:49
Ninja...
amen to that
JJBinxyboo q
I really enjoyed this series. There is only one issue that I have and that's the actor's playing some of the recurring character's, changed. Madeleine, Fink Nottle, Steph, Florence etc. and some not for the better. Other than that, top notch stories and plenty of humour!
Elizabeth Morton's Madeleine is perfect, the best by far.
It's funny, the usual actress for Styffy came back for a later episode, this is the only time she played her.
I don't mind either really.
"Perhaps it was in the grape war" XD
This series has a few gorgeous grand trees! Yeah for the environment!
This is made even funnier because certain things are presented seriously - for example the violin playing woman was pretty good and the keyboard player. Which meant the joke was how the crowd reacted rather than making the playing farcically bad.
Viola.
Sorry to keep you waiting six years for this important correction!
The women are top notch in bringing the mores of this era to life!
Totleigh Towers is Highclere Castle. The same location used in Downton Abbey.
Highclere has been a popular filming location for a LOT of TV shows. It was also used in some Miss Marple TV episodes. You see the famous main staircase in "4:50 from Paddington".
Yes, I keep expecting Lady Mary and Lord Grantham to appear!! In fact they, would have been living here at the time Jeeves and Wooster is set!!
Thank,s. This serie is a real classic, for sure !
Many thanks for uploaded this series ...
Gets funnier every time I watch it. Brilliant
Jeeves' facial expressions near the start reminds me of Gromit. Inspiration maybe?
Brilliantly cast and acted! Nothing beats Spode's snarling "Wooster!....." The Amateur Dictator is in fine form!
"Extremely......invigorating sir..."
Despite Googles information, this and other episodes were shot in and around "Highclere" and not albeit fine homes,not a patch on the castle.
the contrast between "today's" Drones and all these lords is becoming pretty obvious , if it wasn't so earlier. meaning that they are the future version of Biffys, Bingos and what not.
bertie has fine taste indeed
jeeves won't destroy a manuscript but will thump a police officer?
Of course he wouldn’t destroy the manuscript, he wanted it published.
Now, just who came first, the comedy character of "Mr. Bean" or Hugh Lauri's "Wooster" interpretations? P. G. Woodhouse is such a delight and so hilariously funny at times. So good for the soul
I realised they changed the dog too - it was a black highland terrier previously and now it's white.
well well, in comparison to Florence, Madeline here appears as being the sweet, charming, reasonable lady. I do recall Florence's character being the most awful out of the lot of women Bertie has been involved with - even surpassing that of Honoria. In fact, not even Honoria treated Bertie with such a demeaning attitude.
It takes a certain man to love a dominatrix such as Florence. Some men however find a scary domineering woman as her incredibly endearing, like a terrifying goddess such as Athena or Ishtar.
@@wolfganghendery8298 agree - to each one's own, after all.
Stiffy is the worst, hands down
I always had a slight soft spot for Honoria. A friendly athletic country girl type with none of the horrific deviousness of Stiffy or Florence or Bobbie, and not a catastrophic dippy drip like Madeline.
@@Venella3567Stiffy is fantastic! Boudicca with bobbed hair.
02:34 , that is the fanciest insult I have ever heard 🤣Also I love Madeleine Bathett 's und Gutthie's lithp : very upper clath
Jeeves made a mistake! He should not brush gritty dirt off a car with a rag. It will scratch the finish of the paint.
Oh that sounds most disagreeable ma'am :-D
Patty Sherwood might I ask what Jeeves should have used?
@@risenshine2783 A chamois cloth woven from the soft throat hair of goats from the mountains of cashmere (Kashmir) will achieve the required effect, I believe sir.
@@hoodatdondar2664Well Cashmere goats and Kashmir (actually Pashmena) are two different species. Cashmere goats are from Mongolia.
he also cleaned the silver with bare hands, which people will only do the first time, the second time they learn to wear gloves.
i wish i was a rich 1920's upper class twit!!!
I'm still pondering whether the allowance is worth the looming threat of arranged mariages.
the one true doddze - not me. I would never have made it to Berty's age as I almost died when I was a child of a disease. Were it not for antibiotics - which did not exist in the form I required - I would have died at 2 or 3 years of age.
When people pine for the 'good ole days', they usually gloss over the reality of the time.
But I get your meaning. It does look like a fun kind of life.
Armand d’Hubert no mate it’s the 20s he was right,they have just got back from prohibition America,1920-1933 and it’s set in the mid 20s
Lady Florence looks fine to me.
Mc Rocket, Penicillin was discovered in the 1920's in the UK and has saved countless lives, sadly to late for you if you had been born earlier.
Thank you so much for the uploads. I am really enjoying them.
Loved em both since black Adder
28:36 Fink-Nottle comes to the rescue when Wooster memory is failing him.😂👍
How could they forget Eulalie???
I think that would've worn the plot point a bit thin by now
+Patrick Ellis Do you know the story behind the character Eulalily?
Lisa W well in the show it was a women's clothing store wasn't it?
I do not recall Eulalily ever being mentioned before it was used as a threat. Thanks for reminding me.
The shop has been sold (but unfortunately they only mention it in the next series)
Out of context quote:
Florence: Where's Wooster? Bertram, you've gotta do it now.
Bertie: Do it? I can't.
Good lord! I never realized what calculating, evil, manipulative, bitchy shrews the women in Wodehouse's works were, until I saw this series!
Yes he rather was one of the preeminent realists of his day. It is this timeless quality that allows his work to stand out even now.
Vikram Radhakrishnan Jeeves is the most calculating and manipulative character in the series, but I suppose that's different, isn't it? How dare that evil woman want to marry the man she's in love with? Manipulation should only be used for noble ends, like convincing your master to get rid of a hat you don't like.
It is part of the comic conceit of Wodehouse's novels that upper-class men are all gormless dullards who are consequently open to manipulation by scheming or imperious women (aunts, wives, fiancees, etc.) and by their social inferiors. A comic inversion of social realities, if you like.
duccio agreed, this rather mildly sexist outlook of fans of this show on women in this series annoys me when in fact near all individuals have their flaws, regardless of genitalia
BlueJayRobin who hurt you, you bitter, sexist troll?
The women and the girls in the Wooster-Jeeves canon tend to be real ball-busters. They own the guys. They rule. And to think in other works, particularly the earlier pre-farce stuff, Wodehouse created some admirable, resilient, women protagonists full of character.
Yes, they do serve their purpose. And. even compared to the women in his early work, they are admirable in a way. They are tough. They know what they want, and they aim to get it.
Yea they are complete bitches, evil to the core. He did become so much more the realist as his talent matured.
Charming.
@@LoneKharnivore They are not ‘evil to the core’! Just funny, shallow and self-absorbed. But go to the Drones, and you will see they have no monopoly on that.
Patronising drivel
When he said he had gone out and bought a piece of Music and he meant sheet music, not a record, not even those vinyls.
People still do that you know. They’re called musicians.
Shellack, not vinyl.
eh, i like series 2's stephanie's actress better
Jeeves putting scratches on that car.. Never dry wipe your car kids
The actress who plays The Basset toned it down a little for this episode compared with the previous one. Much better.
P.G. Wodehouse understood women better than most people.
A quien pueda importar by by "people" do you exlusively mean men or there are women too among the "people"?
@@rachelr-j96 To be fair he did portray men as one dimensional as well. It's a comedy series, you see, meant to parody the two sexes. And in this sense he captured it very well, not just the over-emotional girls or the overbearing bitches, but also the smug twats and cowardly cunts among the men. Great portrayals, I should say.
he also understood the spineless spoiled little blighter which they were forced to marry..
Oy!! 😊
Thank you for a great episode.
Is that wise Sir,after such a Heavy Meal?
Lady Florence dressing down the staff at 48:30. Are you a Footman or an Osler?
Oslers where also mentioned in an episode of Rumpole Of The Bailey ...G...
you mean an ostler?
@@esmeraldaweatherwaxe970 "Bloody T's" New nashers you see, and the old peepers are not what they was ...G...
Spode! Love him! I’d love to hear his views on today’s world!
Oh Jeeves how could you - one surely does NOT dust a car without water: You are runining the laquering - and you SHOULD know better!! And why does Floence not wear her hair as it was it was customary in nice waves? She looks like she experienced a perm gone bad.
Yep, that 80s scrunch would've been deemed unkempt.
Florence has her own sense of style
All together now !
A hunting we will go
A hunting we will go
Erm oh heck ! I forgot the rest
the video stopped at 7:44 and will not continue. There is a circular sort of thingy going round and round, but even though I click it, it won't go. What to do?
For future reference that circular thing means it's buffering, I usually just refresh the page and it works fine
SHE GAVE IT TO ME YOU SEE, TRYING TO IMPROVE MY MIND I DARE SAY. THAT SEEMS SCARCELY POSSIBLE SIR.
Back in Nagasaki. Where the fellers chew tobaccy and the women wicky wacky woo.
What are they doing at Downton Abbey? :)
The house is called Totleigh Towers in Jeeves and Wooster's verse.
Does anybody know what the piece of music played by the violinist at 51:06 is? It appears to be called 'Destiny' but I'm finding it hard to read the name of the composer/arranger, or anything else on the cover.
I do not know the name of this piece but, it sounds remarkably similar to the theme of "Around The World In Eighty Days", the David Niven version. And I would also like to know its title and who composed it. I dont think it is called Destiny as the book of music on the stand is quite thick and appears to have many scores in it.
I'm also interested in the piece played on the piano immediately before the violin piece. It is familiar.
Pity it's not in the credits. I bet Stephen Fry or Hugh Laurie could identify them.
Any J & W fans who know.
Cheers
It's the Destiny Waltz by Sydney Baynes.
12:54 subtitles: "Yes, that'll be all, Jesus"
lol
Does anyone know the song at 36:10? Thanks
edit: It's 'Destiny Waltz' by Sydney Baynes
Thank you!! Been wondering what it was since I heard it in the naked civil servant!
Love this!🇨🇦
These clips are a bit different then the books (the books are even much funnier)
that is the case for every movie ever made from a book.
Where on Earth did you go to School? Eton,and we didn't do Safe Cracking.
Gussie seems to live only for excitement Jeeves.
Is that the same house that's in Downton Abbey?
Yes, that's the same house used as the exterior of the house in "Downton Abbey". It is really Highclare Castile, the home of Lord Carnarvon of Pharaoh Tutankamen's tomb discovery fame
Similar plot to one in "Blandings!"
Thank you very much!
Why is Bertie engaged to that foul girl?
Not anymore
He was once but he thought better of it)))
She is kinda cute. Until she opens her mouth. If only Bertie could think of something to shut her up....
Because he's Bertie.
It's her profile
Wasn't Bertie's uncle the one who was writing the memoirs, how did it change to Bassette? Also, didn't know Florence and Bassette were cousins. The way they keep changing the characters, it's really difficult to get a continuity. Bertie's voice is really wonderful and although the story isn't the same as in the book, this version is really funny
Yes, it was Bertie's Uncle Willoughby. And I don't recall Madeline and Florence being cousins in the books
Isn’t the palace same as in Downton Abbey?
Thank you.
No Irish amadán was hurt in the making of this episode
Estate in 7:25 is, what we see in Downtown Abbey
watch me replay the smooth glass-catch at 41min about 19 times
They've cannibalised Esmond Haddock's hunting song from the Mating Season, and given it to Stinker Pinker here.
What a load of wicky wacky woo.
just love deze gyz....da best comedians r frm england...in doze times....da black adder series,fawlty towerz,are you being served,jeeves nd wooster....mind your language..,,later on da thin blue line...ohh i cant forget allo allo....thank you for uploading diz one....u got good taste...
Learn English mate.
@@LoneKharnivore Quite.
LoneKharnivore You can also stop acting like you are the Gatekeeper of the RUclips comment section. You don’t know why they wrote the comment that way, they perhaps chose to write in short-hand to save time or English may not be their native language . Whatever the reason may be your comment was uncalled for.
Please do take a course in English spelling. You are hurting my eyes.
By listening attentively to Wooster and Jeeves (in that order of importance), I now know how Elizabethan English actors sounded on the stage. It's Shakespeare revived!!!