The World of Wooster - Ian Carmichael and Dennis Price

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июл 2012

Комментарии • 208

  • @RS-xo7rd
    @RS-xo7rd Год назад +14

    Absolutely wonderful. i saw these episodes as a kid and loved it. The stutter and the monacle are masterstrokes, and the fact it appears to have been acted live in a studio with a genuine audience turns it into a theatrical experience. I love the Fry and Lawrie versions, but Price and Carmichael will always be the ultimate Jeeves and Wooster for me.

  • @diogenesagogo
    @diogenesagogo 6 лет назад +30

    YES! YES! YES! I've waited 40 years to hear that voice again!
    I've been down several blind alleys trying to find the owner of those rich, wonderful, many layered tones. I've come across some marvellous actresses during my search, but they never sounded quite right .... & at last, here she is!
    Fabulous Fabia Drake. Aunt Agatha. A voice full of wit, irony & simply a delight to listen to. A million thanks to the uploader!

  • @carolvogelman8216
    @carolvogelman8216 11 лет назад +16

    P.G. Wodehouse said firmly that Ian Carmichael was the personification of his vision of Bertie Wooster and I feel his vision was important; he wrote him!

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 6 месяцев назад

      I liked David Niven better. It is art; interpretation's in the eye of the beholder. No artist ever says how their art should be interpreted. DaVinci didn't leave a paragraph about how to take the Mona Lisa, Van Gogh didn't explain ``Starry Night,'' and I am not gonna let any writer tell me how best to interpret their characters. Actually, I'm disappointed that Wodehouse would bother saying which actor he wanted. No composer, certainly, said who should play their works.

    • @jeannelipham2583
      @jeannelipham2583 5 месяцев назад

      So, Agatha Christie telling Joan Hickson she would like her as Miss Marple, authors having a say in who portrays their characters in plays and/or movies or TV shouldn't care how the characters they gave life to are played by those who present themselves as those very characters? Wow. In addition, composers do say exactly how one should play their works. You do know how to read music, don't you? I would hope the composer would say, if a particular orchestra played their music perfectly, that they did so.

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 5 месяцев назад

      I never say ``should.,'' Obviously if they're friends & they exchange opinions, great. An artist can't add an essay after a work is finished to persuade beholders to like their work. Their work stands for itself. It is a product of them and a muse. Not every author is going to have the film aptitude to say who's the best actor & who has the best stage presence.@@jeannelipham2583

    • @acechadwick
      @acechadwick 29 дней назад

      ​@quickchris10 If I wrote a character and it was televised, I would strongly insist on casting choice. Agatha Christie hated Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple (I adored her) but a lot of authors resent casting choices and make no bones about saying so.

  • @RichyPoops
    @RichyPoops 4 года назад +9

    Taken off an old video recording done by yours truly... I'd forgotten about this... I recognise the drop-outs... Nice one.

    • @dominickillworth1154
      @dominickillworth1154 4 года назад +5

      I seem to be the first to say this, but Thank you for recording this, even if someone else stole and posted it :-)

  • @mithrilmoon1
    @mithrilmoon1 8 лет назад +52

    I can scarcely believe I'm about to watch this treasure. The very BEST Jeeves and Wooster. I didn't expect to ever find this again after so many years. Thank you xx

    • @granny13ad33
      @granny13ad33 4 года назад +2

      Depends on what you start with like Sherlock, depends on the one you grew familiar.

    • @Tony-hx2fj
      @Tony-hx2fj 2 года назад +2

      have vou seen fry and laurie

    • @wulfrunian
      @wulfrunian 10 месяцев назад +1

      They were never quite as good.

    • @nikolaisedov2295
      @nikolaisedov2295 9 месяцев назад +4

      Would you not concur, sir, that comparisons are inherently a matter of personal discernment? Whether they stand as the paramount representation might merely be a wistful reflection. Permit me to opine that Mr. Fry and Mr. Laurie's portrayal possesses a certain canonical resonance, especially in terms of the characters' age. (Wish I could produce such speech in real life without taking an hour to form a single sentence.)

  • @Penfold-zr2be
    @Penfold-zr2be 4 года назад +11

    Price and Carmichael. Two class comedy actors. I love the Fry and Laurie versions and they benefitred from higher budgets and location shooting etc but this pair were also excellent; Price in particular. His aloofness and air of implied superiority was closer to the Jeeces of the novels. Such a pity this is the only surviving episode.

  • @Space.Oddity666
    @Space.Oddity666 11 лет назад +20

    I loved fry and laurie just as much as i loved carmichael and price! In my opinion, both series were wonderful adaptations of the woodhouse stories!!

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 4 года назад +4

      both versions have there own charm. the acting is superb on both.

  • @williamnethercott4364
    @williamnethercott4364 6 лет назад +20

    Fantastic! I remember that episode from when I was about 8 years old and it was my favourite programme. I still love it and Ian Carmichael remains one of my favourite actors.

    • @granny13ad33
      @granny13ad33 4 года назад +1

      Not mine. Bertram actor is too old for the playboy. Each to his own.

  • @granthurlburt4062
    @granthurlburt4062 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks so much. Fry & Laurie are impeccable choices but no doubt Ian Carmichael was born to play an English aristo too.

  • @sewartwebb
    @sewartwebb 9 лет назад +15

    Only two exist!! This was my first Wooster. Brilliant!!!

  • @naomiseraphina9718
    @naomiseraphina9718 4 года назад +5

    Bloody brilliant! Had no idea the works of Wodehouse had been adapted for television so long ago, and so MAGNIFICENTLY!! Thank you for the opportunity to see these beloved characters so artfully portrayed! I've never before now thought that anyone could do justice to Jeeves and Wooster besides Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry, but now I see where at least some of THEIR inspiration came from. Marvelous! Go maire an saothar Wodehouse go deo! (Irish for: may the works of Wodehouse live forever!)

  • @suerobinson
    @suerobinson 6 лет назад +6

    Omg, I’d forgotten about these two. Brilliant

  • @angelacooper2661
    @angelacooper2661 Год назад +2

    This version of Jeeves and Wooster is one I didn't see, as it pre-dates my existence. I well remember watching the Fry and Laurie rendition in the early 90s, when I would have been in my early twenties!

  • @charleshart5158
    @charleshart5158 8 лет назад +11

    Ian Carmichael is the definitive Bertie Wooster.

    • @MrWilmasmiley
      @MrWilmasmiley 8 лет назад +5

      Actually, Bertie is about 24, not as old as Carmichael, and Hugh Laurie looks more like my idea of him. But Dennis Price is exactly right, IMHO.

    • @davidmellish3295
      @davidmellish3295 4 года назад +5

      Your smoking something my friend ,hugh laurie is MILES closer to Bertie,who's in his 20s,this one much to old ,NO WAY is he the definite Bertie,Hugh is Bertie

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 6 месяцев назад

      Didn't you guys just see the David Niven one in this playlist, ``Thank You, Jeeves?'' I like him better than this yahoo.

  • @uphollandlatic
    @uphollandlatic 6 лет назад +8

    Thank you for uploading this. It was this series that made me fall in love with the works of P.G. Woodhouse.

    • @sylviacowham316
      @sylviacowham316 3 года назад +3

      Thanks again

    • @stephenreeds3632
      @stephenreeds3632 9 месяцев назад +1

      Same here. Still read them. The audiobooks are superb.

    • @tuberider324
      @tuberider324 9 месяцев назад

      @@stephenreeds3632it’s a crime that so few of these were kept.

  • @inspectorspinda
    @inspectorspinda 6 лет назад +22

    Though I do like the fry and lauire version more for a number of reasons, this one still has it's own special charm! I love the look jeeves gives when wooster mentions shrimp and the way jeeves's cup trembles when Agatha mentions the twins

  • @margarethorrigan4644
    @margarethorrigan4644 5 лет назад +3

    Absolutely loved, with a passion “The World of Wooster “ look forward to catching up with more episodes on RUclips...thank you they should be back on BBC!

  • @HorseDoofus
    @HorseDoofus 8 лет назад +15

    Amazing! I'd given up on ever being able to see one of these again. Thanks.

  • @gilesdenmark
    @gilesdenmark Год назад +1

    I remember seeing Dennis Price whilst walking around on as a teenager in family holiday in Sark. A small island in the Channel Islands.

  • @ytxmak
    @ytxmak 9 лет назад +8

    Takes me back to when I was a kid, nice!

  • @mjclark641
    @mjclark641 3 года назад +2

    Sir Humphrey played by Clive Morton, who was the prison governor in Kind Hearts and Coronets, probably Dennis Price's finest moment.

  • @58christiansful
    @58christiansful 4 месяца назад +1

    This is funnier and better done than the Fry-Laurie - the embellishments on Wodehouse notwithstanding. (No girl in Wodehouse ever tells a young man that he has what it takes.)

  • @NickRatnieks
    @NickRatnieks 11 лет назад +2

    I can remember watching this as a kid- probably 1966- the tram regulator particularly stuck in my memory. Even Simon Ward has died- last year- how time flies!

  • @swallin19
    @swallin19 10 лет назад +38

    So sad only the two exist now, but they were very popular when broadcast, and Dennis Price is the definitive Jeeves. Ian Carmichael came up with the stammer himself, he said he needed a hook to hang the character on........Fry and Laurie had better scripts, and Hugh Laurie played Bertie better. The half hour format forced the story changes, Clive Exton did far better in the longer shows.
    The BBC were very relieved the show went so well with Dennis Price, he was renown as a drinker, and they expected troubles, but none came up. Over all the series had very large audiences.

    • @GEricG
      @GEricG 9 лет назад +3

      Very interesting snippets of info about the world of wooster series that I didn't know about. Thanks. It really is a pity that so little survived. The beeb lost a fair few tv shows in the past it seems, which is sad.

    • @Pstephen
      @Pstephen 7 лет назад +5

      Surely you mean "somdomite"?

    • @pahoboye
      @pahoboye 7 лет назад

      sodomite?

    • @Pstephen
      @Pstephen 7 лет назад +1

      The Marquess of Queensberry's misspelling, when he accused Oscar Wilde of being homosexual. Sodomite's a bad term anyway: Wilde didn't care for anal sex, and many other gay men don't either.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 6 лет назад +4

      EricG The beeb deleted a lot of the tapes of these old series for some mysterious reason of their own. To my mind it amounts to wilful destruction.

  • @RichardIIfan
    @RichardIIfan 10 лет назад +9

    I am enjoying this. what schoolboy did not read Jeeves? As Waugh said, it is a world that can never stale...

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 6 лет назад

      And what schoolgirl did not read Jeeves either! The three volumes of short stories are the best in my own opinion. However I found the full-length novels boring and repetitive and the characters are weary, stale, flat and unprofitable.

    • @SixStringSteve
      @SixStringSteve 4 года назад +3

      Mairwen 99 Noooooooooo! Read them again. Utter classics. Start with a Right Oh Jeeves.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 2 года назад +1

      “The Code of the Woosters”. Longish, but gripping. One damn thing after another, all surprises.
      Note the difference in public ethics. Not once does Jeeves sell a story to the Sun with the headline :”How Mr. Wooster Was Pressured Into Stealing A Silver Cow Creamer, And I Had To Cover It All Up”.

  • @arhassoc
    @arhassoc 7 лет назад +10

    Notice the cheek bones on 'Claude', played by Timothy Carlton. 40-odd years he was to play alongside his wife to play the parents of their real life son who was playing the title role in the BBC series of Sherlock Holmes. Mr Carlton's full name is Timothy Carlton Congdon Cumberbatch, and his son (with the same cheek bones) is Benedict.....

  • @gwenethgrieve4023
    @gwenethgrieve4023 3 года назад +2

    Carmichael and Price delivery genius.

  • @1965MJW
    @1965MJW 5 лет назад +4

    Famous connections: Benedict Cumberbatch's dad - Timothy Carlton - playing Claude.

  • @paulnuttall1253
    @paulnuttall1253 10 лет назад +3

    Great never seen before really enjoyed it I thank you...:-)

  • @pcefulpolarbear
    @pcefulpolarbear 14 дней назад

    this is actually funnier than most modern british TV imo

  • @zboston3
    @zboston3 7 лет назад +10

    This is much funnier and loonier than the Fry and Laurie version

  • @holmsatlarge
    @holmsatlarge 11 лет назад +2

    Excellent posting.For a while ,I had begun to think I had imagined the series. Mention to others drew blank stares, then I found the intro posted and was relieved.The poster wasn`t sure any episodes had survived the BBC purging.Glad this survived.Good Fun,What?
    P.S. I enjoyed Fry and Laurie`s version.

  • @paulredhead8603
    @paulredhead8603 7 лет назад +2

    Wonderful ! Thank you so much.

  • @margaretshaw7343
    @margaretshaw7343 3 года назад

    Just loved these thank you so much. ❤️❤️❤️

  • @ruthtagg8959
    @ruthtagg8959 6 лет назад +4

    Hello all Dennis Price fans! Elaine Parker is soon to have her biography published this November by Fonthill Media, so watch this space for an update.

  • @patrixspringer2753
    @patrixspringer2753 11 лет назад +3

    I never thought I would see anything of this show! I do not recall Bertie's monocle or the comic stammer in any of the books & it's also interesting to hear the audience laughter as Wodehouse was subtle in the comedy writings, one doesn't tend to think of it as sitcom!

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 2 года назад +1

      Magazine illustrators liked to give give him a monocle, and so do stage productions. But he is never mentioned as having one, so, tho it fits the character, I don’t think his creator meant him to have one.

  • @julieporter7805
    @julieporter7805 9 месяцев назад +1

    Okay, I love Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry the best but I also love watching different interpretations of characters and see what various actors and writers do differently. So watching the OG Bertie and Jeeves is quite a treat. (Well actually the real OGs were technically David Niven and Arthur Treacher but Ian Carmichael and Dennis Price were pretty close.)

    • @Roxy222uk
      @Roxy222uk 6 месяцев назад +1

      If you like different interpretations try searching out the (BBC) radio adaptation I grew up with. Richard Briars as Wooster and Michael Horden as Jeeves. This will always be my favourite, although I enjoy every version.

  • @FlaSheridn
    @FlaSheridn 8 лет назад +5

    This episode is “Jeeves and the Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace.”

  • @mariello30
    @mariello30 10 лет назад +4

    Dennis Price's is my favourite Jeeves. Fry's character was more prominent in his help of Bertie Wooster and also in the way he dressed,at times he looked better dressed that B.W. Well he certainly knew how to dress better than his boss but he could not afford it.Price's character was always one step back.

    • @margaretgalloway4520
      @margaretgalloway4520 10 лет назад +3

      You hafta be joking.Hugh Lauries Wooster was mouth-wateringly Beautifully suited.Superb English tailoring,but probably too understated for the hoi polloi to appreciate.

    • @mariello30
      @mariello30 10 лет назад +5

      Margaret Galloway You're missing the point. I'm talking about Jeeves.
      It is a great pity that some idiot at the BBC decided to delete those tapes.
      I saw that series and they were immensely enjoyable. Have you ever seen them?

  • @swallin19
    @swallin19 11 лет назад +6

    Absolutely, but Ian said he invented the stutter to "hang the character" on, and PG did not really approve till he saw the first episode. Dennis Price is simply perfect in the part, a llttle trick was used by the director, they rarely show Dennis Price walking through doors etc, "he appears", duplicating the "shimmying in" that PG describes.
    Fry and Laurie were not bad, but nowhere as good as Ian and Dennis.
    It is disgraceful that the BBC wiped the tapes.

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 6 месяцев назад

      Nobody cares what the writer thinks. It's like asking Beethoven if he'd rather Vienna or New York symphonies played his music. He would of course say, ``all of the above! We want as many orchestras playing it, as often as possible.''

  • @paulnuttall1253
    @paulnuttall1253 10 лет назад +5

    I would love to see some more of these hint hint wink wink nudge nudge ...:-)

  • @TedaR
    @TedaR 4 года назад +1

    What a treat! TYSM

  • @13thcentury
    @13thcentury 5 лет назад +4

    I say! This is bloody brilliant :)

  • @calvinkirk9777
    @calvinkirk9777 7 лет назад +1

    Simon Ward of the film "Young Winston" (1972) plays Eustace.
    (BTW, this series was recorded in 1965-1966.)

  • @JiveDadson
    @JiveDadson 6 лет назад +7

    I never knew Ian Carmichael was a Bertie.

  • @Tobypaws2002
    @Tobypaws2002 8 лет назад +3

    Hi, I was just looking up the locations for "School For Scoundrels" (1960, Ian Carmichael / Terry-Thomas), it was on t.v., Sat. 07 May 2016. (The location for the tennis match was Corus Hotel, Edgewarebury Lane, Elstree, by the way : I want to have a look on Google Earth in a minute...)
    Noticed I.Carmichael & Dennis Price in n episode of "The World of Wooster", "Jeeves and the Delayed exit....",
    Dennis Price I think was the best Jeeves.
    Steven Wallin wrote in about I.C's stammer being added, and that P.G. didn't much like it.
    I don't like it much either, but it does give Bertie a slightly more gauche aspect, making him very slightly ridiculous / innocent/different......... and that seems to be needed for the character. Just a thought.
    I do like to see how different actors tackle the roles.
    With Fry & Laurie, I really liked the part where Bertie wanted Jeeves to join in singing 'Minnie The Moocher' :
    retaining his dignity when it came to the response to "Hi-de-hi-de-hi-de hi", Jeeves muttered,
    "Hi-de-hi-de-hi-de-ho, Sir..."

    • @swallin19
      @swallin19 8 лет назад

      +Toby Paws Part of the directors ideas was to have Price appear from nowhere, as described in the books, and also not to show him walking onto the set through doors, but be there already. In this episode it does not show much, but was effective in showing Jeeves "shimming" up to Bertie. They made a running joke of Jeeves anticipating every request from Bertie. An addition to the stories was Bertie always financially rewarding Jeeves after each adventure.

  • @sebastianverney7851
    @sebastianverney7851 Год назад

    The great Libra humourists: Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse (15 October 1881 - 14 February 1975). Almost all the video recordings of this classic series have been lost, "wiped", incredible as it seems. This blurred version seems to be the sole survivor.

  • @stephenreeds3632
    @stephenreeds3632 9 месяцев назад

    I think it was recorded live which makes it even better. Better in its way than the Fry and Laurie version. Best thing Carmichael ever did.

  • @philipinchina
    @philipinchina 2 месяца назад

    Top hole and so true to the original idea.

  • @bernie4268
    @bernie4268 11 месяцев назад +1

    I’m hoping they find the whole series on some dusty shelf somewhere very soon. There were Blandings episodes and Psmith episodes too.

  • @TheAkelei
    @TheAkelei 11 лет назад +4

    This is all very well, but I'm totally smitten by Laurie and Fry. And I don't think a change of opinion is likely ;-).

  • @jonjamg
    @jonjamg 12 лет назад +3

    Is that Simon Ward at 01.33?

  • @matador521
    @matador521 11 лет назад +3

    Thank you drp, I had about given up hope of ever seeing this! It's made my day. Sadly I have to say that, even though Denis Price and Ian Carmichael are great favourites of mine, this episode simply wasn't a patch on the Fry and Laurie.

  • @LePrince1890
    @LePrince1890 11 лет назад

    First time I ever saw anything of this series. I was under the impression it was lost, and the only series of Wodehouse stories I saw were those with Pauline Collins and the series with Steven Fry and Hugh Laurie. I read this story years ago. There was an added kicker in the story that evened things out for Bertie with his two cousins, courtesy of Jeeves. It is missing from this teleplay.

  • @TheAkelei
    @TheAkelei 11 лет назад

    I see. Didn't take a look at the end credits. Thanks for letting me know, though. Now we know where these impressive cheekbones came from ;-)

  • @carolvogelman8216
    @carolvogelman8216 11 лет назад +1

    I adore Ian Carmichael and for those who prefer Peter Wimsey, in Murder Must Advertise, he is referred to as "rather resembling Bertie Wooster! Different men entirely! Cannot compare the roles, does not compute!

  • @sidneyfrederickson3941
    @sidneyfrederickson3941 6 лет назад +1

    Yep, it's a very young Simon Ward as Eustace.

  • @royksk
    @royksk Год назад

    Brilliant, the first time I’ve seen this version of J and W 🤪

  • @yogi2.057
    @yogi2.057 7 лет назад +4

    Yes Jeeves, petty thievery has always been a time-honored liberal skill acquired at Oxford.

  • @stephenking3017
    @stephenking3017 8 лет назад +25

    Dennis Price.........The Ultimate Jeeves......better than Michael Hordern,Stephen Fry or Maurice Denham and Ian Carmichael !!!!!!!! Words fail me!

    • @colinmurray5368
      @colinmurray5368 7 лет назад +3

      Richard Briers and MH surely the best being a radio version the words are important and Bertie's narration is brilliantly transposed... all this is lost with every TV version...sorry HL and SF the medium you work inis against you.

    • @Orange1313
      @Orange1313 4 года назад +3

      In total agreement that Dennis Price is the definitive and Ultimate Jeeves. He is sublime and portrays all of the stuff, as if the character floated off the page. Sincere thanks for sharing this.....it gives me a reminder of my childhood interests, books and superior half hour comedy programmes that were commonplace when I was 8,9,10 years old.

    • @sesquipedalian2885
      @sesquipedalian2885 3 года назад +2

      Hmmm...
      Personally, I find Dennis Price a bit too cold for Jeeves. Despite Jeeves's characteristic stoicism conveyed in the books, there is still a quiet warmth about him that radiates softly through his phlegmatic persona. I thought Stephen Fry captured this quality very well, along with the "sympathetic face" that Wodehouse ascribed to Jeeves's countenance. Wodehouse also wrote that Jeeves had a "soft and respectful" voice. I don't aim to suggest that Price's voice is far off from this outline, but it simply doesn't hold a candle to Stephen Fry's in my opinion. Fry's vocal attributes *perfectly* align with Wodehouse's description of Jeeves's voice. I also like Fry's delivery better than Price's overall. I thought Fry portrayed Jeeves in a way that makes the character seem several steps ahead of everyone else; as though he is observing that everything is unfolding as he's planned it. Dennis Price, by contrast, I thought acts almost as though he is lagging behind a step. In a few parts in this episode, he was unable to complete his sentence as the scene progressed ahead of him whilst he tried to catch up with it. Personally, I think that Stephen Fry makes Jeeves appear a bit more intelligent than Dennis Price does. But, of course, my opinion is purely subjective. To each their own, I guess. (And I fully respect the opinion of those who prefer Dennis Price as Jeeves.)

  • @PraiseDog
    @PraiseDog 8 лет назад +4

    Thanks. I really enjoyed his Lord Peter Wimsey series, I believe 6 were made. He mentioned the Wooster series in an interview, and I am glad to see one. Although I see they suffered the same fate as over 100 Doctor Who episodes.

  • @mrbigarms
    @mrbigarms 8 лет назад +5

    Class act, every bit as good and Fry & Laurie.

  • @YardieBoi2000
    @YardieBoi2000 11 лет назад +3

    Ian Carmichael and Dennis Price were my childhood images of Wooster and Jeeves. I just can't accept other people in these roles. However, I don't think this was one of the best episodes of the series.

    • @stephenreeds3632
      @stephenreeds3632 9 месяцев назад

      It's one of 2 that exist. Be thankful.

  • @swallin19
    @swallin19 9 лет назад +7

    It seems long fogotten that the real reason so many programs were not stored was Equity, the Actors Union. In those days they demanded no repeats without full fees, and no repeats at all after about 5 years,(without special raised fees), rendering all stored material near worthless. Well intentioned to protect jobs, but times changed and these days actors benifit from the repeats, and curse the shortsighted view of the 50/60/70/early 80 period. All stored material was basicaly a record of a series, not the full content, a requirement from Equity.
    Stephen.

    • @jeanhodgson8623
      @jeanhodgson8623 8 лет назад +6

      Ah. So that's why the programs were erased. Unions are a pain. The UK. musicians' union stopped American jazzmen from playing in the U.K. for many years. That included Philly Joe Jones, who was here for two years but unable to perform. How stupid. The American musicians' union prevented jazz from being recorded from July 1942 through 1944, and as a result, the vital big bands of Earl Hines and Billy Eckstein were not recorded when they contained Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. There was another recording ban in 1948, but fortunately, it was defied. Unions are a curse. Anyway, it's great to have this episode of the Jeeves and Wooster program. I saw all of this series when it was first aired, and the story was that none of the episodes had survived. The Laurie and Fry versions are superb, but by no means definitive, because the Carmichael and Price performances were also marvelous. Thank you to the uploader, and let's abolish all unions; they have plagued the U.K. and other countries, such as le Canada, for far too long. Go to Russia, comrades, and don't come back.

    • @bacfrere
      @bacfrere 6 лет назад

      interesting. i like a lot of the originals better than the remakes.

    • @BaronMichaelDeBlone1066
      @BaronMichaelDeBlone1066 4 года назад +1

      I wonder if Dave Allen was following this tradition when he had it written into his contract that any of his episodes could only be repeated once. I had always thought him rather original in that although it didn't cover Australia where I am led to believe they have been shown many times.
      The musicians' union also hampered the career of flautist Harold McNair which still is a real shame as what more excellent recordings we might have had from people like that.
      Anyway getting back to Bertie and Jeeves, I did not even know about this original TV serialisation, what a bonus as I was looking up the Fry & Laurie version. Thanks muchly. The jury is out as far as I am concerned, like them both and I am more than happy to settle for that.

  • @DemeterTelphousia-Erinyes
    @DemeterTelphousia-Erinyes 4 месяца назад +1

    IC is also wonderful as Lord Peter Wolsey.

  • @michaelmanning5379
    @michaelmanning5379 5 лет назад

    One can see the progression from "I'm alright Jack" towards Lord Peter Whimsey

  • @holmsatlarge
    @holmsatlarge 11 лет назад

    Yes, it is Timothy Carlton.The other "twin" is Simon Ward.It`s in the end credits. ;)

  • @Resurgam1901
    @Resurgam1901 11 лет назад +3

    Wonderful to see this great show once more, any chance of uploading the other surviving episode? I really hope some more will turn up in the Bob Monkhouse collection. Maybe even in Zimbabwe when Mugabe is retired.

  • @MrSherry1929
    @MrSherry1929 7 лет назад +5

    What Ho! Wonderful stuff don't you know! is this the only surviving episode?

    • @Bucketstein
      @Bucketstein 7 лет назад +3

      No, another one was announced found only yesterday.

  • @albertgainsworth
    @albertgainsworth 7 лет назад +11

    IMO you can't beat your own imagination. Wodehouse was meant to be read, not watched.

    • @harpharpharpharp1971
      @harpharpharpharp1971 6 лет назад +2

      Read or listened to. On the radio the pictures are better.

    • @SixStringSteve
      @SixStringSteve 4 года назад +3

      This can be said for many writers. However, these adaptions brought this duo to a new audience, some of whom might read the books and become enlightened 🌈

  • @jonjamg
    @jonjamg 12 лет назад

    And yes it was as Eustace!! Poor old thing passed away in July.

  • @signorellil
    @signorellil 11 лет назад +1

    "Answering the door these days, Bertie?"

  • @agathachristie2402
    @agathachristie2402 11 лет назад

    According to imdb, that´s indeed Timothy Carlton, playing Claude :)

  • @annemariefleming
    @annemariefleming 9 лет назад +16

    Shame on the beeb for wiping the tapes! They had a nasty habit of doing that to footage that some back-room oik decided was not populist enough. They actually kept some awful, badly acted and produced dross, and they are still doing it. Commissioning editors today are "meeja-studdys" grads (a mickey mouse degree if there ever was one), usually 25-year-olds who cater for their own tastes (and those of their "right-on, down-with-the-kids" social groups). People are switching channels in droves. Get a grip, "Auntie beeb"!

    • @alastairmacqueen5728
      @alastairmacqueen5728 9 лет назад +3

      As I think has been pointed out a few times on other channels - they wiped the tapes because they were hugely expensive - tapes cost much more than the average house price for a series. Also most programs were only ever made on the basis for one showing and one repeat - the concept of Dave style repeats had not been thought of as yet !! Therefore keeping tapes which needed fee renegotiation in order to be shown was not cost effective. A few episodes per series were sometimes kept for reference purposes and "transcription versions" which were tele-cine transferred to 16mm film often survive

    • @swallin19
      @swallin19 9 лет назад +3

      Alastair MacQueen Not that expensive to the largest broadcaster in the world, with huge income from licences. They were about £700 from memory, a fraction of the total production costs, the real reason they did not stored was Equity, the Actors Union, who would not allow repeats..

    • @jeanhodgson8623
      @jeanhodgson8623 8 лет назад +1

      Good point, Stephen. Rip people off with license fees (what an outrage in the first place) and then give very little back. That is very British. Anyway, I don't pay them, and there is nothing that they can do about it. They don't even send me form letters anymore. In 2016, it is time that this anachronism was made to pay for itself. I don't watch live TV anymore. There is nothing that I want to see. RUclips, torrent downloads, Kodi etc. have made live TV obsolete.

    • @jamesmay2473
      @jamesmay2473 6 лет назад

      Annemarie Fleming

  • @ruthtagg8959
    @ruthtagg8959 6 лет назад

    Hello everyone. Elaine Parker's biography of Dennis Price will be published in April 2018 by Fonthill Media. "The Price of Fame" will retail at £20.00 from all bookshops and on Amazon.

  • @thewrighttime1
    @thewrighttime1 9 лет назад +1

    I barely recognize Dennis Price with his face so puffy. What time frame is this. anyone?

  • @mamelucoderribado
    @mamelucoderribado 6 лет назад +1

    I seem to notice a considerable age difference between wooster and jeeves. I haven't read the books though, is it so in them? I've always assumed they were about the same age, or Jeeves only a little older.

    • @aspenl.1104
      @aspenl.1104 4 года назад

      Andrés Marchant Yep! Jeeves is older in the books

    • @stephenreeds3632
      @stephenreeds3632 9 месяцев назад

      Fry and Laurie had to have them the same age...don't be coloured by that series. Jeeves was a surrogate father to Bertie.

  • @arnaudmoos8098
    @arnaudmoos8098 9 лет назад

    Ian Carmichael plays the part ^_^

  • @TheAkelei
    @TheAkelei 11 лет назад

    Please correct me if I'm wrong but can it be that just in the beginning one of the two guests (the right one) is the father of Benedict Cumberbatch, i. e. Timothy Carlton??? There is a resemblance.. I'm not sure as far as the dating is concerned.... Please help me here, thanks.

  • @mfjdv2020
    @mfjdv2020 6 лет назад +8

    I used to love this series back in the 60s but now I'm sorry to say it does seem rather dated! And personally I prefer Hugh Laurie as Bertie and Stephen Fry as Jeeves, although their version of the original stories isn't as good. The director or producer (or whoever is responsible) focused far too much on the short stories set in New York and on the full-length novels, which meant that very little attention was given to the short stories set in the UK. Those that did receive attention were combined with parts of other stories, which made for rather a messy whole, especially for those of us who've read the books.

    • @Lytton333
      @Lytton333 3 года назад +1

      The Fry and Laurie American stories were awful. Didn't rate Fry's cardboard Jeeves either. Laurie, however, was inspired as Wooster in the English based escapades.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 2 года назад +2

      The us episodes were ok when they stuck to plums plots. When they tried to do more than adapt those, they got lost.

    • @stephenreeds3632
      @stephenreeds3632 9 месяцев назад

      Dated? The stories were written in the first 2 decades of the 20th century! Of course they're dated. Don't need location shots if you've got an imagination.

  • @drpessimistanticant
    @drpessimistanticant  11 лет назад +1

    alas old fruit if I had it I would upload it! I'm not even sure where this one came from, aside from being from 'The Internet.' Wonderful thing, isn't it?

  • @neil5551
    @neil5551 8 лет назад

    LIVE AS WELL

  • @signorellil
    @signorellil 11 лет назад +1

    "So, the Duke is off his rocker, uh"?

  • @usernamegoyale
    @usernamegoyale 7 лет назад +1

    this looks better

  • @warrenalexander5285
    @warrenalexander5285 7 лет назад +7

    Read the books!

    • @bacfrere
      @bacfrere 6 лет назад +1

      i do read books but i live in vietnam and choice tends to be "new york times #1 bestseller" [how many could be #1?]/self help/pulp.....
      . i would really enjoy some of the originals with carmichael and price but, apparently, not available.

  • @drumrnva
    @drumrnva 4 года назад +2

    Good grief... how old is Bertie meant to be??

    • @davidbrazier9246
      @davidbrazier9246 3 года назад +3

      Even Carmichael, years later, said that he was much too old to play Wooster.

  • @BelatedCommiseration
    @BelatedCommiseration 10 лет назад +9

    Its not bad...but I definitely prefer the Fry and Laurie version...maybe its because I grew up with it...but this version does seem to take more liberties with the actual stories. I mean...why is the neurologist father sir Humphrey rather than Sir Roderick Glossop? Why is his potential love interest Marion and not Honoria? The twins are after a Marion in the actual stories but she is a singer. I suppose the format for this show was shorter than Fry and Lauries so there has to be some cuts and reduction of character...but still...I also don't care much for the Bertie stammer either. Also Clive Exton, the man behind the Fry and Laurie Jeeves and Wooster adaptations, was brilliant at adapting stories. He was also behind the David Suchet Poirots.

    • @jeanhodgson8623
      @jeanhodgson8623 8 лет назад +5

      The Suchet Poirot is certainly the definitive version. It's great that they made so many. No other actor can touch David Suchet in that role.

    • @BelatedCommiseration
      @BelatedCommiseration 8 лет назад +2

      Tommy Black Totally agree about David Suchet...amazing portrayal...but it wasn't just him that made that series work...I mean I can watch him now as Poirot, but the first 4 or 5 series were in a whole other class, and I believe that was because the quality of the adaptation by Clive Exton was so high. That and the production values, the supporting cast (Hugh Frasier also made Hastings his own, and Philip Jackson is amazing as Japp) all have great chemistry...same with the Fry and Laurie Jeeves and Wooster! I believe Brian Eastman was also the producer on both Poriot and Jeeves and Wooster, and he got a great stable of talent together! Two definitive versions of two beloved literary creations! Not bad going...and you don't really see that done very well these days...although I guess Downton abby is the closest...only seen one or two episodes of that, and I know its popular, but it looks to Photoshop to me...whereas Poriot and Jeeves and Wooster really seem to speak of their period in terms of look and acting.

  • @carolvogelman8216
    @carolvogelman8216 11 лет назад

    Also, this was live action television and really a play televised! And you meant you were not lucky enough see chemistry; don't know between what or who?

  • @Lytton333
    @Lytton333 11 лет назад

    Yes, I think it is the late Mr Ward..

  • @GirGir183
    @GirGir183 Год назад

    9:13 HENNIMORE!!!!!

  • @rayoyler9229
    @rayoyler9229 6 лет назад +1

    Pipen good.

  • @flaggerify
    @flaggerify 4 месяца назад

    Is that Simon Ward?

  • @rikicooper3169
    @rikicooper3169 11 лет назад +6

    Absolutely no chemistry and Jeeves never makes the worst anything. He is also in the strictest of confidences with the social set.

  • @rikicooper3169
    @rikicooper3169 11 лет назад +1

    Bertie indeed wore a monacle. But in his twenties with two prominent front teeth giving him a permanent askance expression and the utter picture of innocence. Completely deceiving of course.

  • @neil5551
    @neil5551 8 лет назад +3

    better!!

  • @SmashTactics
    @SmashTactics 9 лет назад +25

    I know a lot of people like the Fry and Laurie version but dammit, those episodes just don't seem to have the same charm as this.

  • @Jubilo1
    @Jubilo1 2 года назад

    Simon Ward eh?

  • @patrixspringer2753
    @patrixspringer2753 11 лет назад

    (That explains the stiffness!)
    As is Stephen Fry-- I don't think it has anything to do with Jeeves--- just coincidence, what?

  • @anchy1995
    @anchy1995 10 лет назад

    Can anyone upload all episodes? It is written on IMDb that 18 of 20 episodes from World of Wooster are lost.

  • @hocbes
    @hocbes 11 лет назад

    Why does Bertie stammer ? Is that on purpose ? Or did Ian Carmichael actually stammer in real life - it sounds pretty real to me ? Could someone kindly answer this naive question from a foreigner who has never heard (or heard of) Mr Carmichael otherwise.