Dad's Army
1 9 6 8 - 1 9 7 7
(UK)
83 x 30 minute episodes
The Walmington-On-Sea platoon of the Local Defence
Volunteers (LDV) - more commonly known as the Home Guard - is
commanded by pompous bank manager Captain Mainwaring. Mainwaring is
incompetent at both these jobs but still feels he will
single-handedly lead Britain to victory in WWII. He is assisted (both
at the bank and in the Home Guard) by Sergeant Wilson ("would you mind
awfully sort of falling in to three lovely lines, chaps?").
Notable characters among the
lower ranks are Lance Corporal Jones (the local butcher), Private
Frazer (a mad Scots undertaker), Private Godfrey, (an incontinent old
man who lived with his sisters Dolly and Sissy and was never known to
venture far from a public convenience ), Private Pike (a mummies boy
excused from the real army due to his unusual blood type) and Private
Walker (black market wide-boy about town). Completing the line-up were
Bill Pertwee as Hodges, the prickly Air Raid Warden, and Frank
Williams as the rather effeminate Vicar.
Dad's Army was the brainchild of David Croft
and actor/writer Jimmy Perry (who had served in the Home Guard at
Watford). At first the BBC turned down the series - the program
controller at the time, Paul Fox, felt that you couldn't take the
mickey out of England's finest hour.
Several
of the cast had also had experience in the army, but only veteran
Scottish actor John Laurie (who played undertaker Jock Frazer - "we're
doomed!") had served in the Home Guard). Arthur Lowe (Captain
Mainwaring) had been a Sergeant-Major in the Second World War while
John Le Mesurier had served in the Royal Armoured Corps. Unsure how
to portray Sgt Wilson (aka Uncle Arthur), he thought:
"Why not just be myself, use an extension of my own personality
and behave rather as I had done in the army?. So I always left
a button or two undone and had the sleeve of my battle-dress blouse
slightly turned up. I spoke softly, issued commands as if they were
invitations and generally assumed a benign air of helplessness".
Wilson's relationship with Private Pike's
mother was also subject of much conjecture.
Clive Dunn (Jonesy - "Don't panic, Mr Mainwaring!"
"Permission to worry you, Mr Mainwaring?") had an unexpected hit
record in the late sixties with a song called Granddad. The
B side was a nifty little ditty called I play the Spoons - "I
tap them here, I tap them there . . ."
A Dad's Army feature film was released in
1971 and several years after the last episode of Dad's Army
was transmitted, John Le Mesurier, Ian Lavender and Bill Pertwee
reprised their Dad's Army roles for a BBC radio sitcom called
It Sticks Out Half A Mile. Sadly, no archive recordings of this
particular program are thought to exist. Two
long-lost episodes of the series were unearthed in 2000 following an
appeal by BBC archivists for missing TV programs. The BBC had been
anxious to trace five missing episodes out of the 80 that were
made. The two episodes, Manoeuvres and Operation Kilt,
from 1969, turned up in a pile of rusting film cans handed into the
BBC by a man who wished to remain anonymous. The episodes were among
19 film cans pulled out of a skip at Elstree film studios in
Hertfordshire in the 1970s
TRIVIA NOTE
Walmington-on-Sea, the imaginary south-coast town "not far from
Eastbourne" was loosely based on Bexhill (although the series was
filmed at Thetford in Norfolk). The "Who do you think you are kidding
Mr Hitler?" theme song, which sounds so authentically wartime (largely
thanks to the unmistakable voice of Bud Flanagan), was actually
written and recorded in 1967/1968 especially for the series by Jimmy
Perry.
Rear Guard, a US version of Dad's Army
screened in America by ABC on 10 August 1976, but failed to make it
past the pilot stage. As the United States was never seriously in
danger of military invasion, a premise depicting the old codgers' last
stand was probably never going to be appreciated as it was in the UK. |