Originally Posted by Absinthe_1900
I stand corrected. Thank you for the link, being a David Niven fan I'll have to give it a try.
Thank you for the kind words WH1.Originally Posted by WH1
Drawing on my fine command of the English language, I said nothing. - Robert Benchley
Originally Posted by Absinthe_1900
I stand corrected. Thank you for the link, being a David Niven fan I'll have to give it a try.
Drawing on my fine command of the English language, I said nothing. - Robert Benchley
According to some of the wags at Amazon, they wrote Bertie totally out of the second picture, because (yes because) Niven happened to break big. Unfortunately, he made the pic on loan to Fox and given his sudden popularity, couldn't be re-hired or anyone else substituted. So Jeeves without Wooster, and apparently, taking on some of Bertie's absent mindedness to make up for it. ?!?!!
Underneath this flabby exterior is an enormous lack of character. -Oscar Levant
i simply adore jeeves & wooster! as well as anything and everything p.g. wodehouse.i introduced my mom to J&W, and she loves the series - wanted all the seasons for christmas. hugh laurie is one of my favourites, in a non-comedy, i love him as stuart little's dad. has anyone read his book? it's fairly good.
wodehouse is by far my favourite author, i always leave his books feeling so much better about the world. (and writing in a completely different style - my school papers become whimsical and carefree and littered with "improper" spellings - what i read always effects how i write...) i lucked out at a local used book store recently and picked up a dozen or so wodehouse books i didn't have cheaply - they weren't even out on the shelves, because 'nobody in the area looks for them'.... good thing i asked!
If you'd like to see it before you buy it, "Wodehouse Playhouse" is available on Netflix, if you're a netflixer - if not, there's a free trial that should get you through the series. i've only seen the first season so far, but i enjoyed it.Originally Posted by WH1
thank you for the response
"The worst of all fears is the fear of living." T.R.
"Life is conflict, survival and conquest."
Col. John Boyd
Jeeves and Wooster! Simply the best! When I work at home, sometimes I'll take lunch and watch an episode![]()
http://wearinghistoryblog.com
"...be transformed by the renewing of your mind." Romans 12:2
I watched the first Jeeves movie and it is HORRIBLE. Niven and Treacher (now know more for his "fish and chips") are fine but the script is far from Wodehouse. To make it worse, it gets racist when Willie Best shows up, all shuckin' and jivin' and "yah sir" with his eyes wide and he even eats watermelon! Stick with the BBC productions which are faithful and hysterical. You might also check out the audiobooks. I am currently listening to "Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves," and it is wonderful.
BRS
"...back in the Thirties, the style seeker learned that genuine stylishness was an extension of himself..." AF
Hi WH1,
I always like to travel with a Jeeves book as well. The only downside is to sit in your airline seat chuckling uncontrollably. I was reading an old copy of "Carry On, Jeeves", in that exact state, only to be interrupted by my seatmate's curiosity over what old book could possibly be that funny. I tried to give him a brief tutorial, and he had seen the tv show and liked it, so we managed to get to an understanding.
It is one of the happiest reads - for me, true escapism in a way few modern titles are.
I LOVE Jeeves and Wooster! I haven't seen the David Niven movies yet. Perhaps TCM will play them soon.
Personally I didn't like the season where they were in America. The fake American accents...well...![]()
"It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice." -- Eddie Cantor
Originally Posted by Brian Sheridan
I recently watched these movies too and yes they're quite dreadful. I was going to send the DVD back to netflix without even watching the second movie but decided to give it a try. Before pressing play on the old remote I told myself (yes I often talk to myself) to watch it as a classic B movie of the time and forget any connection to Wodehouse. Well, it worked I enjoyed it more, not enough to run out and buy a copy but much more than the disappointment of the first film.![]()
Drawing on my fine command of the English language, I said nothing. - Robert Benchley