Janet King
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Dad's Army character | |
Janet King | |
Occupation | Bank clerk |
---|---|
First appearance | The Man and the Hour |
Last appearance | Shooting Pains |
Portrayed by | Caroline Dowdeswell (television) Harriet Rhys (film) Elizabeth Morgan (radio) |
Miss Janet King, played by Caroline Dowdeswell, was a junior clerk in the Walmington-on-Sea branch of Swallow Bank in five out of six episodes of the first series (1968) of the BBC TV comedy series Dad's Army, set during the Second World War.
[edit] The character
Janet King was a bubbly blonde whose character, according to the series' creator David Croft, was introduced at a fairly late stage in the scripting because the BBC's head of comedy Michael Mills believed that the programme, about a group of mostly elderly men who volunteered for service in the Home Guard, needed a "soupçon of sex" [1]. Miss King appeared in five episodes, including the first (The Man and the Hour, 1968), in which, on 14 May 1940, she advised the manager of the bank, George Mainwaring (Arthur Lowe), that the Secretary for War, Anthony Eden, was about to make a wireless broadcast announcing the creation of the Local Defence Volunteers (later the Home Guard). Suitably inspired, Mainwaring promptly appointed himself captain of the Walmington LDV.
[edit] The significance of the role
Despite the very minor and comparatively short-lived nature of her part, Janet King was (with the possible exception of Private Walker's girl-friend Shirley, played in later series by Wendy Richard) virtually the only young woman to have a recurring role in Dad's Army. Others - such as the fiancée for a very short while of Private Pike (Miss King's male contemporary in the bank), Sergeant Wilson's daughter who once visited him on leave from the WRNS, and assorted waitresses, land girls and service personnel, usually flattered by Wilson for the prettiness or smartness of their outfits - were essentially brought on to support the story-line of particular episodes. Perry and Croft were later to redress the balance in their series Hi-De-Hi! (1980-88), based in a holiday camp in the late 1950s.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Graham McCann (2001) Dad's Army