List of Dad's Army episodes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of television episodes from the British sitcom Dad's Army, about the British Home Guard during World War II. The sitcom aired between 1968 and 1977, and there were a total of eighty episodes spread over nine series, as well as three Christmas specials.[1] Most episodes were also adapted for radio. The show was set in the fictional seaside town of Walmington-on-Sea, on the south coast of England, making the Home Guard the front line of defence against an invasion by the enemy forces across the English Channel, which formed a backdrop to the series.
The first episode, The Man and the Hour, began with a scene set in the "present day" of 1968, in which Mainwaring addressed his old platoon as part of the contemporary "I'm Backing Britain" campaign. It was a flash-back to the founding of the Walmington-on-Sea Home Guard platoon by Mainwaring after he had heard Anthony Eden's 1940 radio broadcast. The final episode, Never Too Old, focused on the wedding of Corporal Jones and Mrs. Fox, which was interrupted as the platoon were put on full invasion alert.
The first two series were in black and white. There are three lost episodes from series two. Only film copies made of the episodes from these series survive; copies of series one were made for overseas sales, but there was little interest, so none were made of any series two episodes. The three episodes that exist do so because two were film recorded to show Columbia Pictures executives and another needed to be edited post-production.
Dates shown are original air dates on BBC One.
Contents |
[edit] Series 1
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
001 | The Man and the Hour | 1968-04-15 | 1968-07-31 | Mainwaring, manager of Swallow's Bank, takes it upon himself to form the Walmington-on-Sea Home Guard platoon, after hearing of the formation of the Local Defence Volunteers, declaring himself Captain, and making his chief clerk, Wilson, Sergeant. In absence of weapons and uniforms, the platoon are forced to make do with pepper and armbands.[2] |
002 | Museum Piece | 1968-04-22 | 1968-08-07 | Mainwaring, worried that the Nazis could attack at any time, decides to requisition much needed weapons - from the local Peabody Museum of Historic Army Questions. There is one problem - to do so, they must outwit the curator - Lance Corporal Jones' father.[2] |
003 | Command Decision | 1968-04-29 | 1968-08-14 | Mainwaring, still short of weapons, receives an offer from Colonel Square - he will give them weapons, but command must be handed over to him. Mainwaring agrees - until he discovers that the weapons in question are muskets, and that he wants the platoon to fight on horseback. The platoon finally receive their proper weapons at the end of the episode.[2] |
004 | The Enemy Within the Gates | 1968-05-06 | 1968-08-28 | A lecture by Mainwaring is interrupted when a Polish officer from GHQ announces that a reward of £10 will be available for any Nazis captured. On patrol later that night, Jones and Walker capture two Luftwaffe airmen, but they escape. The Polish GHQ officer recaptures them and brings them back to the church hall - the platoon receive a £30 reward after he is also mistaken for a German.[3] |
005 | The Showing Up of Corporal Jones | 1968-05-13 | 1968-09-04 | After Major Regan from Area HQ decides that Corporal Jones is too old to be in the Home Guard, he announces that unless he can get round the assault course in 15 minutes, he will be removed from the platoon. The rest of the platoon come up with a plan to save him.[3] |
006 | Shooting Pains | 1968-05-20 | 1968-09-11 | The platoon is chosen to provide the guard of honour for the Prime Minister on his visit to Walmington, but after awful shooting at the range, Major Regan decides that a competition between the Eastgate platoon and the Walmington-on-Sea platoon will decide who will provide the guard.[3] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Series 2
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
007 | Operation Kilt | 1968-10-13 | 1969-03-01 | Thought lost, found in 2001. A Captain Ogilvie from the Highland regiment arrives at parade and informs Mainwaring that there will be an exercise involving ten of his troops and all of Mainwaring's. The platoon create a devious plan to ensure that they will win.[4][5] |
008 | The Battle of Godfrey's Cottage | 1968-10-20 | 1969-03-08 | Thought lost, found in 2001. In the event of an invasion, Mainwaring says, the platoon will split into two sections, one commanded by Wilson and the other by Mainwaring. When the church bells begin the ring (the signal that an invasion is in progress) Mainwaring's men scramble to their assigned positions, but fail to realise where the other section is, leading to one section attacking the other.[4][5] |
009 | The Loneliness of the Long Distance Walker | 1968-10-27 | 1969-03-15 | Lost. Private Walker is called up to the regular Army. The platoon, anxious at how they will get hold of off the ration supplies, fights to keep him. In the end, only one thing can save him - his allergy to corned beef.[6] |
010 | Sgt. Wilson's Little Secret | 1968-11-15 | 1969-03-22 | When Mrs Pike tells Pike there is a little Arthur on the way, having taken in an evacuee, (Arthur) Wilson gets worried and assumes that it is his child, and begins to plan a wedding.[6] |
011 | A Stripe for Frazer | 1968-11-15 | 1969-03-29 | Lost. Mainwaring has the opportunity to promote one of his men to Corporal, and rather than give it to Jones, decides to test who has the greatest potential, appointing Frazer Lance Corporal - but his increasingly dictatorial manner alienates the platoon.[6] |
012 | Under Fire | 1968-11-27 | 1969-04-05 | Lost. After Frazer spots what he believes to be a German spy signalling planes, the platoon arrest a suspect - but he protests he is a naturalised Englishman. The Warden embarrasses them by confirming that not only is he a loyal British subject but that he is married to his Auntie Ethel.[6] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft (Episodes 1-3) Produced by David Croft, Directed by Harold Snoad (Episodes 4-6)
[edit] Series 3
From this point on, all episodes were in colour
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
013 | The Armoured Might of Lance Corporal Jones | 1969-05-25 | 1969-09-11 | After the platoon is encouraged by GHQ to work more closely with the ARP, Jones donates his butcher's wagon to the platoon as a troop transport. Walker plans to use this for his black market activities, but Hodges decides it will be used for air-raid practice exercises.[7] |
014 | Battle School | 1969-06-01 | 1969-09-18 | The platoon is selected to attend a weekend camp. After arriving 'nearby' by train, they get lost and arrive late and hungry, oversleep and miss breakfast, and are instructed to capture an 'enemy base'. The discovery of a secret tunnel makes this somewhat easier.[7] |
015 | The Lion Has Phones | 1969-06-08 | 1969-09-25 | After a German plane crashes into the town's reservoir, Walker and Frazer frantically try to call GHQ. Walker solves the situation by flooding the reservoir with water and forcing the crew to surrender.[7] |
016 | The Bullet is Not for Firing | 1969-06-22 | 1969-10-02 | After the firing of the entire platoon's ammunition at a low-flying German plane, Mainwaring sets up a court of inquiry to determine who should be held responsible, but the inquiry becomes farcical as the platoon attempt to re-enact the event.[7] |
017 | Something Nasty in the Vault | 1969-06-15 | 1969-10-09 | Swallow's Bank takes a direct hit during an air-raid, but the bomb fails to explode, leaving Mainwaring and Wilson stuck in the vault with it. After the Bomb Disposal squad retreat to collect the right tools, the platoon take matters into their own hands.[8] |
018 | Room at the Bottom | 1969-06-29 | 1969-10-16 | It is determined by GHQ that Captain Mainwaring has never held a commission, and he is demoted to Private. Sergeant Wilson takes temporary command as Mainwaring attempts to regain his stature.[8] (Although made in colour, this episode survives only as a 16 mm black & white film recording.) |
019 | Big Guns | 1969-07-06 | 1969-10-23 | The platoon is given a heavy naval artillery piece - but the town's bandstand, a rare example of Victorian ironwork, must be preserved. Mainwaring reasons that a demonstration of the gun's capabilities win over any doubters.[8] |
020 | The Day the Balloon Went Up | 1969-10-23 | 1969-10-30 | A runaway barrage balloon has to be brought back to earth, and the platoon is called to action. One mistake leads to another, and Captain Mainwaring finds himself on a tour of the English countryside.[8] |
021 | War Dance | 1969-10-30 | 1969-11-06 | Mainwaring announces that a dance will be held to raise morale, but he is less than pleased when Pike announces his date for the evening will be the daughter of a woman who used to clean for the Mainwarings. The Captain is concerned of Pike's infatuation with this 'common' young woman.[8] |
022 | Menace from the Deep | 1969-11-07 | 1969-11-13 | The platoon are placed on guard duty, manning a machine gun post at the end of the pier. After Pike loses the food and the boat, morale begins to fall. The spotting of a drifting sea mine fails to improve morale.[9] |
023 | Branded | 1969-11-14 | 1969-11-20 | Private Godfrey admits to being a conscientious objector during the Great War, and is sent home in disgrace, ostracised by the rest of the platoon. When, however, he later rescues Captain Mainwaring and reveals that he holds the Military Medal, he is reinstated as medical orderly.[9] |
024 | Man Hunt | 1969-11-21 | 1969-11-27 | Mainwaring decides to use Walker's newly found tracking dog to discover the source of a discarded parachute. A man is finally cornered - but only after the platoon have examined several dozen pairs of ladies' negligee.[9] |
025 | No Spring for Frazer | 1969-11-28 | 1969-12-04 | Frazer, a coffin maker, loses the spring of the Lewis gun. Frazer believes it has been lost in a recently made coffin, shortly to be buried. The platoon declare a bomb scare and evacuate the graveyard, but fail to find the spring - until Frazer finds it in his pocket.[9] |
026 | Sons of the Sea | 1969-12-05 | 1969-12-11 | Mainwaring believes that the platoon could play havoc with the Nazis in a recently requisitioned boat, and the platoon set off to guard the local River. After getting lost in the what they believe to be the English Channel, the platoon believe they are behind enemy lines, stow away on a train, and destroy their weapons - until they discover they are in Eastbourne.[9] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft (Except 3 and 11) Produced by David Croft, Directed by Harold Snoad (Episodes 3 and 11)
[edit] Series 4
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
027 | The Big Parade | 1970-07-17 | 1970-09-25 | The platoon join in 'Spitfire Week' parade, but have to compete with the Sea Scouts and the ARP for pole position. Mainwaring thinks a mascot will help - but when Pike falls in a bog as they try to catch a ram, their plans go awry.[10] |
028 | Don't Forget the Diver | 1970-07-24 | 1970-10-02 | The platoon takes part in an exercise to capture a windmill containing Captain Square's men - they must plant a dummy bomb in the windmill. They decide to put Jones in a fake tree trunk and push him up the river - but only he can get the bomb inside.[10] |
029 | Boots Boots Boots | 1970-07-31 | 1970-10-09 | Captain Mainwaring is concerned with the three Fs - fast feet, fit feet and functional feet. He embarks on a foot toughening regime, including 20 miles (32 km) route marches and playing football in bare feet.[10] |
030 | Sergeant - Save My Boy! | 1970-06-27 | 1970-10-16 | Pike gets caught in barbed wire on the beach, in the middle of a mine field. But the Army engineers are slow to arrive, and it is up to the platoon to save him - with Godfrey's help.[10] |
031 | Don't Fence Me In | 1970-07-10 | 1970-10-23 | The platoon have been sent to guard a camp full of Italian POWs - but Walker's attitude to them makes Mainwaring wonder whether he is a fifth columnist.[10] |
032 | Absent Friends | 1970-08-07 | 1970-10-30 | In Mainwaring's absence, the platoon forego parade to compete in a darts match against the ARP wardens - but when Mainwaring arrives back he is appalled and orders Wilson to bring them back - but with two pints for the winners, the platoon are staying where they are.[11] |
033 | Put That Light Out! | 1970-10-30 | 1970-11-06 | The platoon man a local lighthouse as defence against a seaborne assault - but when the light is switched on and the town is illuminated during an air-raid, Jones' section must come up with an ingenious plan to turn it off - and the telephone wires are cut.[11] |
034 | The Two and a Half Feathers | 1970-11-06 | 1970-11-13 | Jones has extensive battle experience - but when one of his comrades from the Sudan, Clarke, turns up and accuses him of cowardice, Jones puts the record straight, and Clarke is sent out of the town in disgrace.[11] |
035 | Mum's Army | 1970-11-13 | 1970-11-20 | Mainwaring allows female members into his platoon - but with Mrs. Mainwaring still at home, the Captain takes a shine to a younger woman. Rumours begin to circulate that there is more to their relationship than immediately visible.[11] |
036 | The Test | 1970-11-20 | 1970-11-27 | The ARP challenge the Home Guard to a game of cricket, but while Mainwaring is happy to play fair, Hodges has a secret weapon - Ernie Egan, a professional cricketer.[11] |
037 | A. Wilson (Manager)? | 1970-11-27 | 1970-12-04 | Mainwaring is shocked to discover than Wilson has been commissioned, and even more shocked when he finds out that Wilson has been made manager of the Eastgate branch, leaving Pike as his Chief Clerk and Jones as his Sergeant.[12] |
038 | Uninvited Guests | 1970-12-04 | 1970-12-11 | After the ARP HQ is bombed out, the platoon are forced to share the church hall with the ARP wardens. Mainwaring protests to anyone who will listen, and they are ordered to leave - but not for another week.[12] |
039 | Fallen Idol | 1970-12-11 | 1970-12-18 | Captain Square gets Mainwaring drunk in the Officers Mess, ending up thoroughly inebriated - only a truly heroic action can repair his damaged reputation in the eyes of his men.[12] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft (Except 2 and 5) Produced by David Croft, Directed by Harold Snoad (Episodes 2 and 5)
[edit] First Christmas special
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
040 | Battle of the Giants | 1971-10-19 | 1971-12-27 | The platoon are challenged by the Eastgate platoon to a test - but Hodges, the vicar and the verger are judges. To begin with, they seem likely to win - but when Jones gets a bad attack of malaria, defeat seems close.[12] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Series 5
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
041 | Asleep in the Deep | 1972-05-26 | 1972-10-06 | A bomb falls on the local pumping station as Godfrey and Walker are patrolling there, trapping them. When the platoon try to free them, they get stuck with them, and when a pipe bursts the room rapidly begins filling with water.[13] |
042 | Keep Young and Beautiful | 1972-06-09 | 1972-10-13 | The older members of the platoon try to make themselves look younger to avoid transfer to the ARP - the Captain dons a toupee, some dye their hair and the Sergeant puts on a corset.[13] |
043 | A Soldier's Farewell | 1972-06-02 | 1972-10-20 | Mainwaring, depressed as his men are not living up to his expectations, and believing his leadership to be unappreciated, dreams he is Napoleon after eating too much toasted cheese.[13] |
044 | Getting the Bird | 1972-05-19 | 1972-10-27 | Wilson goes AWOL and is seen with his arm round a younger woman, who turns out be his daughter. Walker acquires 250 pigeons for Jones to sell as "off the ration" meat - but when Jones hears of a shortage of pigeons in Trafalgar Square, he changes his mind.[13] |
045 | The Desperate Drive of Lance Corporal Jones | 1972-06-16 | 1972-11-03 | A mis-read map lands the platoon in a barn marked as a target for artillery practice. Jones and Godfrey try to phone to stop the firing, but Godfrey cuts the wire - it is down to Jones to reach the barn before it is blown up.[13] |
046 | If the Cap Fits... | 1972-06-30 | 1972-11-10 | After Frazer moans about Mainwaring wasting his time with irrelevant lectures, he allows Frazer become Captain for a couple of days - but the power goes to his head. When Mainwaring re-assumes command he is shocked to find out he must play the bagpipes the following day.[14] |
047 | The King was in his Counting House | 1972-06-23 | 1972-11-17 | To boost morale, Mainwaring holds a party in his home - but a bomb hits the Walmington-on-Sea branch of Swallows Bank, and there are thousands of pounds to be counted and guarded by his party guests and taken to the Eastgate branch on horse and cart.[14] |
048 | All is Safely Gathered In | 1972-11-03 | 1972-11-24 | The platoon volunteer to gather the harvest at one of Godfrey's friend's 100-acre (0.4 km²) farm. The harvest is collected in well - until the widowers home-made potato wine is served.[14] |
049 | When Did You Last See Your Money? | 1972-11-10 | 1972-12-01 | When Jones arrives at the bank to deposit £500 from local shopkeepers for the servicemen's canteen, he realises the packet he has contains a pound of sausages instead.[14] |
050 | Brain Versus Brawn | 1972-11-17 | 1972-12-08 | The platoon is challenged to plant a dummy bomb in the OC's office, and decide to disguise themselves as firemen, travelling in an old fire engine. There is one problem - Hodges has spotted a real fire.[14] |
051 | A Brush with the Law | 1972-11-26 | 1972-12-15 | Mainwaring is charged with showing a light and taken to court by a gleeful Warden, and when the Verger tries to correct him he is blackmailed into remaining silent. Walker takes to the stand.[15] |
052 | Round and Round went the Great Big Wheel | 1972-12-01 | 1972-12-22 | Operation Catherine Wheel is the testing of the War Office's new radio controlled explosive wheel. The platoon are chosen for fatigues - but Pike and Walker sneak off to listen to the radio, unknowingly pushing the wheel out of control.[15] |
053 | Time on my Hands | 1972-12-08 | 1972-12-29 | An enemy pilot has bailed out and is trapped on the town hall clock. The platoon climb up the precarious ladder to reach him, but getting down is harder - Jones has broken the ladder.[15] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Series 6
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
054 | The Deadly Attachment | 1973-06-22 | 1973-10-31 | The platoon is ordered to guard the crew of a sunken U-Boat until the escort arrives - but when the escort is delayed, they must guard them all night. They insist on being fed only the finest fish and chips, and make it known that they will be held accountable after the war.[16] |
055 | My British Buddy | 1973-06-08 | 1973-11-07 | The Americans have decided to get involved in the war, and they make themselves at home in Walmington-on-Sea - with the platoon's girlfriends. A fight breaks out - and the local press are on hand to record it.[16] |
056 | The Royal Train | 1973-06-29 | 1973-11-14 | King George VI is set to pass through Walmington and the platoon are selected to provide a guard of honour, but a mix-up between sleeping pills and saccharine knocks out the drivers of a preceding train. The platoon must move the train to clear the line.[17] |
057 | We Know Our Onions | 1973-06-15 | 1973-11-21 | The platoon take part in an efficiency test - but fail the first sections miserably. A combination of Hodges' onions and their Smith gun gives them a distinct advantage.[17] |
058 | The Honourable Man | 1973-07-08 | 1973-11-28 | Mainwaring is enraged when Sergeant Wilson inherits a title, and consequently receives an invitation to the golf club Mainwaring has been trying to join for years as well as ending up welcoming a visiting Soviet VIP.[17] |
059 | Things that Go Bump in the Night | 1973-07-15 | 1973-12-05 | The platoon run out of petrol outside a deserted, apparently haunted, house. Tired and miserable, they decide to spend the night in the house - but it's not entirely deserted.[17] |
060 | The Recruit | 1973-07-22 | 1973-12-12 | When Mainwaring takes leave due to an ingrowing toenail, Wilson takes charge - but he allows the vicar and the verger to join the platoon, making the rest of the men angry. While on patrol, they prove useless at keeping order, and end up resigning.[17] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Series 7
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
061 | Everybody's Trucking | 1974-10-27 | 1974-11-15 | The platoon are given the job of signposting the area for an Army exercise - but a steam engine is blocking the route, and its driver has gone. When Jones tries to drive his van through, he gets stuck, along with Hodges and his bus load of pensioners. They must set up a diversion.[18] |
062 | Man of Action | 1974-05-07 | 1974-11-22 | A landmine has destroyed 100 yards (100 m) of railway track, along with water and gas supplies and telephone wires. Compounding the problem, Pike gets his head stuck between the bars of a gate. Mainwaring declares martial law.[18] |
063 | Gorilla Warfare | 1974-10-27 | 1974-11-29 | On a field exercise acting as commandos meeting a secret agent (Mainwaring), the platoon must trust no-one - GHQ has put out counter agents to catch them. The appearance of a gorilla compounds their problem.[18] |
064 | The Godiva Affair | 1974-11-03 | 1974-12-06 | The platoon are dressing up as morris dancers as part of a carnival to raise money for the town's Spitfire fund, which is still £2,000 short. A Lady Godiva figure will lead the parade, but there is confusion over who this will be.[18] |
065 | The Captain's Car | 1974-11-17 | 1974-12-13 | Lady Maltby has donated her Rolls-Royce to the war effort - Mainwaring decides this would make an excellent staff car, and gives it to Wilson and Pike to camouflage - they are providing the guard of honour for a visiting French general - but they paint the Mayor's Rolls-Royce and not Mainwarings.[19] |
066 | Turkey Dinner | 1974-11-10 | 1974-12-23 | After Jones mistakenly shoots a turkey on patrol, and its owner cannot be found, the platoon decide to hold a turkey dinner and treat the town's senior citizens. Mainwaring turns up in a dinner jacket, which is promptly soaked with gravy - which is then covered up with white paint.[19] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Series 8
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
067 | Ring Dem Bells | 1975-07-03 | 1975-09-05 | Mainwaring is displeased when he finds out his platoon has been chosen to play Nazis in a training film, and even less so when he finds out Pike and Sgt. Wilson are to play the German officers. When they arrive at the set, they are told filming will not start for another week - on the way back, they are mistaken for real Nazis when they stop at a pub - and then again when they reach Walmington.[20] |
068 | When You've Got to Go | 1975-06-06 | 1975-09-12 | Despite his bad chest, blocked sinuses and weak ankles, Pike is passed A1 on medical and is set to join the Army. Before this happens, Mainwaring must compete with Hodges in a blood donor drive - and it is discovered that since Pike has a rare blood type, he is no longer suitable for call up.[20] |
069 | Is There Honey Still for Tea? | 1975-06-26 | 1975-09-19 | Godfrey's cottage is under threat from the building of a new aerodrome - but Frazer knows the past of the Minister in charge - his expulsion of school and sacking from a weekend job after theft.[20] |
070 | Come in, Your Time is Up | 1975-07-10 | 1975-09-26 | The platoon go camping and discover three Nazis in a dinghy, aircrew who bailed out when their plane was shot down. Pike wants to shoot through the dinghy and sink them, but Mainwaring dismisses this as not "playing with a straight bat." Wilson comes up with a more civilised strategy.[21] |
071 | High Finance | 1975-05-30 | 1975-10-03 | Mainwaring stops Jones from cashing any more cheques because his bank balance is in the red - but an investigation reveals an increasing train of debtors, traced back to Hodges, through an orphanage Jones has been supplying with meat.[21] |
072 | The Face on the Poster | 1975-07-17 | 1975-10-10 | Mainwaring prepares a poster for a recruitment drive, eager to increase his platoon to a company and gain promotion to Major - but a print shop mix-up lands the platoon in trouble, and Jones, the face of the recruitment drive, in a POW camp.[21] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Second Christmas special
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
073 | My Brother and I | 1975-05-23 | 1975-12-26 | Mainwaring's drunken brother Barry arrives in Walmington claiming that their father's pocket watch, held by Mainwaring, belongs to him. Mainwaring gives him the pocket watch to assuage him, but he gatecrashes Mainwaring's party for local dignitaries.[21] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Third Christmas special
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
074 | The Love of Three Oranges | 1976-10-10 | 1976-12-26 | To raise money for the Comforts For The Troops Fund, the vicar organises a bazaar - each member of the platoon donates something. Hodges the greengrocer donates three oranges, extremely rare due to wartime rationing. Mrs. Mainwaring fails to show, and Captain Mainwaring has only one chance of redemption - get his hands on one of Hodges' oranges.[22] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft
[edit] Series 9
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
075 | Wake Up Walmington | 1977-07-08 | 1977-10-02 | As the threat of invasion lessens, the towns people begin to relax. Mainwaring orders Operation Wake-Up, dressing the platoon up as fifth columnists, and telling them to act suspiciously. Eventually, the Eastgate platoon are called in to deal with them.[22] |
076 | The Making of Private Pike | 1977-07-01 | 1977-10-09 | Pike borrows Mainwaring's recently acquired staff car to drive his new girlfriend to Eastgate, but, still heady from his raspberryade binge, it runs out of petrol nine miles from home on the way back, forcing Pike to spend all night pushing it back.[22] |
077 | Knights of Madness | 1977-07-22 | 1977-10-16 | As part of a Wings for Victory campaign, the platoon decide to stage a re-enactment of the battle between St George and the Dragon, with Mainwaring as St. George - but the ARP wardens have been planning exactly the same thing.[22] |
078 | The Miser's Hoard | 1977-06-24 | 1977-10-23 | Frazer, distrustful of banks, keeps his savings in the form of gold sovereigns - but Mainwaring believes his hoard would be better in Mainwaring's bank. Rumours spread about the savings, and when Frazer is seen carrying a box to the graveyard, the platoon follow.[23] |
079 | Number Engaged | 1977-07-15 | 1977-11-06 | The platoon is given the job of guarding telephone wires, other known as "highly secret invasion warning devices" - but as the vicar arrives to give a service, Mainwaring sees an unexploded bomb caught in the wires. Mainwaring's commandeering of furniture fails to help, but Wilson has a better idea.[23] |
080 | Never Too Old | 1977-07-29 | 1977-11-13 | Corporal Jones is married to Mrs Fox - but the service is interrupted as an invasion warning is sounded. The platoon break the fourth wall and raise their glasses to toast Britain's real Home Guard.[23] |
Produced and Directed by David Croft (Episodes 3 and 6) Produced by David Croft, Directed by Bob Spiers (Episodes 1, 2, 4, 5)
[edit] Christmas Night with the Stars inserts
Christmas Night with the Stars was a programme screened annually on Christmas night, when the top stars of the BBC appeared in short versions of their programmes, typically five to ten minutes long.
No | Title | Recorded | First broadcast | Overview |
---|---|---|---|---|
001 | 1968: Untitled Sketch | 1968-10-27 | 1968-12-25 | It's Christmas morning parade, and Mainwaring is confronted by a platoon of Father
Christmases.[24] |
002 | 1969: Resisting the Aggressor Down the Ages | 1969-11-21 | 1969-12-25 | To raise money, the platoon dress up in costumes and act as historical figures in the past that have taken over England.[24] |
003 | 1970: The Cornish Floral Dance | 1970-12-04 | 1970-12-25 | The platoon are rehearsing 'The Cornish Floral Dance' alongside the Wardens and some of the ladies of Walmington-on-Sea.[24] |
004 | 1972: Broadcast to the Empire | 1972-11-26 | 1972-12-25 | The platoon is chosen to take part in a world wide radio broadcast.[24] |
[edit] References
- ^ BBC Comedy Guide - Dad's Army. BBC. Retrieved on 2007-02-16.
- ^ a b c McCann (2001), p.231
- ^ a b c McCann (2001), p.232
- ^ a b Missing Dad’s Army episodes unearthed by BBC archives treasure hunt. BBC. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
- ^ a b McCann, (2001), p.232
- ^ a b c d McCann, (2001), p.233
- ^ a b c d McCann, (2001), p.234
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.235
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.236
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.237
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.238
- ^ a b c d McCann, (2001), p.239
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.240
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.241
- ^ a b c McCann, (2001), p.242
- ^ a b McCann, (2001), p.242
- ^ a b c d e McCann, (2001), p.243
- ^ a b c d McCann, (2001), p.244
- ^ a b McCann, (2001), p.245
- ^ a b c McCann, (2001), p.245
- ^ a b c d McCann, (2001), p.246
- ^ a b c d McCann, (2001), p.247
- ^ a b c McCann, (2001), p.248
- ^ a b c d BBC Comedy Guide - Christmas Night with the Stars. BBC. Retrieved on 2007-02-22.
- McCann, Graham (2001). Dad's Army: The story of a classic television show. Fourth Estate. ISBN 1-84115-308-7.
[edit] Further reading
- Croft, David; Perry, Jimmy; Webber, Richard (2003). Dad's Army: The Complete Scripts. Orion. ISBN 0-7528-6024-0
- Croft, David; Perry, Jimmy; Webber, Richard (2000). The Complete A-Z of Dad's Army. Orion. ISBN 0-7528-1838-4
[edit] External links
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