My British Buddy
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055 - My British Buddy |
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Script | Jimmy Perry and David Croft |
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Director | David Croft |
Producer | David Croft |
Recorded | Friday 8/6/73 |
Original transmission | Wednesday 7/11/73 6.50pm |
Series | Six |
Length | 30 minutes |
Original Viewing Figures | 12.5 million |
Preceded by | The Deadly Attachment |
Followed by | The Royal Train |
My British Buddy is the second episode of the sixth series of the British television sitcom Dad's Army that was originally transmitted on Wednesday 7 November 1973.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The Americans have, at last, decide to join the fight against fascism, and the first small contingent of troops arrives in Walmington-on-Sea. Mainwairing tells them to make themselves at home, which they promptly do - with the platoon's girlfriends. When the British are told they don't know the right temperature to serve beer, and the American's are told they don't know when to enter a war, a fight breaks out. A photographer from the local paper is on hand to record the special relationship...
[edit] Plot
The Walmington-on-Sea Home Guard unit has received exciting news; as Captain Mainwaring puts it, the long dark tunnel is now illuminated by a bright light shining for all to see. He is not, as Pvt. Pike initially believes, referring to the blackout, but to the arrival of the Americans in the war (and not before time, according to certain members of the platoon). A detachment of American troops will be arriving in Walmington-on-Sea within the week, and the Home Guard intend to treat them to a traditional British welcome. It is Lance Corporal Jones who has the brilliant idea (arrived at following a characteristically long-winded anecdote about a spear-throwing contest during his military service in the Sudan) of treating their visitors to a darts match in the local pub, to which the platoon will bring their girlfriends along.
All initially goes well with the meeting of two nations. Mainwaring is surprised by the informality of the American Colonel Schultz (who greets the British officer with a cheery "Howdy partner, put it there!"), and the Colonel is somewhat nonplussed by both Pvt. Frazer's unique rendition of a Robert Burns poem (with strategic updating and references to Hitler) and Jones' complicated explanation of where the term 'limeys' originated, but all seems to be going well, with a number of pleasing propaganda photos taken. It starts to go wrong, of course, when the American soldiers are told to make themselves feel at home - and thus immediately start flirting with the Home Guard soldier's girlfriends, who all promptly forget about their boyfriends when faced with the attention of the glamorous, sexy young Americans. Matters are not helped by the ungracious American response to warm beer and the lack of scotch due to war privations, and when Warden Hodges struts in and begins telling the Americans that their late entry into both the First and Second World War is not greatly appreciated, it doesn't take long for a fight to break out.
The next day, Mainwaring (having earned a black eye as the first person to get hit in the fight) is ordered by his superiors to make a formal apology to the Americans, and thus restore Anglo-American relations and offset any potential German propaganda value out of the fight. Resentful at being made the scapegoat, he intends to make a formal statement detailing how his platoon were not responsible for the violence; but as every member of the platoon (even, surprisingly, Pvt. Godfrey) was a more than willing participant in the fight, it soon becomes a moot gesture.
Mainwaring is surprised, however, by the arrival of the Colonel Schultz - who, having learnt the extent of British hardship during the war, and somewhat ashamed of his earlier ungraciousness, has arrived to offer his own apologies on behalf of his unit, and to give the men a gift of chocolate. This would seem to be repairing the friendly relations - but then, the Home Guard learn of a dance in the American mess to which their girlfriends are all invited. It doesn't take long for Jones to provoke the Colonel to violence once again - or for Mainwaring to receive yet another black eye.
[edit] Notes
- The arrival of the American troops into Britain places this episode sometime in 1942.
- The Warden offends the American Colonel by suggesting they have made an "improvement on last time", the United States having entered the last war in 1917, whereas this time they are only two and a half years late (war having broken out in Europe in September 1939).
[edit] Cast
Cast | Characters |
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Arthur Lowe | Captain Mainwaring |
John Le Mesurier | Sergeant Wilson |
Clive Dunn | Lance Corporal Jones |
John Laurie | Private Frazer |
James Beck | Private Walker |
Arnold Ridley | Private Godfrey |
Ian Lavender | Private Pike |
Bill Pertwee | ARP Warden Hodges |
Alan Tilvern | Colonel Schultz |
Edward Sinclair | The Verger |
Frank Williams | The Vicar |
Janet Davies | Mrs Pike |
Wendy Richard | Shirley |
Pamela Cundell | Mrs Fox |
Verne Morgan | Landlord |
Talfryn Thomas | Mr Cheeseman |
Suzanne Kerchiss | Ivy Samways |
Robert Raglan | The Colonel |
Blain Fairman | US Sergeant |
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