Rentaghost

Rentaghost

The Rentaghost title card, as it appeared in the first episode.
Genre Children's Comedy
Created by Bob Block
Starring Anthony Jackson
Michael Darbyshire
Michael Staniforth
Edward Brayshaw
Ann Emery
Molly Weir
Sue Nicholls
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 9
No. of episodes 58
Production
Producer(s) Jeremy Swan,
Paul Ciani
Production company(s) BBC
Broadcast
Original channel BBC1
Original run 6 January 1976 – 6 November 1984

Rentaghost was a British children's television comedy show, broadcast by the BBC between 6 January 1976 and 6 November 1984. The show's plot centred on the antics of a number of ghosts who worked for a firm called Rentaghost, which rented out the ghosts for various tasks.[1]

Background

The company, located in South Ealing, is run by Fred Mumford, a recently deceased loser who feels he can find work for ghosts whose lives were as failed as his. His first (and only) recruits are Timothy Claypole, a mischievous jester with a comical lack of knowledge about modern technology; and Hubert Davenport, a delicate Victorian-era gentleman who is morally shocked by the modern world. The ghosts work from an office, which they rent from Harold Meaker, who discovers the truth about them in the third episode.

Over the course of several series, other characters were added: Hazel the McWitch, a Scottish witch; Nadia Popov, a Dutch ghost who suffers from hay fever and teleports away when she sneezes; and the pantomime horse Dobbin, who first appears in a one-off Christmas special called "Rentasanta" and is brought to life by Claypole, who is unable to cancel the spell afterwards thus allowing Dobbin to remain in the show for the rest of the run.

Another key figure is a ghost from the Wild West called Catastrophe Kate (cf. Calamity Jane), played by Jana Shelden, who is collected from outside a magic carpet shop in the Spirit World by Fred Mumford. The two ghosts are transported back to Earth on a flying broomstick, Catastrophe Kate having turned down the alternative of a flying vacuum cleaner. It is Catastrophe Kate who later introduces Hazel the McWitch to the regulars.

Adam Painting, a local entrepreneur played by Christopher Biggins, frequently appears in episodes and tries, with limited success, to involve the ghosts in his latest business enterprise.

When actor Michael Darbyshire (who played the role of Davenport) died in 1979, Anthony Jackson (Mumford) declined to appear in the next series, leaving Michael Staniforth's Claypole the sole original ghost; Davenport and Mumford's absences were explained at the start of the series by them having acquired permanent haunting jobs at a stately home. After Mumford's departure, the business was taken over by Harold Meaker and his wife Ethel, who suffered from the various problems the ghosts brought to their lives.

The long-suffering neighbours of Rentaghost are the Perkins, who appear from Series 4 onwards, and think the Meakers are mad.

Remakes

In September 2008, it was reported that the show could be returning to television after the rights to the programme were obtained by the UK production company RDF.[2] However, no new show was forthcoming.

Deadline reported in December 2010 that "Warner Bros had acquired the rights to RentaGhost and was going to develop it into a Beetlejuice-style afterlife feature comedy vehicle for Russell Brand as Fred Mumford."[3] However, in October 2011 it was reported that Ben Stiller had now been signed for the project. Night at the Museum writers Tom Lennon and Robert Ben Garant have been hired to write the script, which will reunite the two writers with Stiller.[4]

Running jokes

In an early series, the Perkins are given a magical amulet that grants all their wishes. They do not realise this, however, and persist in expressing odd wishes, which the amulet then proceeds to grant.

Mrs. Perkins: (referring to Mr. Meaker) I wish he was here now. For two pins, I'd tell him what I think of him!
The amulet is seen glowing. The Meakers knock on the Perkins' door.
Mr. Meaker: (in a strange monotone) Here are two pins.
Mr. Meaker produces two enormous 'prop' pins and hands them to Mrs. Perkins, who accepts them in the same somnambulist way.
Mrs. Perkins: Thank you. Who do you think you are?
Mr. Meaker: Harold
Mr. and Mrs. Meaker: and
Mrs. Meaker: Ethel
Mr. and Mrs. Meaker: Meaker.
The pair bid each other farewell and the Meakers leave. The Perkins return to normal and are confused and somewhat distressed by what has just happened.

One of the more frequent running jokes in the last series was the cellar of the Meakers' house. The house's power was provided by a pantomime dragon called Bernie St. John ("St. John" in this instance is correctly pronounced "Sinjun", making the dragon's name an obvious play on words), who was brought to life by Claypole and served as a furnace. If anyone entered the cellar, typically all characters present would shout, "Don't go into the cellar!" all at once, and a few moments later whoever who went in would return charred and covered in soot.

List of Episodes

Episode # Season # Original air date
116 January 1976
2113 January 1976
3120 January 1976
4127 January 1976
513 February 1976
6218 May 1976
Rentaghost sets itself up as a detective agency
7225 May 1976
821 June 1976
928 June 1976
10215 June 1976
11222 June 1976
12322 February 1977
1331 March 1977
1438 March 1977
15315 March 1977
16322 March 1977
17329 March 1977
The ghosts win £500 on premium bonds and decide to use it to treat Harold Meaker as a gesture of appreciation. Unfortunately the events of the previous few weeks have placed Mr. Meaker on the verge of a nervous breakdown and he gets the wrong idea...
18414 September 1978
19421 September 1978
20428 September 1978
2145 October 1978
22412 October 1978
23419 October 1978
Catastrophe Kate drops in on her surfboard to find that Rentaghost is organising a charity fete.
24421 December 1978
Titled Rentasanta, this marked the final appearance of Fred Mumford and Hubert Davenport in the series. Mr. Claypole's antics cause problems as he brings a pantomime horse, Dobbin, to life... and finds he cannot undo the spell.
2557 March 1980
Fred and Hubert have left for an extended tour of stately home hauntings, and so Mr. Claypole recruits two new members of Rentaghost: Hazel McWitch and Tamara Novek. Meanwhile, Dobbin learns how to transport himself and continues to cause problems for the Meakers.
26511 March 1980
27514 March 1980
28518 March 1980
29521 March 1980
30624 April 1981
3161 May 1981
3268 May 1981
33615 May 1981
34622 May 1981
35629 May 1981
3675 October 1982
37712 October 1982
38719 October 1982
39726 October 1982
4072 November 1982
4179 November 1982
42716 November 1982
43723 November 1982
44730 November 1982
4577 December 1982
46714 December 1982
47721 December 1982
48729 December 1982
498October 1983
508October 1983
518October 1983
528November 1983
538November 1983
5499 October 1983
55916 October 1984
56923 October 1984
57930 October 1984
5896 November 1984

DVD releases

Rentaghost Series 1 DVD

Only the first series of Rentaghost has been released on VHS and DVD.

Some master copies of Rentaghost episodes and other children's shows were junked by the BBC Archives in 1993 on the assumption that they were 'no use' and that examples of some other episodes were sufficient. The wiped tapes were then sold overseas to countries that still used obsolete (in the UK at least) tape formats. However, BBC Enterprises had requested copies of the first three series a couple of years earlier and indeed they were showing at the time on UK Gold these were later recovered by the BBC Archives.

Regular cast

See also

References

  1. "BBC - Comedy Guide - Rentaghost". Web.archive.org. Retrieved 2015-03-09.
  2. "Entertainment | Rentaghost 'to make TV comeback'". BBC News. 8 September 2008. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  3. Fleming, Mike. "Russell Brand Haunts 'Rentaghost' Remake". Deadline.com. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  4. Fleming, Mike. "Fox Buys ‘Rentaghost’ And Re-Teams Ben Stiller With ‘Night At The Museum’ Scribes Lennon And Garant –". Deadline.com. Retrieved 18 October 2011.

External links