Thank You, Jeeves (Bertie Wooster & Jeeves)

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Thank You, Jeeves (Bertie Wooster & Jeeves)

Thank You, Jeeves (Bertie Wooster & Jeeves)

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In the 1970s and 1980s, Jeeves and Bertie Wooster were portrayed by various actors in twelve commercials for Croft Original Sherry. [133] One 1973 advertisement featured Jeremy Irons as Bertie Wooster. [134] Madeline Bassett is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. She is the daughter of Sir Watkyn Bassett and is a rather mushy, sentimental girl. Bertie Wooster is briefly engaged to her. Episode of the Dog McIntosh" (alternate title: Jeeves and the Dog McIntosh, US title: The Borrowed Dog), originally published 1929. In the Jeeves and Wooster television series, Morehead herself does not appear. Instead, she is impersonated by Jeeves. Jeeves has an uncle, Charlie Silversmith, who is butler at Deverill Hall. Silversmith dandled Jeeves on his knee frequently when Jeeves was very young and, when Jeeves is an adult, they write regularly to each other. [15] [16] Charlie Silversmith's daughter Queenie Silversmith is Jeeves's cousin. Jeeves also mentions his late uncle Cyril in Right Ho, Jeeves. His niece Mabel is engaged to Bertie Wooster's friend Charles "Biffy" Biffen. His cousin Egbert is a constable and plays a role in the short story " Without the Option". [17]

Agatha Gregson (née Wooster, later Lady Worplesdon) is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being Bertie Wooster's fearsome Aunt Agatha and mother of Thomas "Thos" Gregson. Wodehouse disclosed little about Jeeves's early life. According to the character, he was privately educated, [13] and his mother thought him intelligent. [14] Charlie Silversmith is a fictional character who appears in the Jeeves novel, The Mating Season. A large, imposing 16- stone man with a bald head, Silversmith is the austere butler at Deverill Hall. He is Jeeves's uncle and the father of Queenie, who is the parlourmaid at Deverill Hall and engaged to Constable Dobbs. [61] In Much Obliged, Jeeves, Bertie Wooster says that he esteems few men more highly than Jeeves's Uncle Charlie, and when Jeeves is writing a letter to his uncle, Bertie says, "Give Uncle Charlie my love", to which Jeeves replies that he will. [62] Sippy Sipperley [ edit ]Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1934]. Thank You, Jeeves (Reprinteded.). Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0-09-951373-5. George Wooster, Lord Yaxley, is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He frequents many gentlemen's clubs, and is said to have discovered, well before modern medical thought, that alcohol was a food. [79] He is Bertie's uncle and apparently inherits his title, as he seems unlikely to have earned it. He eventually marries an ex-barmaid. [80] He plays an important role in " The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace" and appears in " Indian Summer of an Uncle". Jeeves last appears in Aunts Aren't Gentlemen, in which Jeeves and Bertie head to the rural village of Maiden Eggesford, though Jeeves wants to go to New York. He and Bertie visit New York at the end of the story. Bertram Wilberforce Wooster is a fictional character in the comedic Jeeves stories created by British author P. G. Wodehouse. An amiable English gentleman and one of the "idle rich", Bertie appears alongside his valet, Jeeves, whose intelligence manages to save Bertie or one of his friends from numerous awkward situations. Bertie Wooster and Jeeves have been described as "one of the great comic double-acts of all time". [1]

Garrison, Daniel H. (1991) [1989]. Who's Who in Wodehouse (Reviseded.). New York: Constable & Robinson. ISBN 1-55882-087-6. Tall and slim, Bertie is elegantly dressed, largely because of Jeeves, who tends to talk Bertie out of the more flamboyant articles of clothing that Bertie sometimes favours. [24] He has blue eyes. [25] Normally clean-shaven, he grows a moustache in two different stories, and ultimately loses the moustache, as Jeeves does not think a moustache suits Bertie. [18] It seems that he has an innocent-looking appearance; when Bertie wants to wear an alpine hat in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, he states, "I was prepared to concede that it would have been more suitable for rural wear, but against this had to be set the fact that it unquestionably lent a diablerie to my appearance, and mine is an appearance that needs all the diablerie it can get." [26] Bertie has an expressive face that Jeeves can read easily. [27] Bertram "Bertie" Wooster is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being the master of said Jeeves.The Artistic Career of Corky", a rewrite of "Leave It to Jeeves", originally published in My Man Jeeves



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