Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-21 of 21
- 1976–19798.6 (62)TV EpisodeScared by the fraudulent success of Grot, Reggie decides to kill off the monster he has created by giving executive posts to men he sees as incompetents - Doc Morrissey, Jimmy, Tom and an Irishman called Seamus in the hopes that they will destroy the shop chain. However the business goes on to even greater heights as a result, thanks to Tom's advertising slogans, leading to a television advert, and a useless machine made by Jimmy, which becomes the latest must-have item. He is mindful to sack them but feels he cannot fire in-laws and ends up by giving Seamus, who has seen through his ruse, a raise.
- 1976–19798.6 (83)TV EpisodeElizabeth has gone to stay with her sick mother so Reggie uses the opportunity for some afternoon delight with his glamorous secretary Joan, who proves herself to be up for it. Sadly, just as they are about to unleash their passions Reggie is visited, first by his layabout son, resting actor Mark, and then by Elizabeth's right-wing, scrounging brother Jimmy, wanting food. Eventually Joan, hiding from them in Reggie's bedroom, escapes down the drainpipe.
- Reggie is about to open his fiftieth Grot shop whilst Sunshine Desserts has gone bust and is now a thing of the past. Generously Reggie decides to employ C.J. but makes him wait an extra week for his interview and enjoys having power over him. He asks Joan to be his secretary again but she and Tony are already having marital problems, which Reggie sorts out before employing them both. Elizabeth is annoyed that Reggie has yet to offer her a job with the shop, but eventually he does - even imagining her mother as a hippopotamus, just like old times.
- Reggie asks C.J. for a start-up loan to establish his shop Grot. C.J. thinks it's hush money to keep quiet about his hitting on Elizabeth and lends it to him. Grot sells highly unusual and often impractical things but people buy them,either because they are unique, such as square hula hoops, which in fact become a craze,or as presents for relatives they dislike, like Tom's turnip wine. Grot becomes a huge success and Reggie quickly has the wherewithal to repay the loan. However, when he returns to Sunshine Desserts to see his old boss he finds things have changed. Joan is now married to his former colleague Tony, and the firm is on the verge of collapse.
- 1976–19798.4 (78)TV EpisodeA nervous Reggie is to address the British Fruit Association and mixes Dutch courage with sedative pills, with the result that the speech is a disaster and he has to be dragged off the stage. He is now at breaking point and tells C.J. that blood will flow. C.J. takes this literally when Reggie empties a lorry load of loganberry essence into the river where C.J. is fishing. Next Reggie leaves his clothes by the edge of the sea to fake his suicide and considers which false identity to assume.
- Desperate to kill off Grot, Reggie goes to extreme lengths, such as insulting chat show hosts on whose television shows he appears. He also insults a job applicant who mistakenly believes he is making a pass at him so he pretends to be gay when visiting the branch manager, only to find that he is gay and is attracted to Reggie. He dresses in drag in public but by now everybody is used to Reggie's eccentric behaviour and sees it as the norm. Finally he and Elizabeth go back to the beach and fake a double suicide, only to discover that they have set a trend and scores of people are following suit in order to reinvent themselves.
- 1976–19798.3 (72)TV EpisodeCalling himself Martin Wellbourne, an alleged friend of the deceased newly arrived from Brazil, and sporting a curly beard, Reggie gate-crashes his own memorial service where a vague vicar plugs Mark's new play and people seem to miss Reggie less than he had hoped. Elizabeth is engaged to Henry but recognizes Reggie immediately. She allows him to romance her and plays along with his deception, finally agreeing to marry him, as Martin. Linda has also seen through the disguise but Elizabeth tells her to say nothing as Reggie is clearly much happier in his new skin. He even gets his old job back as Martin.
- 1976–19798.3 (75)TV EpisodeReggie tries out various new identities, including Lord Amherst (which attracts the attention of the comely Jean) and Donald Potts (which attracts the less comely Miss Pershore). However, he misses Elizabeth and is upset to find that, since she assumes that Reggie is dead, she is seeing an old flame, Henry. He even encounters them whilst pretending to be an Italian, though she fails to recognize him, as do his work colleagues when he sits near them in their local pub. Finally he gets a job in a sewage works.
- Reginald Iolanthe Perrin is a 46-year old sales executive for Sunshine Desserts, run by the hearty but hectoring boss C.J. Reggie is clearly suffering a mid-life crisis. Though not unhappily married to Elizabeth, he calls her mother a hippopotamus and is finding no enthusiasm for marketing C.J.'s latest line - exotic ices. He wants something better for his life, but is not sure what.
- 1976–19798.2 (88)TV EpisodeLife is beginning to get on top of Reggie as he starts to dictate abusive letters. Perhaps he needs a nice peaceful holiday. Unfortunately his daughter Linda asks him to take her and her husband Tom and their children, Adam and Jocasta, to a safari park, as Tom has crashed their own car. Being cooped up in a hot car in a safari park is too much for Reggie who gets out of the car for a walk and has to be rescued from the lions.
- 1976–19798.1 (58)TV EpisodeAfter a disastrous morning working at Tom's estate agency, Reggie returns to the piggery as himself, but does his back in, so Elizabeth decides that she will become the bread-winner. She gets a job as secretary to C.J. at Sunshine Desserts but does not want Reggie to know, so she claims that her employers are the British Basket Company. Reggie is suspicious as his efforts to find the company come to nothing. C.J. tries it on with Elizabeth at home whilst his wife is away but stops himself in time. Then, on Monday morning Reggie follows his wife and discovers where she really works.
- Reggie suspects Elizabeth of having an affair, leading to a punch-up in the firm's car park and a double black eye. He returns to the piggery but gets the sack after his employer finds out who he really is. Elizabeth also gets the sack after altering some of C.J.'s letters. Reggie goes to visit Jimmy, whom is hoarding guns under his bed. He tells an appalled Reggie of his plan to form a private right-wing army to rid the country of all do-gooders and - as he sees it - scroungers. Having told Jimmy his plan is rubbish, Reggie forms his own idea. He will open a shop selling rubbish to a gullible public and will call it Grot.
- 1976–19798.1 (76)TV EpisodeStill at her mother's house, Elizabeth rings Reggie to remind him that she had planned a dinner party but Reggie does not cancel it. Instead he asks C.J. and his wife, young colleague David who toadies to C.J., the well-endowed Davina from the custards department and his rude uncle Percy, who makes sexist comments about Davina. Then he tells them that there is no food as he has made a donation to Oxfam instead. Next morning he finds a hung over David has stayed the night and can remember nothing of the evening before, not even when his trousers fell down, exposing his Beethoven underpants.
- 1976–19797.7 (65)TV EpisodeMarried again to Elizabeth and working as Martin at Sunshine Desserts - where he runs the Reginald Perrin Memorial Trust - Reggie is now getting dissatisfied with his new identity and keen to return to being his old self. Joan sees through the disguise, and tries to blackmail him into having sex with her. Doc Morrissey, the firm's vague old medical officer, also knows who Martin really is and tells C.J. C.J. however fires both Doc and 'Martin', who reverts to being toothy Donald Potts and working in a piggery.
- 1976–19797.6 (63)TV EpisodeThe Perrins communities are sold. Everybody has a job to go to - except Reggie, who moves back to suburbia with Elizabeth. Then he gets an interview with Amalgamated Aerosols, a firm which makes air fresheners. It is run by F.J., the identical twin brother of C.J. who even has two young yes men redolent of Tony and David. Reggie is now trapped in the same routine as when he was at Sunshine Desserts and after suggesting Bolivian Unicyclist's Jockstrap as an exciting new fragrance, heads back to the beach.
- Reggie and Elizabeth revert back to being their old selves and sell Grot. Having witnessed a middle aged man's outburst in a bank Reggie decides to use the money to buy a large house which will become a self-help commune, called Perrins. He encounters C.J. and Doc Morrissey, both down on their luck, and offers them positions at his commune. Then he approaches Tom and Linda, Joan and Tony and David and his wife Prue to come and work for him. The commune is born.
- 1976–19797.0 (55)TV EpisodeMr. Babbacombe leaves but a number of other guests arrive, including Reggie's old boss from the piggery, who has gone off meat, and wealthy tycoon Thruxton Appleby, who dislikes being disliked, as well as Bernard Trilling, the head of comedy at a television studio who has lost his sense of humour. By a series of accidents and designs, Reggie and his staff help out their guests, in Thruxton's case by having him change places with arc welder Arthur Noblet, with whom he has a slanging match. Everybody is very grateful - and it shows in the cheques they give to Reggie.
- 1976–19796.9 (57)TV EpisodeThe success of Perrins has mushroomed so that Reggie now has five houses in Oslo Avenue as therapy communes. They are taking in so many guests that staff have to double up in the bedrooms and living rooms become therapy classrooms. Mr. Dent, a council official, comes to look into these arrangements but Reggie is persuasive and gets him to take part in a therapeutic boxing match. Mr. Dent decides to stay - various council officials turn up to find out what is happening. They all decide to stay.
- After Reggie is interviewed on television another twenty-two guests turn up, including Mr. Johnson, a dissatisfied black teacher who cannot get the sack for fears of racism, and Deborah Swaffham, a nymphomaniac who tries it on with all the male staff in turn, though when they go to her room as invited, she is not there. 'Lofty' Anstruther, Jimmy's old business partner, who cheated him, also arrives, swearing he needs help with his redemption. Unfortunately money starts to go missing. Plainly it is down to 'Lofty' especially as he too disappears. After Reggie has fallen off a drainpipe whilst trying to escape Deborah's amorous clutches, Lofty returns. He has lost all the stolen money on the horses and now wants a genuine cure.
- At Elizabeth's request Reggie employs Jimmy as Perrins' physical fitness instructor though his early morning bugle calls are not appreciated. He also takes on Kenny McBlane, a Scottish chef whom nobody can understand. When two of the neighbours complain about Perrin's, Reggie gets C.J., Tom and Tony to black up as different ethnic types proposing to buy the house and the complainants move out. The first and only guest arrives - nervous Mr. Babbacombe. The staff pretend to be guests to put him at ease and when he sees through the ploy Reggie passes it off as a group exercise.
- Perrins is now experiencing a sharp downfall in its fortunes - not helped by Lofty's thievery, which caused a mass exodus. Kenny's drunken exploits with a meat cleaver and a recent stomach bug have both got the community unwelcome press coverage and a petition is once more presented demanding its closure. The crunch comes when the main house is invaded by thugs angered by Jimmy's vigilantes - and this too ends up in the papers.