Whack-O!
Whack-O! | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Frank Muir Denis Norden |
Starring |
|
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 60 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | BBC1 |
Release | 4 October 1956 26 February 1972 | –
Whack-O! is a British sitcom TV series starring Jimmy Edwards. It was written by Frank Muir and Denis Norden.
The series (in black and white) ran on the BBC from 1956 to 1960 and (in colour) from 1971 to 1972. Edwards took the part of Professor James Edwards, M.A., the drunken, gambling, devious, cane-swishing headmaster who tyrannised staff and children at Chiselbury public school (described in the opening titles as "for the sons of Gentlefolk"). The Edwards character bore more than a passing resemblance to Sergeant Bilko as he tried to swindle the children out of their pocket money to finance his many schemes.
The first six episodes were subtitled "Six of the Best". In 1959 a film was made based on the show, called Bottoms Up!. The series was revived in colour with updated scripts in 1971–72, retitled Whacko!. In all, it ran for a total of 60 episodes, with 47 of black-and-white and 13 colour, of 30 minutes each. There were three special shorts. There was also a radio version with Vera Lynn starring as herself in the second episode. Many of these radio episodes were recovered by a BBC archivist from a listener's collection of tapes in 2012.[citation needed]
The front of the historic house of Great Fosters near Egham in Surrey was used in the opening title sequence of the TV comedy series, behind the name of the fictional Chiselbury School.[1]
Cast
[edit]- Professor James Edwards played by Jimmy Edwards
- Mr Oliver Pettigrew played by Arthur Howard in 1956–60 and Julian Orchard in 1971
- Mr F.D. Price Whittaker played by Kenneth Cope
- Mr S.A. Smallpiece played by Norman Bird
- Lumley (a pupil) played by John Stirling
- Mr R.P. Tench played by Peter Glaze
- Mr Halliforth played by Edwin Apps in 1956–60 and Peter Greene in 1971
- Parker played by David Langford
- Mr Forbes played by Keith Smith
- Mr Proctor played by Brian Rawlinson
- Mr Dinwiddie played by Gordon Phillot in 1956–60 and Harold Bennett in 1971
- Mr Cope-Willoughby played by Frank Raymond
- Matron played by Barbra Archer, Liz Fraser and by Charlotte Mitchell
- Taplow played by Gary Warren in 1971
- Potter played by Greg Smith in 1971
- Proctor played by John Clegg
- Clodagh Rodgers appeared as herself during the colour series in 1972[2]
- Max Bygraves appeared as himself in one episode in 1960[3]
- Vera Lynn appeared in one episode in 1959[3]
Surviving episodes
[edit]Most of the show's episodes are missing, presumed lost. Six of the original black-and-white episodes are known to exist today.[4]
Only 6 episodes of the B/W version exist in the BBC TV archives, with 3 (out of the 6 remaining B&W episodes) having been rediscovered in December 2016.
- Series 3 episode 5 (21 October 1958)
- Series 5 episode 4 (1 December 1959)
- Series 6 episode 4 (3 June 1960)
- Series 7 episode 1 (22 November 1960)
- Series 7 episode 5 (20 December 1960)
Theme of school corporal punishment
[edit]This table possibly contains original research. (February 2022) |
TV comedy historians have written that the central theme of Whack-O! and Bottoms Up! was corporal punishment and specifically the caning of boys’ backsides. This however was largely absent from the revived series in 1971, as by that time corporal punishment was becoming less acceptable in Britain and was eventually banned in state and many independent schools in 1986.
Whack-O! tended to glorify a ritualised form of punishment that had been an accepted practice in British schools, but by modern standards the popular humourizing of corporal punishment is an anathema, and it may seem somewhat perverted in the way it was featured in the series.
The comedy of the series was built around whether boys would be caught and punished for minor misdemeanours, and the size and effectiveness of canes and the building of caning devices. In one episode a device and long cane was made so six boys could be punished together. In another a device was made so the teacher carrying out the caning did not see the boy, and it turned out that all the backside seen to be caned were that of deputy headmaster Pettigrew (when played by Arthur Howard). A feature of Edwards carrying out punishment was the clear enjoyment he exhibited.
Both Jimmy Edwards and Arthur Howard were gay men and Anthony Slide, in his biography of Edwards Wake Up at the Back There! It’s Jimmy Edwards (BearManor, 2018), has written: "I know I’m a little perverse, but I cannot find it anything but fascinating and decidedly weird that two gay men were starring in a BBC series involving the use of a cane on the bottoms of young boys."[5]
The BBC sums up this aspect of Whack-O! on its official website as: "Watching the series now is a little painful in one respect – we're too sensitive to find canings amusing – but it's right on the money in other ways, mainly because finding over-privileged kids vile hasn't gone out of fashion."[citation needed]
Details of radio adaptation
[edit]BBC Radio adapted the TV scripts into 45 thirty-minute shows, mostly with the original cast, of which 42 recordings survive. There were three series which originally ran on the BBC Light Programme from 23 May 1961 until 22 July 1963. They have been repeated on BBC Radio Extra since 2015 and the last airing was in 2020.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Whack-O! Opening titles, BBC TV". Retrieved 28 July 2008.
- ^ "Whacko! - BBC One London - 19 February 1972 - BBC Genome". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ^ a b "Whack-O! (TV Series 1956–1972)". Retrieved 20 September 2018 – via imdb.com.
- ^ "Whack-O!", Kaleidoscope website
- ^ Soares, Andre. "Jimmy Edwards - Outed 'Conservative' Gay British Comedian: Q+A with Biographer Slide". Alt Film Guide, thinking cinema. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
External links
[edit]- Whack-O! at IMDb
- Whack-O at BBC Online Comedy Guide
- BBC Radio 4 Whack-O Episode Guide
- British Film Institute Screen Online