Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt: Difference between revisions

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{{Roy Clarke}}
{{Roy Clarke}}
{{Alan Plater}}


[[Category:ITV sitcoms]]
[[Category:ITV sitcoms]]

Revision as of 10:29, 21 November 2022

Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt
Oh No, It's Selwyn Froggit.jpg
Created byRoy Clarke
Directed byDerrick Goodwin (pilot)
Ronnie Baxter (series)
Starring
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series4
No. of episodes29
Production
Running time30 minutes
Production companyYorkshire Television
Original release
NetworkITV
Release30 September 1974 (1974-09-30) –
17 October 1978 (1978-10-17)

Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt is a British television sitcom which ran on the ITV network from 1974 to 1978. Set in the fictional Yorkshire town of Scarsdale, the series stars Bill Maynard as Selwyn Froggitt, a council labourer, hapless handyman, working men's club secretary and all-round public nuisance. It was created by Roy Clarke from a concept by Maynard. Clarke wrote the pilot episode transmitted in 1974 but was replaced by Alan Plater when the first series was commissioned. It was made by Yorkshire Television and was a ratings success. For its fourth and final season, the programme was renamed Selwyn and its location changed to a holiday camp.

Cast

Conception

Bill Maynard had the initial idea for the show, wanting to create a sitcom based around the members of the working men's club in his home village Sapcote, Leicestershire. Maynard would later say "every character came from that club".[1] Maynard modelled his lead character on a larger-than-life patron named Peter Wright.[2][3] Wright would often exclaim "magic!" and order "a pint of cooking and a bag of nuts", both of which became catchphrases of Maynard's character.[4] Wright had arms so muscular he could not fold them properly so he often kept them high on his chest, another attribute Maynard borrowed.[1]

Maynard attempted to get the show commissioned by Duncan Wood during his 1972–73 tenure as the BBC's Head of Comedy.[5] Wood commissioned a pilot after he had moved to Yorkshire Television to be Head of Light Entertainment.[6] Wood brought in Roy Clarke, the creator of Last of the Summer Wine, to write the pilot. As Clarke felt he lacked the familiarity to write about a working men's club, Maynard took the train to Leeds to assist him. Clarke titled the programme Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt, and the pilot episode was transmitted on 30 September 1974.[5] This initial episode rendered Selwyn's surname as 'Froggit'. Feeling the pilot was at odds with his original concept, Maynard met again with Clarke to discuss the show's direction. Clarke admitted he had found it difficult to write about situations he had not thought up himself, and decided he was not right for the job.[5]

Maynard approached Alan Plater to take Clarke's place as writer, having worked with the playwright and screenwriter on Trinity Tales (1975).[5] Plater was best known for writing television drama including Shoulder to Shoulder (1974) and The Stars Look Down (1975); Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt was his only foray into sitcom writing. This has been noted as indicative of Plater's maverick and prolific approach to television writing.[7]

Plot

The original Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt regular cast. Left to right from top row: Maurice (Robert Keegan), Selwyn (Bill Maynard), Mrs Froggitt (Megs Jenkins), Ray (Ray Mort), Clive (Richard Davies), Jack (Bill Dean) and Harry (Harold Goodwin).

The first three series centred on the bungling exploits of Selwyn Froggitt as Working Men's Club secretary and a council labourer in the fictional Yorkshire town of Scarsdale. Bill Maynard described Froggitt, a burly, balding and good-natured man often clad in a donkey jacket, as "this naïve boy who never grew up".[4] Maynard took inspiration from Bottom, a comic character from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.[8] Froggitt has an urge to improve his life and that of everyone around him; he carries The Times and often tells people "there was an article about it in The Times" regarding subjects he has brought up. Maynard considered this an important part of the character, explaining "I wanted him to be intelligent, always anxious to improve himself. The easy route would've been to use old cliches, like Malapropisms and Spoonerisms, but that would have made the character too one-dimensional. By getting him to read The Times and be an ardent student of dynamic word power, we gave him the breadth to spread the comedy over a wide range of subjects. We wanted people to laugh with him, not at him".[5]

Froggitt lives with his mother (Megs Jenkins) and his brother Maurice (Robert Keegan). Maurice's girlfriend, Vera Parkinson, was played by Rosemary Martin in the first series. In the second and third series (during which Maurice and Vera marry), Vera was played by Lynda Baron. A running gag is Froggitt's mother saying, "Don't open that cupboard our Selwyn, things fall out!" whenever he opens the cupboard in the Froggitt front room, before objects fall from it. Froggitt is on the committee of his local working men's club, serving as concert secretary in charge of booking "turns". Froggitt's colleagues on the committee are the dour Scouser Jack (Bill Dean), Harry (Harold Goodwin) and excitable, stereotypical Welshman Clive (Richard Davies), often referred to as Taff by Selwyn. All decisions taken by the club committee are taken on a "show of hands..." and "carried unanimously". In keeping with the A Midsummer Night's Dream characterisations, Maynard saw the committee as the mechanicals.[8] Froggitt is incompetent at everything he turns his hand to, being equally inept at his day job (digging holes and filling them in), do-it-yourself at home, and booking acts for the club. Nevertheless, he is honest and hard-working, unlike the other committee members, who usually sit back in comfort while Froggitt does the manual labour. They generally tolerate him because he is prepared to volunteer for unwanted tasks. Barman at the club is Raymond (Ray Mort), often seen answering the telephone with a number of highly fictitious and fanciful addresses.

The show's humour included a fair measure of slapstick alongside Plater's typical northern humour. It was mainly shot at Yorkshire Television Studios on Kirkstall Road, Leeds, whilst outdoor location filming for the series took place in Skelmanthorpe, West Yorkshire and Elvington, North Yorkshire. The series was a ratings success, reaching peak viewing figures of 29 million.[2]

Between the second and third series, Bill Maynard suffered a slipped disc and used a wheelchair. He recovered sufficiently in time for the commencement of filming of the third series on 5 September 1977.[9] Alan Plater would later say that Maynard had "a constitutional resistance to learning the script".[7]

In the fourth (and final) series, the format of the show changed radically. This version of the series was entitled Selwyn; all of the regular cast from the first three series (bar Maynard) left the show, to focus on and pursue other TV work. The Froggitt character became entertainments manager at a seedy holiday camp on the east coast. Plater was no longer involved with the series, but with disappointing audience reactions a planned fifth series was cancelled.

List of episodes

Series Episodes Original Broadcast
Series premiere Series finale
Pilot 1 30 September 1974
Series 1 (1976) 6 7 January 1976 11 February 1976
Series 2 (1977) 7 21 February 1977 4 April 1977
Series 3 (1977) 7 8 November 1977 20 December 1977
Christmas Special (1977) 1 27 December 1977
Series 4 (1978) 7 5 September 1978 17 October 1978

Pilot (1974)

  • Oh No- It's Selwyn Froggit (30 September 1974)

Series 1 (1976)

  • Three Fifths of the World Loves a Lover (7 January 1976)
  • We Are the Masters Now (14 January 1976)
  • There Are Several Businesses Like Show Business (21 January 1976)
  • The Grand Outing (28 January 1976)
  • The Master Builder (4 February 1976)
  • Ladies' Desire (11 February 1976)

Series 2 (1977)

  • Daze of Hope (21 February 1977)
  • The Game of the Name (28 February 1977)
  • Raffles (7 March 1977)
  • Selwyn Rides Again (14 March 1977)
  • Alphabetic Orders (21 March 1977)
  • The Protection Racket (28 March 1977)
  • Just Cause and Impediment (4 April 1977)

Series 3 (1977)

  • Be It Ever So Humble, There's No Place (8 November 1977)
  • Gala Performance (15 November 1977)
  • Boom Boom (22 November 1977)
  • Occupational Hazard (29 November 1977)
  • Sling Along with Selwyn (6 December 1977)
  • A Little Learning (13 December 1977)
  • Around the Houses (20 December 1977)
  • On the Feast of Selwyn (27 December 1977)

Series 4 (1978)

NOTE: Series 4 of Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt was retitled Selwyn

  • The Road to Paradise Valley (5 September 1978)
  • Wish You Were Here (12 September 1978)
  • Better Never Than Late (19 September 1978)
  • Take a Tip from Selwyn (26 September 1978)
  • I've Gotta Jockey (3 October 1978)
  • Don't Make Waves (10 October 1978)
  • A Man for One Season (17 October 1978)

DVD release

All four series of Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt have been released on DVD. A four-disc set of the complete series of both complete series titles has also been released.

DVD Year(s) Release date
The Complete Series 1 1974
1976
25 May 2009
The Complete Series 2 1977 7 September 2009
The Complete Series 3 1977 3 May 2010
The Complete Series 4 1978 16 August 2010
The Complete Series 1 to 4 Box Set 1974–
1978
11 October 2010

References

  1. ^ a b Wakelin, Adam (30 March 2018). "Named after wine gums, a fortune squandered – Things you never knew about Heartbeat actor Bill Maynard". Leicestershire Live. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  2. ^ a b Marlow, Lee (30 March 2018). "'I made 31 films, most were rubbish': Bill Maynard in his own hilarious words". Leicestershire Live. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  3. ^ "Moving Up". Bill Maynard. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  4. ^ a b Shaw, Karen (21 December 2015). "A scoundrel, thespian, CHEEKY CHARMER | Bill Maynard". Northern Life. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e Maynard, Bill; Sheard, John (1997). Stand Up... And Be Counted (1st ed.). Breedon Books. ISBN 1-85983-080-3. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  6. ^ "Bill Maynard Interview". Youtube. Archived from the original on 19 December 2021. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  7. ^ a b Sweet, Matthew (4 September 2004). "Alan Plater: 'I used to be cool...'". Independent. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  8. ^ a b Hannam, John. "John Hannam Meets Bill Maynard (Archive Edition)". Apple. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  9. ^ Smyllie, Patricia (1 June 1977). "A Wheelchair Winner – That's Selwyn". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 3 June 2020.

External links