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Thank You, Jeeves (1934) – The first full-length Jeeves novel; Right Ho, Jeeves (1934) (US title: Brinkley Manor) The Code of the Woosters (1938) Joy in the Morning (1946) (US title: Jeeves in the Morning) The Mating Season (1949) (Come On, Jeeves – 1952 play with Guy Bolton, adapted 1953 into Ring for Jeeves, produced 1954, published 1956)
Bertie's overbearing Aunt Agatha orders him to go to Deverill Hall, King's Deverill, Hants., to stay with some friends of hers and perform in the village concert.Jeeves, who knows about Deverill Hall because his uncle Charlie Silversmith is the butler there, says that Esmond Haddock, his aunt Dame Daphne Winkworth, four other aunts, and Dame Daphne's daughter Gertrude Winkworth live there.
The Jane Addams Hull-House Museum is the perfect place for a Chicago-centric ghost tour this Halloween season. The museum is part of the original house, which was settled in 1889 by Jane Addams ...
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.
Butterfield is the butler of Totleigh Towers, Sir Watkyn Bassett's country house located in Totleigh-in-the-Wold. Butterfield's first name is not stated in the novels. In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, Bertie Wooster guesses that Butterfield is a hundred and four years old, and Jeeves agrees that he is "well stricken in years". [16]
Arthur Veary Treacher, Jr. (/ ˈ t r iː tʃ ər / TREE-chər; 23 July 1894 – 14 December 1975) was an English film and stage actor active from the 1920s to the 1960s, and known for playing English types, especially butler and manservant roles, such as the P. G. Wodehouse valet character Jeeves (Thank You, Jeeves!, 1936) and the kind butlers opposite Shirley Temple in Curly Top (1935) and ...
My Man Jeeves is a collection of short stories by P. G. Wodehouse, first published in the United Kingdom in May 1919 by George Newnes. [1] Of the eight stories in the collection, half feature the popular characters Jeeves and Bertie Wooster , while the others concern Reggie Pepper , an early prototype for Bertie Wooster.
Oh look, another glorious year of Freeform's 31 Nights of Halloween! See where your Halloween favorites, like Hocus Pocus and Beetlejuice, fall in this closer look at the schedule.