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Wodehouse's and novel
The " Tulse Hill Parliament ", a socialist club, features in PG Wodehouse's comic novel Psmith in the City.
The novel features one of Wodehouse's best-known characters, Jeeves.
* Heavy Weather ( TV ), a 1995 adaptation of Wodehouse's novel
Bolton's play, Come On, Jeeves centred on one of Wodehouse's best-known characters ; Wodehouse later adapted the play as the novel Ring for Jeeves.
In 1928 Beith adapted P. G. Wodehouse's novel A Damsel in Distress as a play.
* A Gentleman of Leisure-Giles's new definition of himself-according to Willow-is to be a " Gentleman of Leisure ", referring to English P. G. Wodehouse's novel.
Wodehouse's novel The Mating Season: Jeeves uses the phrase ' Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came ' to describe Bertie Wooster's arrival at Deverill Hall.
* A Damsel in Distress ( film ), 1937 Hollywood musical film based on Wodehouse's novel
It was Wodehouse's first published novel, and the first of several school stories, this one set at the fictional public school of St. Austin's.

Wodehouse's and Bertie
Bertie is also acquainted with Lord Emsworth, another of Wodehouse's best-known characters, and mentions having visited Blandings Castle.
Wodehouse's character Bertie Wooster, who lives in a flat there along with his valet Jeeves, not far from the Drones Club.
Wodehouse's character Bertie Wooster recalls in the story " Jeeves Takes Charge ", first published in the Saturday Evening Post in 1916, that he memorized a poem about Eugene Aram when he was a boy.
Written only a few years before his death, Much Obliged, Jeeves is the second-to-last appearance of Wodehouse's characters, Jeeves and Bertie Wooster ( the last being Aunts Aren't Gentlemen ( 1974 )).
It is the setting of a great number of Wodehouse's Jeeves stories and a popular destination for Bertie Wooster, Dahlia's beloved nephew.
* Bertie Wooster, in P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves novels
Fictional characters such as Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot, P. G. Wodehouse's Bertie Wooster, Walt Disney's Scrooge McDuck, Jean de Brunhoff's Babar the Elephant, Jiggs from the comic strip Jiggs and Maggie, Rich Uncle Pennybags the iconic man from the Monopoly board game, the Sixth Doctor from Doctor Who and Bustopher Jones from the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Cats, among others, have been depicted as wearing spats.
Wodehouse's short story " Jeeves Takes Charge ," the butler Jeeves ' first act for his master Bertie Wooster is to make him a hangover cure very similar to a prairie oyster in description: " It is the Worcestershire sauce that gives it its color.

Wodehouse's and Wooster
* St John's Wood is the home of fictional characters Bingo and Rosie Little in P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster books.
Wodehouse's fictional Black Shorts movement, featured in the television series Jeeves and Wooster.
* P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster novels ( 1919 onwards ).
Mortdecai and his manservant Jock Strapp bear a fun-house mirror relation to Wodehouse's Wooster and Jeeves.
With completed new stories appearing over a span of 60 years, he is in fact the longest-running of Wodehouse's characters, topping Jeeves and Wooster ( 1915-1974, or 59 years ) and the denizens of Blandings Castle ( 1915-1969, or 54 years ).
Wodehouse's immortal literary characters Jeeves ( Fry ) and Wooster ( Laurie ).
Sayers admitted having partially based Bunter's character on P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves, although Wimsey and Bunter are quite distinct from Wooster and Jeeves.
Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster.
He is best known for his scripts of Agatha Christie ’ s Poirot, P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster, and Rosemary & Thyme.
She played Wodehouse's Bobbie Wickham in the ITV series Jeeves and Wooster ( 1990 – 1993 ).

Wodehouse's and is
Wodehouse's story The Amazing Hat Mystery, a character in hospital with a broken leg is playing halma with his nurse.
Both Schulberg and Wodehouse describe the methods of all those would-be screenwriters and actors hunting for jobs, but Wodehouse's depiction is not at all serious or critical.
Guybrush's surname " Threepwood " was decided upon in a company contest and is derived from P. G. Wodehouse's family of characters including Galahad Threepwood and Freddie Threepwood ( with whom he shares similar characteristics ).
He narrates the majority of Wodehouse's golf stories from the terrace of a golf club whose location is unclear, and he never has a proper name.
* Jeeves, created in 1915 by P. G. Wodehouse, starred in a series of stories until Wodehouse's death in 1975 ; Reginald Jeeves is considered the " personification of the perfect valet " since 1930, inspired the name of Internet search engine Ask Jeeves, and is now a generic term in dictionaries such as the Oxford English Dictionary.
In P. G. Wodehouse's stories of Mr Mulliner, Mulliner is made a fisherman in order to cast doubt on the outrageous stories he tells.
This aspect of Ollendorf is made fun of in P. G. Wodehouse's ' The Pot Hunters '( 1902 ):
" Simpson's is also featured in Wodehouse's " Cocktail Time " as the restaurant that one of the characters, Cosmo Wisdom, chooses to lunch at after leaving Prison.
The Coué Method is mentioned in P. G. Wodehouse's 1926 short story Mr Potter Takes a Rest Cure.
It is widely believed that Shifnal was the origin of P. G. Wodehouse's fictional town Market Blandings.
He is somewhat more emotional than Wodehouse's other famous domestic servant, Jeeves, although when in the company of his masters Beach generally limits himself to a slightly-raised eyebrow, even when strongly moved.
Wodehouse's Jeeves, in that he is very intelligent ( much more so than his employers ), well-read ( he reads Thomas Paine while awaiting orders ) and incredibly efficient, ministering to his employers ' every need, and even anticipating them.
It is a mixed bag of stories, mostly featuring appearances from several of Wodehouse's recurring characters, including two Drones Club stories ( the first about Bingo Little and another about Freddie Widgeon ), five Oldest Member golf stories, one Blandings Castle, one independent, and one Ukridge story.
It is referred to in P. G. Wodehouse's first Jeeves story, Jeeves Takes Charge: " There is a story about Sir Stanley Gervase-Gervase at Rosherville Gardens which is ghastly in its perfection of detail.
Lady Florence Craye is a fictional character who appears in P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves stories and novels.
Rupert Psmith ( or Ronald Eustace Psmith, as he is called in the last of the four books in which he appears ) is a recurring fictional character in several novels by British comic writer P. G. Wodehouse, being one of Wodehouse's best-loved characters.

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