Rising Damp is a British sitcom written by Eric Chappell. It stars Leonard Rossiter as landlord Rupert Rigsby, Richard Beckinsale as Alan Moore, Frances de la Tour as Ruth Jones, and Don Warrington as Philip Smith. Alan, Miss Jones and Philip reside as lodgers in Rigsby's house.
The original run of Rising Damp was transmitted on ITV in four series from 1974 to 1978. Rising Damp (1980), a feature film based on the programme, premiered on 5 March 1980. It was written by Eric Chappell, and directed by Joseph McGrath.
No. | Title | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "The New Tenant" | 2 September 1974 | 101 |
Stingy, pretentious landlord Rigsby is looking for another lodger. One of his current lodgers, Miss Jones, is keen for her acquaintance, Philip, to move in—because she is attracted to him. He says that he is from Africa and is the son of a chief. He almost decides not to move in, due to the fact that he dislikes Rigsby and is not attracted to Miss Jones and was unaware that he would be living in close proximity to her. This episode is alternatively titled "Rooksby", after the character in the stage play The Banana Box, from which Rising Damp was adapted. The character was renamed to Rigsby because a real-life landlord named Rooksby complained. [1] | |||
2 | "Black Magic" | 22 November 1974 | 102 |
Rigsby is sceptical but intrigued by a ritual which Philip shows him—banging his spear on the ground to summon a woman. When Philip does so, Miss Jones comes to the room. Rigsby's other lodger Alan later does so; Miss Jones comes in and hugs him in the dark, expecting it to be Philip; she is disappointed when she realises that it is Alan. Rigsby later does likewise, hoping it will attract Miss Jones—but is disappointed when Philip and Alan come to the room instead. | |||
3 | "A Night Out" | 29 November 1974 | 103 |
Rigsby, Alan, Philip and Ruth go out to an upmarket restaurant (which has a strict dress code) for Ruth's birthday. Rigsby borrows his new lodger Spooner's suit, without his permission—and Alan borrows Spooner's bow tie. Spooner shows up and angrily takes the tie from Alan and demands that Rigsby return the suit to him. Spooner rips the right sleeve off the suit. The restaurant's manager throws Rigsby and Alan out for being improperly dressed. | |||
4 | "Charisma" | 6 December 1974 | 104 |
Alan wears an earring to attract the opposite sex, which Rigsby disapproves of. Alan sneaks Maureen into his room; Rigsby hears her and ejects her. Rigsby asks Miss Jones to a wrestling match, which she declines. Alan gives him some tablets and a Matt Monro LP, suggesting that he take one of the tablets and play the record whilst talking to her. Philip gives Rigsby a medallion to wear. After Rigsby leaves the room, Alan informs Philip that the tablets are tranquillisers which were withdrawn from the market because they turn the patients' urine green. Rigsby plays the record at the wrong speed, and she rejects his attempt to seduce her. He collapses and falls asleep for 24 hours. He sees a doctor, who tells him that the tablets are for pregnant women. Philip advises Rigsby to burn the wood of the love tree outside Miss Jones's room as an aphrodisiac. She finds the smell unpleasant, so she sprays Rigsby and the wood with water. Philip tells him that the piece of wood came off the wardrobe. | |||
5 | "All Our Yesterdays" | 13 December 1974 | 105 |
Spooner annoys the household by playing his radio loudly. Rigsby is annoyed, but finds it difficult to pluck up the courage to confront him about it. He fires his gun, which he wrongly believed was not loaded. He thinks that he shot Spooner through his door, but after going into Spooner's room he realises that he did not, but Spooner is angry about being disturbed. | |||
6 | "The Prowler" | 20 December 1974 | 106 |
7 | "Stand Up and Be Counted" | 27 December 1974 | 107 |
An election polarises the household: Rigsby supports the Conservatives, Alan and Philip lean towards Labour, whilst Miss Jones is impressed with the Liberal candidate. After being disapproved of by the Conservative candidate when he visits the house, Rigsby switches his allegiance to Labour. |
No. | Title | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|
8 | "The Permissive Society" | 7 November 1975 | 201 |
Alan and Philip return from an unsuccessful double date. Alan tells Philip that he is a virgin, and Philip says that he first had sex on his 14th birthday as part of his coming-of-age initiation. Alan encourages Rigsby to pursue Miss Jones. Philip advises Alan to pursue her. Alan goes into her room to make a move on her, but Rigsby enters the room before she sees Alan, so Alan hides in her wardrobe. She rejects Rigsby's advances. Rigsby hears Alan, and Ruth opens the wardrobe door. Seeing Alan, she is surprised and Rigsby is angry. The angry father of a girl whom Alan is dating comes to the boarding house, wanting to know how far she and Alan have gone sexually. Rigsby sends him off. | |||
9 | "Food Glorious Food" | 14 November 1975 | 202 |
Philip wagers Rigsby £5 that he cannot fast for 48 hours. Philip gives him £5 for winning the bet, despite Rigsby having cheated by having eaten food which he thought was left for him by Alan—but was actually leftovers left by Philip for Vienna. Miss Jones takes Rigsby's winnings to give to famine relief, which she is collecting for. | |||
10 | "A Body Like Mine" | 21 November 1975 | 203 |
Miss Jones and Alan decide to get into shape. Rigsby claims to be fit, but feels inadequate when he is unable to open a jar for Miss Jones, but Philip is. Rigsby starts improving his fitness, then challenges Philip to a boxing match. After Philip accepts his challenge, Rigsby is horrified to find out from Alan that Philip is a competent boxer. Miss Jones says that she will go out with the winner. Philip deliberately loses in order to avoid a date with Miss Jones. Rigsby strains his back whilst weight training, so he cannot go on the date. Philip goes on the date with Miss Jones. | |||
11 | "Moonlight and Roses" | 28 November 1975 | 204 |
Miss Jones is dating Desmond, a poetic librarian, and the couple become engaged. Philip advises Rigsby to compliment her, but she angrily rejects Rigsby, throwing flowers and water at him. Rigsby tries to scare Desmond off Miss Jones by falsely claiming that she is a violent alcoholic, but he still wants her. Alan invites Brenda to move in, claiming that it will be easy for him to convince Rigsby to let her do so. Rigsby tries the same lines on Brenda that he did on Miss Jones, after which the latter leaves. | |||
12 | "A Perfect Gentleman" | 5 December 1975 | 205 |
New lodger Seymour preys on Rigsby's gullibility by conning him out of money by recommending he buys shares in an oil company which drills in the Pennines. Seymour tells Rigsby that he is inviting the mayor to the boarding house and asks Rigsby to give him money to buy champagne for dinner with the mayor. When Philip tells him that Seymour has left permanently, Rigsby realises that Seymour is a conman, that the mayor is not coming and that the shares he 'bought' on Seymour's recommendation do not exist. | |||
13 | "The Last of the Big Spenders" | 12 December 1975 | 206 |
Rigsby buys new furniture to impress new lodger Brenda. His plan fails when the furniture is repossessed soon after. | |||
14 | "Things That Go Bump in the Night" | 19 December 1975 | 207 |
Alan and Brenda return to the house from the cinema, where they saw Doctor Zhivago together. Rigsby tries to scare Alan with a ghost story about 'the Grey Lady'. At Philip's suggestion, Alan wears a dress in the house at night to pose as the Grey Lady to scare Rigsby. Rigsby believes it to be the Grey Lady and brings a vicar and curate to the house to exorcise the ghost. When Rigsby finds the dress that Alan wore, he wears it to pretend to be the Grey Lady, and is seen by the vicar and curate, who angrily walk out. | |||
15 | "For the Man Who Has Everything" | 26 December 1975 | 208 |
At Christmas, Rigsby is in the house on his own, as his lodgers are away. He is briefly visited by the milkman, then by the postwoman—who delivers a card which Rigsby sent to himself. Alan and Brenda arrive, believing that Rigsby would be spending Christmas at his brother's house. Philip and Lucy arrive. Rigsby fails in his attempts to kiss Brenda and Lucy. |
No. | Title | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|
16 | "That's My Boy" | 12 April 1977 | 301 |
Alan let one of the rooms to woman with a baby boy, David, whilst Rigsby was in Spain. After Rigsby returns, he wrongly assumes that David is Miss Jones'. The real parents arrive later. | |||
17 | "Stage Struck" | 19 April 1977 | 302 |
A camp playwright wants Rigsby to play the leading man in his play. Rigsby wrongly assumes the man to be gay, until he realises that he is trying to seduce Miss Jones. | |||
18 | "Clunk Click" | 26 April 1977 | 303 |
Rigsby takes Miss Jones for a spin in his new car, scaring her by driving quickly. He wrongly believes that he has run over his cat, Vienna. Alan carries in Vienna alive and Ruth sees that it was her fur stole which Rigsby ran over. | |||
19 | "The Good Samaritans" | 3 May 1977 | 304 |
A suicidal middle-aged man, Mr Gray, moves in to the bed-sitter. He climbs onto the roof and Rigsby goes there to try to bring him down. | |||
20 | "Fawcett's Python" | 10 May 1977 | 305 |
Rigsby disapproves of his new lodger, an erotic dancer, because he initially wrongly assumes that she is a prostitute. He is relieved when he finds out that she is an erotic dancer, but concerned when she tells him that she has a pet snake. | |||
21 | "The Cocktail Hour" | 17 May 1977 | 306 |
Rigsby is pleased that Alan has a posh new girlfriend, Caroline. However, when Caroline and her mother Mabel arrive, Rigsby is displeased by their snobbishness and tells Mabel that he remembers her when she was young and poor. Caroline and Mabel angrily leave. | |||
22 | "Suddenly at Home" | 24 May 1977 | 307 |
A hypochondriac new lodger, Osborne, is convinced he is going to die. When Rigsby sees him unconscious, he wrongly assumes that he has died. The residents are shocked to see him alive. |
No. | Title | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|
23 | "Hello Young Lovers" | 4 April 1978 | 401 |
Rigsby mistakes a courting couple, Robin and Lorna, for newlyweds. Miss Jones phones the girl's father. He arrives, angry and horrified when he wrongly assumes that Rigsby is his daughter's partner. He then is shocked when he falsely assumes that Philip is the partner. When he meets Robin and realises the truth, he is very relieved and approves of Robin. | |||
24 | "Fire and Brimstone" | 11 April 1978 | 402 |
25 | "Great Expectations" | 18 April 1978 | 403 |
Rigsby has been left money in his uncle's will, on the condition that he is happily married. His wife lives in Cleethorpes and he hates her, so he enlists Miss Jones to pose as his wife, but when Rigsby's wife arrives, she realises that Miss Jones is pretending to be her. Rigsby's wife pretends to be with him still. It is discovered that due to his uncle's debts, he will not be inheriting anything. Rigsby is disappointed, but pleased that his wife will not be receiving anything. | |||
26 | "Pink Carnations" | 25 April 1978 | 404 |
Rigsby tells Philip that he has filed for divorce. Rigsby and Miss Jones advertise themselves in a newspaper's lonely hearts column, with dishonest descriptions of themselves. Unaware they have been set up with each other, they meet in a pub. After Rigsby sparks arguments due to mistaking two other women in the pub for his date, he and Miss Jones realise that they are each others' dates. | |||
27 | "Under the Influence" | 2 May 1978 | 405 |
28 | "Come on in, the Water's Lovely" | 9 May 1978 | 406 |
Rigsby is delighted at receiving a letter informing him of his decree absolute, and tells Philip and Miss Jones. During dinner together at the house, Miss Jones accepts Rigsby's marriage proposal. On the day of the wedding, she changes her mind and does not turn up. Rigsby goes to the wrong church by mistake. |
A British sitcom or a Britcom is a situational comedy programme produced for British television.
Leonard Rossiter was an English actor. He had a long career in the theatre but achieved his highest profile for his television comedy roles starring as Rupert Rigsby in the ITV series Rising Damp from 1974 to 1978, and Reginald Perrin in the BBC's The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin from 1976 to 1979.
Ripping Yarns is a British television adventure comedy anthology series. It was written by Michael Palin and Terry Jones of Monty Python fame and transmitted on BBC 2. Following an initial pilot episode in January 1976, it ran for two series — five episodes in September and October 1977 and three episodes in October 1979. Each episode had a different setting and characters, looking at a different aspect of British culture and parodying pre-World War II literature aimed at schoolboys. In the title, "ripping" is a chiefly British slang colloquialism for "exciting" or "thrilling", with "yarn" used in the sense of a story.
Rising Damp is a British sitcom, written by Eric Chappell and produced by Yorkshire Television for ITV, which was originally broadcast from 2 September 1974 until 9 May 1978. Chappell adapted the story from his 1973 stage play The Banana Box. The programme ran for four series and a spin-off feature film of the same name was released in 1980. The series won the 1978 BAFTA for Best Situation Comedy. Rising Damp was the highest-ranking ITV sitcom in the BBC's 100 Best Sitcoms poll of 2004, coming in 27th overall.
Richard Arthur Beckinsale was an English actor. He played Lennie Godber in the BBC sitcom Porridge and Alan Moore in the ITV sitcom Rising Damp. He is the father of actresses Samantha and Kate Beckinsale.
Henry Wilfrid Brambell was an Irish television and film actor, best remembered for playing the grubby rag-and-bone man Albert Steptoe alongside Harry H. Corbett in the long-running BBC television sitcom Steptoe and Son. He achieved international recognition in 1964 for his appearance alongside the Beatles in A Hard Day's Night, playing the fictional grandfather of Paul McCartney.
Frances J. de Lautour, better known as Frances de la Tour, is an English actress. She is known for her role as Miss Ruth Jones in the television sitcom Rising Damp from 1974 until 1978. She is a Tony Award winner and three-time Olivier Award winner.
Eric George Chappell was an English television comedy writer and playwright who wrote or co-wrote some of the UK's biggest sitcom hits over a more than quarter-century career, first gaining significant notice in the 1970s.
Duty Free is a British sitcom written by Eric Chappell and Jean Warr that aired on ITV from 1984 to 1986. It was made by Yorkshire Television.
Only When I Laugh is a British television sitcom made by Yorkshire Television for ITV. It aired between 29 October 1979 and 16 December 1982 and is set in the ward of an NHS hospital. The title is in response to the question, "Does it hurt?".
Don Warrington MBE is a Trinidadian-born British actor. He is best known for playing Philip Smith in the ITV sitcom Rising Damp (1974–78), and Commissioner Selwyn Patterson in the BBC detective series Death in Paradise (2011–present).
David Roger Brierley was an English actor. He appeared in dozens of television productions over a forty-year period.
Christopher Strauli is an English film, television and theatre actor. He is known for appearing as Norman Binns in the British Yorkshire Television sitcom Only When I Laugh.
The Philip Jones Brass Ensemble, founded in 1951 by trumpeter Philip Jones, was one of the first modern classical brass ensembles to be formed. The group played either as a quintet or as a ten-piece, for larger halls. It toured and recorded extensively, and numerous arrangements were commissioned, many of which were bequeathed on Jones' death to the library of the Royal Northern College of Music.
As a location, Rigsby may refer to:
The Bounder is a British sitcom which ran from 16 April 1982 to 28 October 1983, made by Yorkshire Television. The series starred Peter Bowles as Howard Booth, an ex-convict who served two years in jail. He lives with his brother-in-law, Trevor Mountjoy, and his sister, Mary. The latter left after Series One in 1982. It also starred Isla Blair as the next door widowed neighbour, Laura Miles. This series was created by Eric Chappell.
The Squirrels is a British television sitcom created by Eric Chappell. It was produced by ATV for the ITV and broadcast from 1974 to 1977 running for 3 series and 28 episodes. Chappell later created the Yorkshire Television sitcoms Rising Damp, among other series.
Goodnight, Vienna is a 1932 British musical film directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Jack Buchanan, Anna Neagle and Gina Malo. Two lovers in Vienna are separated by the First World War, but are later reunited.
Rising Damp is a 1980 comedy film based on the British situation comedy Rising Damp, which aired on ITV from 1974 to 1978. The television series was, in turn, adapted from Eric Chappell's stage play The Banana Box. Chappell adapted the play to television, and wrote the screenplay for this feature film. The film's director was Joseph McGrath.