[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com

So, we've all been wondering about the preponderance of story-inappropriate mustaches in these illustrations. But what about the couple of tales where Bertie actually does have a soup-strainer?

As far as I know, this only happens in one of the short stories and one of the novels, and happily I have the short story right here. It was illustrated by two of our old familiar chums, Alfred Leete (who was never guilty of inappropriate mustachio-ing) and Henry Raleigh (who, we now know, had no excuse for his improper facial-hair use in later illustrations).

Hold onto your bowlers, my friends -- this is going to be interesting.

Boost for Birdsb-AUGH! )

Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
"Scoring Off Jeeves" and "Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch"
"Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest"
"The Great Sermon Handicap"
"The Purity of the Turf"

[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Today I have another story illustrated by Mills and Skidmore! "The Great Sermon Handicap" is not one of my favorite stories, but it does feature some of my favorite illustrations (by Mills, anyway).



When Cynthia smiles . . . )

Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
"Scoring Off Jeeves" and "Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch"
"Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Hi, I'm back! Hope everyone enjoyed the holidays.

I'm going to be posting more fic soon, but first I have another crop of illustrations to share.



This story was illustrated by Alfred Leete in The Strand, and it was published around the same time in The Saturday Evening Post with illustrations by none other than Henry Raleigh. Let's start with Leete:

Darling Motty . . . )


Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
"Scoring Off Jeeves" and "Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Ok, this is my last one of these before I go off on vacation. Since these two stories are so closely related, I figured I'd just bundle them together.



A tender goddess! )

Hope you all have a topping holiday!
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
I say, let's try something with a little color today!



"Jeeves in the Springtime" was the first story illustrated by Mills in The Strand and the first one to appear in Cosmopolitan (illustrated, of course, by our pal Skidmore). So both artists are still feeling out the characters at this point.
Little horseshoes! )

Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
So, in the last couple of posts, we've gotten to see a bit of Bertie's family: Aunt Dahlia, Cousin Angela, the errant (and surprisingly aged, at least in Skidmore's illustrations) Wooster twins, and even Uncle George. But so far we have had only a brief glance at the dreaded Aunt Agatha. So let's have a closer look.



I give you "Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"/"Aunt Agatha Makes a Bloomer"/"Aunt Agatha Speaks Her Mind" + "Pearls Mean Tears"/"That One with the Pearls where Bertie Finally Sticks It to Aunt Agatha"! 

Seriously, I never even know what to call this story. )

Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Oh, it's going to be hard to follow up Henry Raleigh's Right Ho, Jeeves illustrations! In the meantime, here's something a little more low-key, but also highly entertaining: "The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace", illustrated by our friends A. W. Mills and T. D. Skidmore. 



I saw the phantasm of poor, dear Eustace! )
Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Good afternoon! Oh, do I have a treat for you guys today.

Hee!

Readers of the Saturday Evening Post on December 23rd, 1933, opened up their magazine to one of the best early Christmas presents ever. Across from a truly nightmarish portrait of Santa Claus shilling Whitman's chocolates lay the first page of a new serial by P. G. Wodehouse, illustrated by long-time Post artist Henry Raleigh.
Is this a time for Fink or any other kind of Nottle? )

Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
I'm back with more of these wonderful vintage illustrations! Today, I'd like to go back to where it all began.

Jeeves, Corky, Bertie

Well, not quite, actually -- Bertie and Jeeves first appeared in "Extricating Young Gussie," published in The Strand in January 1916, but Jeeves played such a small role in that one that he didn't even rate an illustration. (It's still worth a look for several reasons, so I'll definitely post it at some point.)

But today I'd like to post the illustrations from "Leave It to Jeeves," a story that appeared in the same magazine only a few months later. You may know it better as "The Artistic Career of Young Corky." Here the foundation is laid for the familiar Jeeves and Bertie dynamic that we all know and love.

The Ur-Jeeves? )
Other entries:
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Comrade Bingo"
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Okay, I'm back with the second installment of this series of vintage Jeeves and Bertie illustrations!



When I started doing this project, I was very curious about how the illustrators would handle "Bertie Changes His Mind," that little oddity where Jeeves is the narrator. Would Jeeves, being the roguish protagonist of the piece, look any different from his usual staid, valety self? In fact, he kind of does.

"If a laugh isn't becoming to your style of beauty, don't read this story!" )

Other entries:
"Comrade Bingo"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
I hope I'm not bothering anyone by posting so many times in a row, but I just have to share this with you. This is it for today, I swear!

When I was poking around for Wodehouse covers, something suddenly dawned on me: a lot of the Jeeves and Bertie stories were originally published in illustrated magazines. I found, to my vast delight, that a lot of these magazines are available online, original illustrations at all. I nabbed a bunch of them (they're public domain and everything!), and I figured I'd post them for you one story at a time (albeit not in any particular order).

Without further ado, I give you "Comrade Bingo."
Noooo, so much facial hair! )
Other entries:
"Bertie Changes His Mind"
"Leave It to Jeeves"
Right Ho, Jeeves
"The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace"
"Aunt Agatha Takes the Count"
"Jeeves in the Springtime"

Bill

Jul. 27th, 2011 12:36 am
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Hope this is not too off-topic, but I just had to share it.

P. G. Wodehouse had a gift for writing lyrics, and -- along with Jerome Kern and Guy Bolton -- he helped create the modern American musical. I just found this absolutely heartbreaking performance of his song "Bill", from the 1936 version of Show Boat. The singer is Helen Morgan. I just can't stop listening to it. (PS - Notice the description of her hypothetical ideal man in the introductory verse!)
I don't know . . . he's just my Bill. )
ETA: Okay, I'm going to try this one more time. *shakes fist and LiveJournal* While I'm on the subject of Wodehousian music, I wanted to share this as well. I recently found footage of tenor Frank Titterton singing "The Yeoman's Wedding Song", a song that Bertie mentions several times in the books. This was apparently something that Bertie had to sing a number of times at school events/village concerts as a youth, and he claims in at least one story that he pulled it off pretty well. Having heard the song . . . that's pretty impressive. I wonder if this is something Wodehouse had to perform at some point when he was a young man.

ETA 2: My attempt to embed that didn't work, so here's the link.

By the way, the British Pathe website is well worth exploring. There's all kinds of rare and fascinating footage there, a lot of it from the general period of the Jeeves and Wooster stories.
[identity profile] wotwotleigh.livejournal.com
Hope this is not too off-topic, but I thought you all might get a kick out of this fantastic website I found. It's a collection of vintage comics, mostly from the early 1900s (although it gets into the '20s a bit). Some of these are pretty famous, others virtually forgotten.

There's a reference to C. A. Voight's Betty in The Mating Season -- Bertie compares Gussie Finknottle to Betty's would-be suitor, Lester DePester.

More! )
[identity profile] dogwoodblossom.livejournal.com
Somebody on my f-list posted this link in the context of Doctor Who, but I thought ya'll Indeed Sirers would find it interesting too. It's a film (in colour!) of London in the 1920's. And the breakaway panels are full of bad puns. Corking stuff.


ext_502975: I am a fair dictator. (Japanese Magnolia light)
[identity profile] gunitneko.livejournal.com
I wish to start a discussion. How much of Jeeves work is Marvel and how much is undiagnosed OCD? Thoughts! GO!

(and are there any fics?)
[identity profile] erynn999.livejournal.com
We've had some discussions of this in the comm before. I was fortunate enough to pick up a copy of Wooster Proposes, Jeeves Disposes this week and the author handles this information in a footnote. I'm posting it here for folks to consider if they ever need the information in their stories.

p. 365-366, f 9.:

"Data on servants' wages during the 1920s are difficult to find in secondary sources. A sampling of London Times want ads for valets in early 1929, however, shows their annual wages falling in this £65-to-£80 range (not counting room and board). For example, a "general manservant" asking £65 described himself wanting a position in London doing the "entire duties of one gentleman"; he could cook, drive a car, and speak French (The Times [4 Mar. 1929]: 3). Butlers and butler-valets received more, in the £80-to-£100 range. An agency supplying footmen, butlers, and valets listed the wage range as £35 to £100 (The Times [19 Mar. 1929]: 4). Even assuming Bertie had to pay Jeeves double the highest valet's rate (i.e. £200) to keep him from his friends' clutches, he would still only make around £4 a week. (In Sayers' Whose Body? [1923], Wimsey reveals that he pays Bunter £200 a year, implying that this is unusually high because Bunter assists him in his hobby of detection.) Thus £95 received in a period of two weeks would be a very substantial sum, with even the £5 to £20 Jeeves customarily gets being far from negligible."

ETA: Somebody in comments noted that tipping of staff (in clothing, for example) was common. The author quotes Bertie in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves as saying: "My heart melted. I ceased to think of self. It had just occurred to me that in the circumstances, I would be unable to conclude my visit by tipping Butterfield. The hat would fill that gap."
[identity profile] saylee.livejournal.com
I'm doing research for a fic, and find myself up against a brick wall trying to find information on weddings in the 1920s. All my google-fu is turning up are links on planning a flapper-themed wedding, and a few pages on wedding dresses from the period, which while slightly more useful, is not the sort of thing Bertie would notice.

So, does anyone know anything about weddings in the 1920s, especially in Britain, as opposed to America? Traditions we had then that we don't have now, or vice versa? What the reception would be like? Would they do a rehearsal dinner? Would the spongebag trousers Bertie talks about be something worn to all weddings, or only upper class ones? Why doesn't my library seem to have any books on this? Any tidbit is appreciated.

(And don't worry; I promise I'm not marrying off Jeeves or Bertie.)

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