Lord Peter Wimsey

Lord Peter Wimsey

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  • @Ebb5845
    @Ebb5845Күн бұрын

    Time for a remake of the Lord Peter Wimsey series!😊

  • @ozlemaktas6446
    @ozlemaktas644611 күн бұрын

    Oh Wimsey has a moustache in this episode 😮

  • @FifthCat5
    @FifthCat514 күн бұрын

    Peter Pratt, who played Mr. Pym, was the principal comedian with the D’Oyly Carte Opera Company between 1951-1959, following Martyn Green’s departure and preceding John Reed, who played the roles through the 1960s. He was a wonderful King Gama and John Wellington Wells on the D’Oyly Carte recordings from the ealy 1969s. I wish I could have seen him on stage!

  • @lefuedebout
    @lefuedebout16 күн бұрын

    A superbly crafted episode with wonderful character actors. The bells are wonderful, and they sound so English. Sadly I wonder for how long before they are silenced so as not to " offend " a certain section of our enriched society!

  • @lefuedebout
    @lefuedebout22 күн бұрын

    Has anyone else, I wonder, spotted that lord Peter smokes " Passing Cloud " cigarettes?

  • @ToudaHell
    @ToudaHell24 күн бұрын

    I just found a youtube video where Ian Carmichael was playing Berty wooster. The algorism actually doing somethibg good for once. Yes. He is marvelous in that too.

  • @dzadza7775
    @dzadza7775Ай бұрын

    Wonderful. How I wish the restraint and artistry shown in this production could return today. Moving last scene relevant to our times. Peace on earth.

  • @LISA-gv5yo
    @LISA-gv5yoАй бұрын

    🤔🤔🤔 Eu não estou entendendo! Não reconheço lorde Winsley nessa série! Ele é casado com uma mulher que prefere o celibato? Depois de ter sido amante de um homem, e ter tido relacionamento vulgar com mulheres? E depois de ter sido acusada de assassinato! Entendem? O personagem desse lord fica longe da personificação de Ian Carmichael. Isso está nos livros? Me desculpem eu não consegui nem um exemplar! Mas, de antemão, fica minha indignação e insatisfação com essa série!

  • @LISA-gv5yo
    @LISA-gv5yoАй бұрын

    😂😂😂😂 É a primeira vez que eu vejo uma mãe da idade do filho! Jerry deve ser até mais velho que a mãe! kkkk 😂😂😂😂 Agora, a amante de Jerry....tem medo de que o marido a mate, mas ainda assim, dorme com outros homens?

  • @fayhart6355
    @fayhart6355Ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @LISA-gv5yo
    @LISA-gv5yoАй бұрын

    8:42...Uma mulher madura, vivendo às custas do pai falando maldito capitalismo! É piada! Fala fala fala, mas, no minuto em que estiver sem dinheiro e com fome, é até capaz de matar por dinheiro! 😂😂😂 A atriz que interpetra Mary, exagerou ! Quando ela viu que a personagem era de uma jovem, ela entendeu adolescente! Agiu como uma adolescente, e ficou esquisito, porque claramente a mulher já estava nos seus 40 anos! Foi mal.

  • @fayhart6355
    @fayhart6355Ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @wasanthaya13
    @wasanthaya13Ай бұрын

    This country sure indeed beautiful ... Love every minute of this story ...

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville22Ай бұрын

    David Langton from Upstairs, Downstairs as the Duke of Denver

  • @wasanthaya13
    @wasanthaya13Ай бұрын

  • @patriciaramsey5294
    @patriciaramsey5294Ай бұрын

    I love watching how Lord Peter is taking his brotherly role seriously to Lady Mary.

  • @patricksargent5357
    @patricksargent5357Ай бұрын

    NELLY IS FLIPPING AMAZING. THE TALKING HEAD FOR THIS CHANNEL REALLY SUCKS NEED TO BLOCK THIS CHANNEL NOW

  • @jamesjenkiinson5882
    @jamesjenkiinson5882Ай бұрын

    Stretched format, why?

  • @LynnKsCouture
    @LynnKsCoutureАй бұрын

    The "honest" Locksmith portrayed a flea exterminator on "Good Neighbors".

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman61412 ай бұрын

    I loved the outrage of David Rintoul's character. Be suspected of murder. vs. Be thought not just a greasy gigolo, but a greasy gigolo with NO TASTE. He doesn't want to be thought a greasy gigolo with such want of standards. A painting gigolo should have taste! Doesn't want that stain on his prospects. Character be damned. Think Gauguin - who made such a career out of abusing and infecting the beautiful and guileless. I'd have been 100% sympathetic to Rintoul's character if he'd have helped the widow to have some later life fun. Yes, she was unbearable to listen to. But - well, let's just say, I don't think it was accidental that the "beautiful" woman was always weaving and spinning - the REAL man eating creature was that Mackintosh mad one. She's even described as "sucking the life" out of her victim. The widow has some love of life left in her. Good for her. The murder "mystery" is all a matter of cross referencing timetables. More trainspotting than detecting. Though that's not meant as a criticism. All those lovely unBeechinged branch lines. One could weep. The real meat is, of course, the characters. The married couple who claim their marriage is strong because they allow each other "freedom", both of whom turn out to be profoundly jealous and really rather nasty. The successful painter whose head servants describe their domestic set-up as being "like a family". Yup, an unkind, controlling, gas lighting, lying, cruel family. They're right...just like a real family. The locals, Scottish locals, who make money from the English tourist incomers, and can't stand them. That's 100% correct in two ways. I've an American relative, who, when he traveled from Ireland to Scotland, said that he really enjoyed Scotland, as people there were too busy hating the English to get around to hating Americans. Plus, anyone who has ever lived in a place that has a tourism economy, will recognize the loathing that locals have for their source livelihood. Sayers did all that stuff so well, and with affection and dry humour, but never blind to reality.. It's one of the reasons I liked Gaudy Night so much. She lived in the academic world, but she didn't let it off the hook. She pointed out the cruelty in the intellectual and social snobbery, the deliberate, relished cruelty. My daughter is currently at uni and she describes very well that world of difference between professors who can critique students' work in a manner which encourages and improves them and their work, and professors who just want to flex & inflate their own egos and do so by humiliating and crushing those young people they're meant to be enlightening and guiding. Sayers was good at seeing the dark and light and not being overly judgmental. That's a real quality when writing about murders.

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman61412 ай бұрын

    Playing some of Debussy's Children's Corner at 34:36.

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman61412 ай бұрын

    Back when David Rintoul was still young and beautiful. Once he was older, he was always cast in sinister roles. He was good at them too. He played Mr Darcy in the version of Pride and Prejudice filmed in the latter half of the 70s. A much more faithful adaptation than the 90s series.

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman61412 ай бұрын

    I like hats. I like a nice hat on a woman or a bloke. I rather wish men still wore them, and I don't mean those ghastly baseball style caps, usually made worse by some advertising slogan, I mean a proper hat. But I often shake my head when I see blokes out in the cold, clotheds in layer upon layer of stiff itchy wool, even a blanket thrown over the shoulders, yet their hat merely something perched atop the head, leaving the poor freezing ears all exposed. Poor ears. What did hat designers have against ears? Though I AM glad that men no longer wear hats that drove the annihilation of beavers. Beavers are sublime. They should probably rule the earth.

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman61412 ай бұрын

    The angels in church roofs in East Anglia are rather famous now. Not many are still left. The ones that are extant are in constant peril in so many ways.

  • @Bersztipflag
    @Bersztipflag2 ай бұрын

    43:14 PTSD. During the war, Wimsey had had to send people into death. Often.

  • @rosemaryclarke2348
    @rosemaryclarke23482 ай бұрын

    He's so easy to watch!

  • @fritula6200
    @fritula62002 ай бұрын

    1974-2024 .... 50 years age, Lord whimsey:

  • @roviasmilonas8910
    @roviasmilonas89102 ай бұрын

    We all talk about Ian Carmichael as the ideal Wimsey (and I agree totally), but how about Bunter!? What's the actor's name? He deserves roses, I'd say.

  • @Nadine-xv1kr
    @Nadine-xv1kr2 ай бұрын

    How times have changed...

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    They got Lord Peters war service wrong unless he was reassigned to Intelligence after his injury on the front line.

  • @LadyPercy.
    @LadyPercy.2 ай бұрын

    If I was a well conected gell back in the day, I would have longed to have married Lord Peter. Not for the title of Her Ladyship. Samely, nor for a life of unquestionable unashamed ease and splendour. My burning desire is fuelled entirely by those utterly sumptuous dressing gowns.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    Involuntary manslaughter at worst.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    As Red Skelton said at the funeral of Harry Cohn, "Give the people what they want and they will come out every time."

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    No, can't buy Mr. Watters as the killer.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    The bells killed him. Never thought of that. Hence the horrified look on his face.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    So, neither Jim or Will are guilty. How about Mary?

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    Right again.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    "Oh, my God." Evidently, who took the body out of the belfry was not the one who killed Deacon. It was probably brother Jim.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    Could be brother Jim, or a strong woman.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Bunter. Oh, someone shoult accompany Hilary to the bank, just in case.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    Episode 4. check my assumptions. Or shall I say deductions?

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    The "ghost" the little girl saw was perhaps the wife of the killer. Of course, she could be the killer herself, but I don't think so.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    I have changed my mind. The victim was evidently Mr. Deacon. His widow is quite probably married to his killer. Not sure yet.

  • @j.sumner6999
    @j.sumner69992 ай бұрын

    I am going out on a limb and suggesting that the victim was killed to prevent him from identifying the alive Jeffrey (or Geoffrey) Deacon. I shall now watch the next episode.

  • @00keziah
    @00keziah2 ай бұрын

    I was abit surprised while watching this the actor was so unlike the written character. However they played the characters and the story well.

  • @lloydbotway5930
    @lloydbotway59302 ай бұрын

    Good stories, but it's too bad the video quality is so poor.

  • @julzhepburn3688
    @julzhepburn36882 ай бұрын

    Quite telling that one dangerous person in a village was a disstressing thought ,and now uk villages full of dangerous people ,by dint of political agenda .,,😢

  • @user-mj6bb3pf1p
    @user-mj6bb3pf1p2 ай бұрын

    That chick and her lipless lips , box haircut

  • @jasanders5877
    @jasanders58772 ай бұрын

    No no no Mon Ami BOM, who the help is this Lord guy😮. Shocking 🥶 quality, Think I'm bored😴🥱😴🥱

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville222 ай бұрын

    The "Duchess" at 18.14 is the old gal who played Mrs Pumphrey (owner of Tricky-Woo) in the original TV series, All Creatures Great and Small.