Married comic actors Hattie Jacques and John LeMesurier seem the perfect couple, with their two young sons and the legendary Christmas dinners they host for their friends. However, in 1963, ... Read allMarried comic actors Hattie Jacques and John LeMesurier seem the perfect couple, with their two young sons and the legendary Christmas dinners they host for their friends. However, in 1963, after a charity fund raiser for leukaemia, Hattie meets the young and handsome John Schofi... Read allMarried comic actors Hattie Jacques and John LeMesurier seem the perfect couple, with their two young sons and the legendary Christmas dinners they host for their friends. However, in 1963, after a charity fund raiser for leukaemia, Hattie meets the young and handsome John Schofield, whose son died of the disease. He tells her that she is lovely and boosts her confide... Read all
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Featured reviews
And regarding Hattie's weight: she is shown in this to be unhappy with her size, but being big gave her work that she would not have had otherwise. One can sling mud at her, call her horrible names, but the public encouraged her to stay that way.
The sensitive handling of this piece does exactly what it should - it shows that it was a sad situation where people failed to talk to one another and took things, and each other, for granted.
So far, so good. But that's mostly what the play is about. We learn little about Jacques's career, not that of le Mesurier, while Davies - played by an actor more celebrated for getting his kit off in POLDARK - is nothing more than a coarse yob. We learn at the end of the episode that eventually left Jacques for someone else, which seems vaguely appropriate for such an itinerant figure.
Jones gives a creditable impersonation of Jacques, but le Mesurier as portrayed by Bathurst is nothing more than a wet blanket, completely unlike the man we came to know as Sereeant Wilson in DAD'S ARMY. He lacks any strength of character, even when Joan rescues him from a potentially difficult situation as the third man in a love triangle.
This film focuses on Hattie's affair with chancer John Schofield (Aidan Turner) a used car salesman that Hattie meets in a charity function. He is not put off by Hattie's large size and makes her feel sexy and wanted. In due course he moves into the marital home as the cuckolded John moves into the spare room as Hattie schemes to arrange John to have a relationship with another woman (who he will later marry and then she will have an affair with his friend, Tony Hancock.)
Looking at this again the drama is just facile and tepid. You do not like any of them. The virile stud John, comes across as self pitying who sees Hattie as a meal ticket. (He would later leave her for an Italian heiress.) Hattie is selfish and cruel in treating her husband John and her kids so shabbily. John Le Mesurier who was well regarded in the public's affections has a charming and urbane man is shown here as a wet lettuce.
As a kid I grew up on The Carry on films, adoring Hattie Jacques, growing up believing that the stern faced actress was frigid and somewhat dowdy, little knowing of the passions that burned away. Ever feminine, I will forever adore Hattie, events here won't change my opinion of her.
John Schofield seemed to have a profound affect on her, Adrian Turner is great in the role, they don't miss a moment to show off his ripped body.
Ruth Jones does a great job, she makes Hattie sweet, conflicted and incredibly feminine. Great job from Bathurst also.
John Le Mesurier has always struck me as such a sad character, adorable, but definitely somewhat withdrawn, I wonder if this is exactly what he was like. Could anyone exist in such a situation?
Loved it, 9/10
I'd love to know what John's car was.
Did you know
- TriviaRobert Bathurst, who played John Le Mesurier, subsequently went on to play the character of Sergeant Wilson in Dad's Army: The Lost Episodes (2019), a series of remakes of the three missing episodes of Dad's Army (1968). In the original series, Sergeant Wilson was played by John Le Mesurier.
- GoofsScenes are included showing filming of Carry on Cabby (1963), including a clapper board with that title. However, this movie was produced as "Call Me a Cab". The title was changed after production was completed.
- Quotes
[Hattie meets John Schofield for the first time when he drives up in a red E-Type Jaguar sports car]
John Schofield: Are you all right here, or do you need to sit in the back like the Queen?
Hattie Jacques: [coyly] I'd need six months' notice to squeeze my behind in there.
- Crazy creditsPrologue: "This film is based on a true story. Some events have been created or changed."
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Amazing Hattie Jacques: Larger than Life (2022)
- SoundtracksCarry on Cabby
Composed by Eric Rogers
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 25m(85 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1