Anna is from West Germany and works as an au pair for Mrs. Walker.1 She has a friend named Eva who is from East Germany and also works as an au pair.2 She is always serious and even says in 'All Through the Night' that she doesn't know any jokes. She has great physical strength and isn't afraid to hit people who annoy her (especially Max). She has a habit of switching her v and w sounds. Mind Your Language. (39) IMDb 8.7 1978 7+. This first series introduces us to teacher Jeremy Brown who teaches a group of foreign students the English language. Juan Cervantes is a student in Jeremy Brown's EFL class. He is played by Ricardo Montez. 1 Profile 2 Gallery 3 Quotes 4 References Juan is a Spanish Catholic from Seville who works as a bartender. In the first season, he constantly says 'Por favor?' As he doesn't know much English. Sometimes Giovanni has to translate for him, the reasoning being Spanish and Italian have similar words. Mind Your Language COMEDY Barry Evans of the incredibly popular 'Doctor in the House' series stars in this off-beat and original sitcom as Jeremy Brown, an eager young academic who gets in over his head when he takes a job teaching English to a classroom of pupils from all over the world.
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This is a list of episodes of the British comedy Mind Your Language.
Overview[edit]
Series | Episodes | Premiere | Finale | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 13 | 30 December 1977 | 23 March 1978 | |
2 | 8 | 5 October 1978 | 23 November 1978 | |
3 | 8 | 25 October 1979 | 20 December 1979 | |
4 | 13 | 30 September 1985 | 31 December 1985 |
Series 1[edit]
Episode | Title | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|
01 | 'The First Lesson' | 30 December 1977 | |
Jeremy Brown starts his new job as the teacher of English as a foreign language class, and meets his students for the first time. A diverse group of ten foreign adult students in London, hailing from nine different countries in Europe and Asia. The Europeans consist of two au pairs, the young, flirtatious and beautiful Danielle (from France) and prim and proper Anna (from West Germany); two young single men, Giovanni (from Italy) and Max (from Greece); and a laid-back middle-agedbartender, Juan (from Spain), who speaks no English. The Asians consist of Su-Lee, a revolutionary-minded secretary from the Chinese Embassy, who is a staunch follower of Chairman Mao's teachings; Taro, a Japanese businessman, as well as three students from South Asia: Ranjeet, a devout PunjabiSikh; Ali, an unemployed Pakistani Muslim; and Jamila, an Urdu-speaking housewife who cannot speak any English. The school principal, Miss Courtney, nearly dismisses Mr Brown immediately as she had requested a female teacher, but she gives in and he is allowed to stay on a trial basis. | |||
02 | 'An Inspector Calls' | 5 January 1978 | |
An education inspector arrives at the school to observe the classes, but Mr Brown mistakes him for a new African foreign student. The inspector plays along and sits in his class pretending to be a student and in the end is very impressed with Mr Brown's teaching methods. | |||
03 | 'A Fate Worse Than Death' | 12 January 1978 | |
Ranjeet asks Mr Brown to help him escape an arranged marriage with Surinder, his father's best friend's daughter, which was arranged 20 years ago. The 10-year-old Surinder was beautiful as a tender bamboo shoot, but she has become so fat that Ranjeet would rather commit suicide than marry her. He eventually escapes the marriage, but Mr Brown in turn is pressured to marry Surinder instead. He writes a letter explaining to Surinder's father why he cannot marry her, but her father is not at all pleased when he reads it. | |||
04 | 'All Through the Night' | 19 January 1978 | |
Concerned that his students' English is not improving, Mr Brown keeps them after class -- so late that they get locked in the building. | |||
05 | 'The Best Things in Life' | 26 January 1978 | |
Jamila is arrested for shoplifting a magazine due to her misunderstanding the term 'free' in promotional material. However, Mr Brown and Ali later discover that Jamila has shoplifted many other items in the past. Mr Brown and his students then work together to return the stolen items without being noticed. | |||
06 | 'Come Back All Is Forgiven' | 2 February 1978 | |
It is Mr Brown's birthday and everyone in the class has brought him a present. However, it is not all happy returns when Miss Courtney informs Mr Brown that his trial month is over and she is not satisfied with his teaching. However, she finds out that the new teacher is taking over the school, so she dismisses her and brings Mr Brown back. | |||
07 | 'The Cheating Game' | 9 February 1978 | |
In order to see how prepared they are for their upcoming exam, the students prepare to take a mock exam. When the students make a lot of mistakes in class and see that their teacher has no faith in them, they decide to cheat in order to ace the exam and fake their progress. | |||
08 | 'Better to Have Loved and Lost' | 16 February 1978 | |
Ali and Su-Lee surprise the class when they announce that they are to marry. Mr Brown gets a much bigger shock when he finds out that Ali is already married and plans to take Su-Lee as his second wife. Ali informs Mr Brown that Su-Lee knows about his first wife and the fact that he was marrying her to have a child. Later, Ali's first wife informs him that she is pregnant. Su-Lee also does not want to marry him anymore, so they decide to cancel the wedding. | |||
09 | 'Kill or Cure' | 23 February 1978 | |
Mr Brown becomes ill and cannot come to class, so Miss Courtney takes charge. The students' English is not up to her expectations, so she sends some of them away and tells Anna to take over the class. Anna then sends the rest of the students home for the same reason. They all visit Mr Brown at his flat, each with their own 'remedy' to make him feel better. | |||
10 | 'Hello Sailor' | 2 March 1978 | |
Juan brings his Russian sailor friend Boris, who has come to England to escape Russia, to Mr Brown's class. Boris explains that he wants to stay in England to be with his English girlfriend. Everything seems to be going all right until the captain of a Russian ship comes to the classroom to take his roaming sailor home - and says that Boris has a wife in Russia but the captain wants to defect as he falls in love with Miss Courtney. | |||
11 | 'A Point of Honour' | 10 March 1978 | |
Mr Brown finds himself in a lot of trouble when Danielle tells Mr Jarvis, a pestering Irish woodwork teacher at the school, that she is engaged to Mr Brown. Mr Brown soon finds himself running around the school in an attempt to quash the false rumour, only to leave wrong impressions and ending up in the school gymnasium to box against the philandering teacher. He is able to win it because Max and Giovanni tie Mr Jarvis' shoelaces together, causing him to fall over. | |||
12 | 'How's Your Father' | 17 March 1978 | |
At the beginning of the lesson, Mr Brown asks the students to speak aloud for one minute each on various topics. The class learns that Taro's childhood was very lonely because his parents died when he was a child. Mr Brown sympathises by telling the class how he was left on the front steps of an orphanage in Jeremy Street when he was two weeks old on Easter Monday - nearly 30 years ago - and therefore grew up without any parents as well. Sid tells Mr Brown that he left his baby at an orphanage on an Easter Monday, which makes Mr Brown assume that Sid is his father. He later realises that he cannot be Sid's son when Sid tells him that the baby he abandoned was a girl. | |||
13 | 'The Examination' | 24 March 1978 | |
The students prepare to take their Lower Cambridge Certificate exam at the end of the first term. Mr Brown has a disagreement with a couple in the bar which comes back to haunt him when it turns out that the man will be supervising the exam. |
Series 2[edit]
Episode | Title | Original Airdate | |
---|---|---|---|
14 | 'All Present If Not Correct' | 7 October 1978 | |
At the start of the new school year, Mr Brown has two new students, Zoltán from Hungary (who speaks no English) and au pair Ingrid from Stockholm. Mr Brown and Miss Courtney are disappointed that all ten of his students from last year failed their exams and have returned to his class; she tells him that if he does not improve, she will dismiss him. Zoltán asks Mr Brown to write a letter to his girlfriend. Mr Brown wrongly believes that he has won £100,000 on Premium Bonds, and writes an insulting letter of resignation to Miss Courtney. He mistakenly gives the letters to the wrong people. As a result, Ms Courtney wrongly believes that Zóltan is in love with her and Zoltán's girlfriend beats him up. | |||
15 | 'Queen for a Day!' | 14 October 1978 | |
It is announced that the Queen will be visiting the school, and Miss Courtney gets over-excited about the event. The students wear their national costumes. The visit is cancelled without anyone at the school being told. A woman who looks and speaks like the Queen is looking for her husband who is a student there. She is mistaken for the Queen. | |||
16 | 'Brief Re-encounter' | 21 October 1978 | |
Albert Collins, who was Miss Courtney's fiancé 25 years ago, phones her at the school then visits her there later that day. He proposes to her, then asks to borrow money from her - which she accepts. Sid recognises him as a conman who was in prison with Sid's brother-in-law and tells Mr Brown that Albert's speciality is to propose to lonely women then flee with their money. Mr Brown tells Ms Courtney about Albert. Mr Brown, backed-up by his male students, see that Albert leaves for good. | |||
17 | 'Many Happy Returns' | 28 October 1978 | |
Ranjeet has been saving up his money to visit his mother in India as a surprise for her sixtieth birthday. He hands £230 cash in an envelope to Mr Brown for safe keeping, but Mr Brown accidentally drops it in front of the school later that day. Sid picks it up and puts £100 of it on a horse to win a race. The horse wins, but is disqualified. The students, along with Mr Brown and Sid, make £100 in the street in various ways in order to replace what Sid lost. Ranjeet flies to India; soon afterwards his mother arrives in his class, intending to surprise him. | |||
18 | 'Don't Forget the Driver' | 4 November 1978 | |
Mr Brown and his students go on a field trip to a stately home. They are travelling on a coach which Sid is driving. They are stranded in the countryside when the coach breaks down due to it running out of petrol. Sid obtains some petrol from a local farm and they continue. They arrive late, so the Earl who owns it sends them away. They become lost on the way back. They work out where they are, but then realise that the coach has a punctured tyre. | |||
19 | 'A Hard Days Night' | 11 November 1978 | |
The students are in their classroom playing darts badly while waiting for Mr Brown. Miss Courtney comes into the room and is disappointed with the students' lack of progress. Mr Brown arrives and tells the class that he is having his flat painted and has to find elsewhere to stay tonight. He initially decides to stay at the YMCA, but after Giovanni and Max offer to let him stay at their flat, he goes there. He goes onto the balcony, and Max, not realising he is out there, locks the door. Mr Brown cannot re-enter, so he tries to pick the lock. A neighbour phones to report him; the police arrest him and take him to the police station, while the rest of the students have arrived at Max and Giovanni's. Sid is brought in, having been arrested for being drunk and disorderly. Jeremy asks Sid to verify his identity, but he is too drunk to recognise him. Max and Giovanni arrive and verify Mr Brown's identity and the fact that he is staying at their flat. The police release Mr Brown without charge and he goes back to Max and Giovanni's with them. The other students are pleased to see him return and then leave in pairs. Mr Brown locks the door to the balcony, not realising that Max and Giovanni are there. The same neighbour phones the police about them. Mr Brown lets Max and Giovanni in, then is arrested. He is taken to the police station, where he is put in a cell with Sid. | |||
20 | 'Take Your Partners' | 18 November 1978 | |
Miss Courtney coerces Mr Brown to buy two tickets to a charity dance. Anna, Ingrid and Danielle want to be his partner, so Mr Brown has them decide amongst themselves which of them will he will dance with; they choose Anna. Gladys and Miss Courtney both pressure him to take them. He therefore takes Anna, Gladys and Miss Courtney - taking turns in dancing with each. | |||
21 | 'After Three' | 25 November 1978 | |
The class have to prepare for the school's talent show. The students individually do various performances in class in front of Mr Brown and Miss Courtney. They are all rejected due to being very inadequate and/or unsuitable. During the show, the class instead sing the Mind Your Language opening theme together, dressed in their traditional outfits. |
Series 3[edit]
Episode | Title | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|
22 | 'I Belong To Glasgow' | 28 October 1979 | |
Max and Giovanni bring in their new cockatoo in its cage. Danielle tells Mr Brown that she is dating five men, and that she sees one on each weekday. Mr Brown tells Miss Courtney that Ingrid and Zoltan have not arrived. She tells him that Zoltan wrote to her to tell her that he has moved back to Hungary. An affluent ArabSheikh enrols his Scottishchauffeur in Mr Brown's class, due to not being able to understand the Scots language which he speaks. Miss Courtney initially refuses to take a new student midway through a course, but changes her mind when the Sheikh gives her £2,000. The new Glaswegian student causes trouble for everyone in the class due to his obnoxious, hostile, confrontational attitude. Mr Brown refuses to continue teaching him, so he teaches Scots to the Sheikh on his own instead. | |||
23 | 'Who Loves Ya Baby?' | 3 November 1979 | |
Au pair Danielle brings her boss' 9-month-old baby to school in his pram. Gladys suggests that she leave him the canteen, which she does. Gladys tells Sid, but when the baby and pram go missing, he tells Danielle. Miss Courtney assumes the baby is the son of one of the students, who abandoned him. Miss Courtney tells Mr Brown that she found the baby and pram and leaves him in her office with Mr Brown whilst she finds out who the baby belongs to. Danielle tells Miss Courtney that he is the son of the couple whom she works for. Gladys takes the baby out of the pram whilst Mr Brown is out of the room. When Mr Brown returns with Sid, they are horrified that the baby is missing. On Sid's suggestion, Mr Brown goes onto the window ledge to look for the baby. Miss Courtney sees Gladys holding the baby in the corridor, collects the pram, closes the window and gives the pram to Gladys. Mr Brown cannot find the baby, and twice narrowly avoids falling to the ground. Gladys meets Sid in the corridor, and they explain what has happened. Danielle takes the baby and pram into the classroom. Mr Brown knocks on the classroom window and is let in by Giovanni. | |||
24 | 'No Flowers By Request' | 10 November 1979 | |
Juan suffers abdominal pain and is taken to hospital, accompanied by Mr Brown. At the hospital, Mr Brown falls down some stairs, breaking his left leg, and is admitted to hospital. Juan returns to class, where Miss Courtney is covering for Mr Brown. When Juan telephones the hospital, a miscommunication results in a nurse telling Juan that Mr Brown has died. The students go to the funeral, not realising that it was another patient, also named Mr Brown, who had died. Mr Brown arrives at school in a wheelchair, his leg in plaster, shocking Sid and Miss Courtney. Sid pushes Mr Brown to the funeral, where the students are delighted to see Mr Brown, who explains the misunderstanding. Sid lets go of Mr Brown's wheelchair whilst on a steep hill. Mr Brown rolls down the hill and falls into an empty grave, breaking his right leg and left arm. He is re-admitted to hospital, where his students give him the flowers that they were going to put on his grave. | |||
25 | 'Just the Job' | 17 November 1979 | |
Mr English, the principal of a language school, visits. He offers Mr Brown a better-paid job, having been recommended him by Ingrid. Mr Brown leaves the same day, only to learn when he arrives that the vacancy no longer exists. He tries to return to his old position, but finds that it has been filled by Mr Wilkins. Giovanni suggests to the students that they all act stupidly, so that Mr Wilkins quits. The plan works and Mr Brown returns to his old position. | |||
26 | 'Guilty or Not Guilty' | 24 November 1979 | |
All the students are brought to court together for causing various acts of mischief at different places in London. Miss Courtney oversees the session as one of the magistrates, while Mr Brown acts as their barrister. They are all acquitted, and leave the court. As Mr Brown is about to get into his car, a policeman stops him because his Vehicle Excise Duty has expired. | |||
27 | 'Repent At Leisure' | 1 December 1979 | |
Miss Courtney gives Mr Brown a tape recorder to help his students improve their pronunciation. Anna's au pair visa is set to expire. The others think that she should marry Mr Brown to become a British citizen. They fail to persuade him to, but there is no need when she finds out that she is allowed to continue living in the UK. Mr Brown is relieved, but then her East German friend wants to marry him. | |||
28 | 'The School Fete' | 8 December 1979 | |
The school holds a fete, and Max is held responsible for hiring Arthur Mullard. | |||
29 | 'What a Tangled Web' | 15 December 1979 | |
Ali suspects that his wife is having an affair. Mr Brown follows her and discovers that she is going to Ranjeet's house.It is shortly revealed that Ali's wife is secretly planning to throw a surprise party for Ali with the help of Ranjeet. Ali's wife arrive with Ranjeet to the school to meet Mr Brown and he advices her that humans tend to make mistake and get over it (the affair). She misunderstood that Ali was having an affair with another woman and chaos ensues. |
Series 4[edit]
The fourth series was created by TRI Films LTD and first aired on TSW in late 1985, and some other ITV regions during 1986, but has yet to be released on DVD.
Episode | Title | Original Airdate: TSW* Granada+ | |
---|---|---|---|
30 | 'Never Say Die' | 30 September 1985* 4 January 1986+ | |
Mr. Brown mistakenly thought that Ms. Courtney is dying | |||
31 | 'Too Many Crooks' | 7 October 1985* 11 January 1986+ | |
Two crooks rob Ranjeet's cousin's shop when he is in-charge. To evade capture, they hide in the school. | |||
32 | 'Easy Come Easy Go' | 14 October 1985* 18 January 1986+ | |
The students have seven draws on the football pools and stand to win thousands of pounds if they get one more draw. | |||
33 | 'Fifty Years On' | 21 October 1985* 25 January 1986+ | |
On her birthday, Miss Courtney finds a mink coat that Ingrid bought for the lady she's au pairing with in her office, and mistakes it for her birthday present. Mr Brown has to get the coat back before Ingrid loses her job, and give Miss Courtney her actual present - an engraved wind-up clock - instead. However, when Miss Courtney starts receiving threatening letters from an unknown sender and hears ticking coming from a box on her desk, she assumes the worst. | |||
34 | 'Time and Tide' | 28 October 1985* 1 February 1986+ | |
Mr. Brown finds himself in deep water when he takes the students down the River Thames to improve their knowledge of English history. | |||
35 | 'Ghoulies and Ghosties' | 4 November 1985* 8 February 1986+ | |
Mr Brown scoffs at the suggestion that the school is haunted. | |||
36 | 'Mama Mia' | 11 November 1985* 15 February 1986+ | |
Giovanni's mother visits him at the school. | |||
37 | 'A Rash Decision' | 18 November 1985* 22 February 1986+ | |
Mr Brown and all the students catch a rash and fever. They are admitted to a quarantine ward. | |||
38 | 'Wedding Fever' | 25 November 1985* 1 March 1986+ | |
Romance is in the air! Juan and Maria have fallen madly in love and arrange to be married by special licence at the nearby Catholic Church. But when Juan gets himself accidentally locked in the school the night before the wedding, it begins to look as if Maria will be left waiting at the church. | |||
39 | 'Everybody's Out' | 2 December 1985* 8 March 1986+ | |
There is discontent when the students form their own union. | |||
40 | 'The First Lady' | 9 December 1985* 22 March 1986+ | |
Mr Brown is suffering from flu and has a bizarre dream involving destruction at the school. When he returns to school he finds his dream has become a nightmare. | |||
41 | 'Teacher's Pet' | 16 December 1985* 5 April 1986+ | |
Mr Brown brings his neighbour's dog to class. | |||
42 | 'End of Term' | 31 December 1985* 12 April 1986+ | |
The school is closed. Miss Courtney is busy preparing for a European tour when Mr Brown and the students arrive at the school to find out how they have fared in their examinations. |
External links[edit]
- Mind Your Language – list of episodes at IMDb
Mind Your Language | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Vince Powell |
Written by | Vince Powell |
Presented by | Sharad Patel (Season 4) |
Starring | Barry Evans Dino Shafeek Zara Nutley Albert Moses George Camiller Jacki Harding Ricardo Montez Robert Lee Pik-Sen Lim Kevork Malikyan Jamila Massey Françoise Pascal Anna Bergman Tommy Godfrey Iris Sadler |
Composers | Max Harris (Season 1-3) Kin Kelly (Season 4) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 42 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Bachu Patel (Season 4) |
Producers | Stuart Allen (Season 1-3) Albert Moses (Season 4) |
Camera setup | Multiple-camera |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production companies | London Weekend Television (Season 1-3) TRI Films (Season 4) |
Release | |
Original network | ITV |
Original release | 30 December 1977 – 6 March 1987 |
Mind Your Language is a British sitcom that premiered on ITV in 1977. It was produced by London Weekend Television and directed by Stuart Allen. Three series were made by LWT between 1977 and 1979 and briefly revived in 1985 (or 1986 in most ITV regions) with six of the original cast. The series shows people of different countries with different social background, religions, and languages existing in the same classroom, learning English as a foreign language.
Summary[edit]
The show is set in an adult education college in London and focuses on the class in English as a Foreign Language directed by Mr. Jeremy Brown (Barry Evans), who is manipulated to teach a group of enrolled foreigners.
Cast and characters[edit]
School staff[edit]
- Barry Evans (42 episodes) as Jeremy Brown, the English teacher and focal point of most of the series. He is a good-natured, earnest single man in his thirties who lives alone. He has a Bachelor of Arts from Oxford University. He was hired in the series pilot, in which he was warned that the students drove the previous teacher insane. Mr. Brown is up to the challenge but often exasperated by the students' creative interpretations of the English language.
- Zara Nutley (42 episodes) as Dolores Courtney, the stuffy, imperious principal of the school. Miss Courtney has a great dislike of the male gender, thinks women are superior to men, and prefers female teachers. She hesitates to hire Mr Brown, but reluctantly puts him on a month's trial. She likes to drop by the English classroom unannounced to check up on the progress of Mr Brown's students, and often leaves disappointed. She nearly eloped with a man in her early years, but was caught and sent home by her father. However, it was revealed that she was only six years old at the time and the 'man' was eight. Her first name was mentioned only in the episode 'Brief Re-encounter'. She has a Master of Arts from Oxford.
- Iris Sadler (20 episodes) as Gladys, (Series 1–3), the tea lady in the school cafeteria, most often referred to as 'Gladys the tea lady'. She is a vivacious, friendly woman in her seventies. In the third season, it is revealed that she is a widow. She has a friendly relationship with both Sidney and Mr Brown. She often cajoles Mr Brown and tattles on Miss Courtney.
- Tommy Godfrey (20 episodes) as Sidney (Series 1–3), the school caretaker, a rough, roguish Cockney in his sixties who speaks in rhyming slang. Only Miss Courtney calls him by his full name; everyone else calls him Sid. He dislikes his long-term partner and wears a black tie on their anniversary. Despite not being married, he routinely refers to her as his wife. He is hard of hearing, which often creates misunderstandings. He is very fond of alcohol and tricks the students into buying drinks for him and giving him money. He also steals supplies from the school and sells them. He is friendly with both Mr Brown and Gladys.
- Sue Bond (13 episodes) as Rita (Series 4), the new tea lady replacing Gladys
- Harry Littlewood (13 episodes) as Henshawe (Series 4), the new caretaker of the school replacing Sid
Students[edit]
- George Camiller (42 episodes) as Giovanni Capello, a stereotypical Italian BritishCatholic chef, the class's loudspeaker and de facto class monitor. He is best friends with Max, who becomes his flatmate. Giovanni's main problem with English is understanding metaphors and large words, though he often answers wrongly on purpose to amuse the class. He often calls Mr. Brown Professori. When shocked or surprised, he often catchphrases like 'Santa Maria', 'Santa Daisy', 'Okey Cokey', 'Buona Sera' or 'Holy Ravioli'. When he doesn't understand something he says scusi. He has an elaborate set of first names: Giovanni Vincenzo Marco Dino Alberto Leonardo etc. His last name is sometimes spelled 'Cupello' in the closing credits.
- Jacki Harding (42 episodes) as Anna Schmidt, a stereotypical British German who works as an au pair. In her introduction, she refers to 'German efficiency'; accordingly, she's a hardworking student, occasionally asking legitimate questions, and as the series progresses, answering Mr. Brown's questions correctly. Her main problem is mixing v and w sounds. She also punctuates her sentences with German words. She is shown to have the exceptional physical strength and she is never reluctant to show it, often punching fellow students, such as Max, if they try to flirt with her. While in one episode, when the denomination was being argued over, she said that Lutheranism was the true religion, but in the episode 'How's Your Father', she said that there's no life after death.
- Ricardo Montez (42 episodes) as Juan Cervantes, a Spanish Catholic bartender with an optimistic outlook. Juan is always laughing at himself, confident of his answers even when they are completely wrong. Early in the series, Juan speaks almost no English (apart from episode 2 where he describes Miss Courtney as 'Plenty awesome, very good!') and answers everything with 'por favor' (please), necessitating Giovanni to translate some key terms for him (as Spanish and Italian have many mutually intelligible words). His typical catchphrase is 's'alright!' and sometimes when he is corrected he says 'Sorry, wrong number'. Juan's English improves as the series goes on, but he remains one of the worst speakers, often speaking a mix of English and Spanish. He cares a great deal for Mr Brown, whom he considers almost as part of his family.
- Albert Moses (42 episodes) as Ranjeet Singh, a London Underground employee from Punjab in India and a religious Sikh. In the first episode, Mr. Brown mistook him for a Pakistani when he asked him to sit next to his 'fellow countryman', Ali Nadim, a Pakistani Muslim; they often clash. He has a good vocabulary but tends to mix up his general knowledge, and upon being corrected he always puts his hands together and says 'a thousand apologies'. When angered, he threatens his tormenters with his kirpan. He usually comes late to class. In Season 1 Episode 3, a woman named Surinder appeared at the school and he told everyone that they had been betrothed to each other as children, but he no longer wishes to marry her. He and Ali become friends in the later episodes of the series.
- Pik-Sen Lim (27 episodes) as Chung Su-Lee (series 1–3), a stereotypical Chinese communist woman who works as a secretary at the Chinese Embassy. She is never seen without her Little Red Book of Mao, from which she often quotes. She constantly mixes up her r and l sounds. Early in the series, she had a fierce ideological rivalry with Taro, her Japanese classmate, but later in the series, he often springs to her defence when a character insults her or China. When she quotes Chairman Mao, Mr. Brown replies 'That's a matter of opinion'.
- Robert Lee (29 episodes) as Tarō Nagazumi (Series 1–3) - a Japanese electronics executive who works as a representative for the London branch of the fictional Japan-based electronic company, Bushido Electronics. He speaks English quite fluently, but has a habit of adding -o to almost every word he says (as in 'thank-o,' 'England-o,' and so on) and always replies 'Ah-So!' and bows whenever he is called on. Early in the series he is at odds with Su-Lee due to Japan and China's own political differences in the 1970s but they become friends later on. Most of the time he is seen with his camera.
- Kevork Malikyan (29 episodes) as Maximillian Andrea Archimedes Papandrious (Series 1–3), stereotypical Greek shipping-agency worker from Athens who is often paired with Giovanni. He is attracted to Danielle, but as the show progresses, the three become friends. Max tends to misunderstand metaphors and large words. He also has a heavy accent, which causes him to add h to almost every word he says. Later, he shares his flat with Giovanni, with whom he is close friends; these two characters have the best command of the English language of all the students in the series.
- Françoise Pascal (29 episodes) as Danielle Favre (Series 1–3), an amorous young French Catholic au pair who instantly grabs the attention of all the men, including Mr Brown. Her good looks often distract Giovanni and Max from their answers, while Mr Brown is often found in seemingly incriminating positions with her, and she is strongly attracted to him. She is annoyed when an attractive young Swedish blonde, Ingrid Svenson, joins the class, instigating a rivalry for Mr Brown's attention.
- Dino Shafeek (29 episodes) as Ali Nadim (Series 1–3), a Pakistani initially unemployed at the beginning of the first season, who later gets a job as a door to door salesman, and the first student to make an appearance. He is originally from Lahore, Pakistan, although he once stated he grew up in Delhi (probably making him a Muhajir, the people who migrated from India to Pakistan after the Partition of India in 1947). Practically never seen without his Jinnah cap, he is the most vocal, honest, and hardworking of the students, with Anna being the second. He often misinterprets the English for a comical sense, but has a very fair command of it. As a Pakistani Muslim, he has a vocal and occasionally physical rivalry with Ranjeet, who is an Indian Sikh. Ali's typical catchphrases are 'yes please' (in situations where he should say 'yes, thank you' or 'yes indeed'), 'oh blimey!', 'Squeeze me please' (which is how he pronounces 'Excuse me please'), and 'jolly good'.
- Jamila Massey (29 episodes) as Jamila Ranjha (Series 1–3), a stereotypical Indian housewife from Shimla. When she first joins the class she barely speaks any English - she rants in Hindi when Mr Brown asks her name, and when she finally does understand, she writes her name on the blackboard in Urdu because she cannot write it in English. Although she needs Ali to translate for her in the first series, by series 3 she shows a marked improvement and is able to communicate in English without needing any help. She often calls Mr. Brown 'Masterji' (Hindi roughly meaning 'teacher' or 'professor'), and her catchphrase early in the series is 'gud hefening' (which is how she pronounces 'good evening'). She often brings her knitting to class. She is shown to be a Christian in the episode 'Guilty or not Guilty?', when she swears on the Bible to tell the truth, from the first season's 11th episode, she wears a cross necklace. But in an episode called 'A Point of Honour', she says the true religion is Buddhism. Also, in the episode 'I Belong to Glasgow', she crosses herself along with Jock, Danielle, Max, and Giovanni.)
- Anna Bergman (21 episodes) as Ingrid Svenson (Series 2 and 4), a Swedish au pair who joins the class at the beginning of series 2. She is attractive and straightforward about her attraction to Mr Brown, sparking a rivalry between her and Danielle. Her main problem with English is word order, often getting words mixed up, such as 'you for I question answer'. She transfers schools at the end of Series 2, but returns in the independently produced Series 4.
- Gabor Vernon (8 episodes) as Zoltán Szabó (Series 2), a Hungarian student who only appears during series 2. He knows very little English and requires a phrasebook for everything. He picks up slang quickly, most of which comes from Giovanni and Juan. At the end of series 2, he returns to Hungary. His typical catchphrase is to say 'Bocsánat?' (pronounced 'bochanot ', the Hungarian word for 'sorry' or 'excuse me') to everything said to him in English.
In the fourth series of 13 episodes, Mr Brown and Miss Courtney are still at the school, as are Giovanni, Anna, Juan, Ranjeet and Ingrid. New students in series 4 include:
- Michelle Dumas, portrayed by Marie-Elise Grepne (13 episodes)
- Maria Papandrious, the sister of Maximillan Papandrious, portrayed by Jenny Lee-Wright (13 episodes)
- Farrukh Azzam, portrayed by Raj Patel (13 episodes)
- Fu Wong Chang, portrayed by Vincent Wong (13 episodes)
Production[edit]
Development[edit]
The series was commissioned by Michael Grade, Director of Programmes at London Weekend Television.[1] The majority of recordings for the first three series took place on Tuesday evenings in Studio Two at the South Bank Television Centre.
Using this series as an example, Sarita Malik, in Representing Black Britain (2002) wrote that 'Blacks, Asians or 'race' were usually the butt of the joke', which 'tended to hit a racist note, but always in a well-meaning, benevolent tone'. She continued that 'never before had so many diverse races... been seen in the same television frame, but they had never clung so tightly to their popular crude national stereotypes.'[2]
The series attracted about 18 million viewers. Grade cancelled the programme having considered the stereotyping offensive.[3] 'It was really irresponsible of us to put it out', he told Linda Agran at the Edinburgh Television Festival in 1985.[2] Although Grade's evaluation of the program's 'offensiveness' is purely a personal view, contesting his assertion is the fact that the program sold and was enjoyed worldwide, especially so in the countries he considered had been lampooned.
International screenings[edit]
The series continues to be screened internationally, particularly in the countries represented in the series onscreen.[4] The series was sold to Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, India, Malaysia, Kenya, Nigeria,[5] Ghana and Singapore. It was also one of the first British TV programmes shown in South Africa after the end of the boycott by the British Actors' Equity Association.[6] It was also broadcast in Canada on CBC Television from 1978 until 1982. The series was screened by some minor or independent ABC TV stations in the United States during 1985.[7]
Episodes[edit]
Transmission details[edit]
London Weekend Television (original run)[edit]
- Series 1 (13) 30 December 1977 – 24 March 1978, Fridays, 7:00pm
- Series 2 (8) 5 October – 23 November 1978, Saturdays, mostly 6:00pm
- Series 3 (8) 27 October – 20 December 1979, Saturday
TRI Films Ltd. (1985 revival)[edit]
The series was resurrected for the export market by an independent producer in 1985, shot at Uxbridge Technical College in western Greater London. The revival was purchased by Granada Television on behalf of the ITV Network in Summer 1985 and was immediately offered by Granada to the ITV Network for showing on a regional basis. Most ITV companies did not show any of the episodes in the revived series. TSW was the first region to show them in 1985 usually Mondays or Tuesdays at 6:30pm, Anglia, Central and Granada transmitted the final 13 episodes, while Border, HTV and Tyne Tees broadcast a handful of episodes in 1986 and 1987.
South West based TSW was the first region to screen the series in Autumn 1985. Granada and Anglia showed the series from January-April 1986 and Central, HTV West (not shown in the HTV Wales part of the HTV region), Border, Tyne Tees showed the series from February 1986 but Border and Central showed 4 episodes in February 1986 and Central showed the remaining 9 in July-September 1986 whereas Border did not schedule the remaining 9 episodes, Tyne Tees showed 9 episodes in February-March 1986 but did not schedule the final 4 episodes, HTV West was the last region to finish the series in March 1987. After the production of 13 episodes, financial problems affected the production company and distributor. The transmission dates on the IMDb episode guide for Series 4 are the Granada region dates whereas the dates on the episode list are the TSW region dates. Both the TSW and Granada dates are on the episode list for Series 4 as TSW (South West) and Granada (North West) were the first 2 regions to show Series 4
Mind Your Language Hd
- TSW was the first ITV region to show the series 30 September – 31 December 1985, (Mondays later Tuesdays 6:30pm)
- Granada Television all episodes from 4 January – 12 April 1986, (Saturdays 2:15pm)
- Anglia: all episodes, from 9 January – 3 April 1986. (Thursdays 7:00pm)
- Central: all episodes, shown as one block of four (1 – 22 February 1986) and one block of nine (12 July – 6 September 1986).
- HTV West: all episodes over a period from 1 February 1986 – 6 March 1987 (*Series 4 not shown in the Welsh part of the HTV region)
- Tyne Tees: nine episodes from 1 February – 29 March 1986 (4 episodes not shown)
- Border: four episodes, from 1–22 February 1986 (9 episodes not shown)
Not Shown
- Yorkshire
- TVS
- Scottish
- Grampian
- Ulster
- HTV Wales*
- Thames/LWT (London ITV contractors. All series of the show, including the revival, were produced in London.)
DVD releases[edit]
The series was released as a 'Best of' four-disc box set on Region 2 DVD in 2003 (Cinema Club), and on Region 1 DVD in 2004 (Granada). However, these sets exclude the Series 1 episode 'Kill Or Cure', the Series 2 episode 'Don't Forget the Driver', the Series 3 episode 'Guilty or Not Guilty?' and all of Series 4.
Another four-DVD box set, The Complete LWT Series, released by Network in November 2007 contains all episodes of Series 1–3.
International remakes[edit]
International television shows based on the premise of Mind Your Language include:
- India: Zabaan Sambhalke[8] and Zaban Sambhal Ke (in Hindi)
- Indonesia: Kelas Internasional (in Indonesian)[9]
- Japan: Nihonjin no shiranai nihongo
- Jordan: العلم نور (al-ʿilm nūr; in Arabic)
- Kenya: Classmates[10]
- Malaysia: Cakap Melayu Lah (In Malay)[11] and Oh My English! (in English)
- Malta: Klassi Għalina (in Maltese)
- Nigeria: Second Chance! (in English),[12] and Jami'ar Albarkawa (in Hausa)[13]
- Sri Lanka: Raja Kaduwa! (in Sinhala)[14]
- United States: What a Country!
References[edit]
- ^Mason, Rowena (23 April 2009). 'Michael Grade at ITV: it seemed like a good idea at the time'. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
- ^ abMalik, Sarita (2002). Representing Black Britain: Black and Asian Images on Television. London: Sage. pp. 96–97. ISBN9780761970279.
- ^'Vince Powell'. The Daily Telegraph. 22 July 2009. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
- ^Jonathan Rigby, DVD commentary on Die Screaming Marianne starring Barry Evans, 2005.
- ^The International World of Electronic Media, Lynne S. Gross, McGraw-Hill, 1995, page 243
- ^New Statesman and Society, 30 September 1994, page 31
- ^TV Guide, Volume 33, Triangle Publications, 1985, page A-36
- ^'Shemaroo releases home video of TV show Zabaan Sambhal Ke'. Indian Television Dot Com. 8 December 2009.
- ^Kelas Internasional (20 June 2015). 'Kelas Internasional - Episode Perdana - Perkenalan - Part 1/3' – via YouTube.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^'(HIBURAN) Astro Warna Lancar Sitkom Terbaru, Cakap Melayulah! | Galaksi Media'.
- ^'Nollywood kills Nigeria's Television Drama - Vanguard News'. 11 June 2011.
- ^'usman baba pategi', Daily Trust
- ^lankacool (8 January 2008). 'Raja Kaduwa 2008-01-06 (Part 01)' – via YouTube.
External links[edit]
Mind Your Language Youtube
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Mind Your Language |
Mind Your Language Season 1
- Mind Your Language at British Comedy Guide
- Mind Your Language at IMDb
- Mind Your Language at the BFI's Screenonline