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Roderick Glossop

Sir Roderick Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the comic novels and short stories of P. G. Wodehouse. Sometimes referred to as a "nerve specialist" or a "loony doctor", he is a prominent practitioner of psychiatry in Wodehouse's works, appearing in several Jeeves stories and in one Blandings Castle story.

Sir Roderick Glossop
Jeeves, Blandings Castle character
Roger Brierley as Sir Roderick Glossop (right) in the television series Jeeves and Wooster
First appearance"Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch" (1922)
Last appearanceJeeves in the Offing (1960)
Created byP. G. Wodehouse
Portrayed byPaul Whitsun-Jones
Andrew Cruickshank
Roger Brierley and others
In-universe information
AliasSwordfish
NicknameRoddy
GenderMale
OccupationPsychiatrist
SpouseLady Glossop née Blatherwick (deceased)
Myrtle, Lady Chuffnell
ChildrenHonoria Glossop (daughter)
Oswald Glossop (son)
RelativesTuppy Glossop (nephew)
NationalityBritish

Though he is initially antagonistic towards Bertie Wooster, they become friends in later stories.

Inspiration edit

The character of Sir Roderick Glossop was inspired by Dr. Henry Crawford MacBryan, who operated a psychiatric nursing home in the hamlet of Ditteridge, in the parish of Box, Wiltshire, near Cheney House where the young Wodehouse spent some of his childhood with his aunts.[1]

Life and character edit

Sir Roderick Glossop is the father of Honoria Glossop and Oswald Glossop. He is first married to Lady Glossop, a friend of Bertie's Aunt Agatha, and later to Lady Chuffnell, aunt of "Chuffy", Lord Chuffnell. He went to school with Lord Emsworth, who states that Glossop was an unpleasant boy who had a nasty and superior manner.[2] Glossop has a pleasant baritone voice, and as a penniless medical student, sang at smoking concerts.[3] His residences are 6b Harley Street and Ditteredge Hall, Hampshire.[4]

He is formally called a nerve specialist or a brain specialist, though Bertie thinks of him as a "high-priced loony-doctor".[5] Even after they become friends, Bertie still refers to Glossop as "the eminent loony doctor".[6] He is a well-known psychiatrist, and, according to Bertie, "practically every posh family in the country has called him in at one time or another".[7] He is described as serious-minded by Bertie Wooster's Aunt Agatha, who tells Bertie that Sir Roderick is President of the West London branch of the anti-gambling league, drinks no wine, disapproves of smoking, and, due to an impaired digestion, can only eat simple food. She also says that he does not approve of coffee, as he considers it "the root of half the nerve-trouble in the world."[8]

When Bertie sees Glossop in "Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch", he describes Glossop as an "extraordinarily formidable old bird," stating:

He had a pair of shaggy eyebrows which gave his eyes a piercing look which was not at all the sort of thing a fellow wanted to encounter on an empty stomach. He was fairly tall and fairly broad, and he had the most enormous head, with practically no hair on it, which made it seem bigger and much more like the dome of St Paul's. I suppose he must have taken about a nine or something in hats. Shows what a rotten thing it is to let your brain develop too much.[9]

In that story, Glossop has lunch with Bertie to judge whether or not Bertie is mentally sound and fit to marry Honoria. Incidents arise that lead him to render a negative judgment, especially when Glossop, who strongly dislikes cats, is surprised by three cats in Bertie's flat. This incident is often recounted in later stories, with the number of cats being exaggerated as twenty-three. In "Bingo and the Little Woman", Glossop corroborates a claim that Bertie is mentally unsound. These stories appear in The Inimitable Jeeves.[10]

He forbids the marriage between Bertie's friend Charles "Biffy" Biffen and his daughter Honoria in "The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy", much to Biffy's relief. He also appears in "Without the Option". Both stories are collected in Carry On, Jeeves.[11] In "Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit" (in Very Good, Jeeves), he is the unintended victim of a prank when Bertie punctures his hot water bottle. In this story, Glossop mentions that he is nervous about fires.[12]

In Thank You, Jeeves, he has been a widower for two years, and wants to marry Myrtle, Lady Chuffnell.[12] Glossop obtains the use of Chuffnell Hall as a clinic, funded by J. Washburn Stoker.[3] In Jeeves in the Offing, he pretends to be a butler at Brinkley Court named Swordfish (the name being suggested by Bobbie Wickham) in order to surreptitiously observe one of the guests, Wilbert Cream, and judge his sanity.[12] It is also stated in this novel that Glossop still runs the clinic at Chuffnell Regis, and that Myrtle has become Lady Glossop, suggesting that they are married.[13] Glossop is mentioned in the last Jeeves short story, "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird".

Outside the Jeeves canon, Glossop appears in the Blandings Castle and Uncle Fred novel, Uncle Fred in the Springtime, in which he is impersonated by Pongo Twistleton's Uncle Fred at Blandings Castle. In Cocktail Time, he is a member of the Demosthenes Club, which is situated immediately opposite the Drones Club, and is briefly seen at the Demosthenes.

Relationship with Bertie Wooster edit

Though they are not friendly towards each other in the early stories, Glossop bonds with Bertie in Thank You, Jeeves (1934) when they both have to endure going about the countryside wearing blackface. As Bertie tells Jeeves, "From now on, there will always be a knife and fork for Bertram at the Glossop lair, and the same for Roddy chez Bertram".[14]

Inconsistencies in the relationship between Bertie and Glossop arise in the later novel Jeeves in the Offing (1960), as they do not seem to be on terms of friendship in the beginning of the story. When Bertie learns his Aunt Dahlia is going to have lunch with Glossop, Bertie states that Glossop "was a man I would not have cared to lunch with myself".[15] However, they become friends in Jeeves in the Offing, after they bond over their realization that they each stole biscuits from the school headmaster's study as children. They start addressing each other as "Bertie" and "Roddy".[16]

Notably, in the 1965 short story "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird", Bertie tells Jeeves that he and "Roddy" are good friends, citing the ordeals they shared in Thank You, Jeeves.[17] Sir Roderick has not yet married Lady Chuffnell in this story.

To explain why Bertie and Sir Roderick are not already friends at the start of Jeeves in the Offing, Wodehouse scholar J. H. C. Morris suggested that Bertie and Sir Roderick had an undisclosed quarrel sometime after Thank You, Jeeves and before Jeeves in the Offing, implying that "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird" occurs before this quarrel.[18]

Bertie continues to regard Sir Roderick Glossop as a friend in Much Obliged, Jeeves (1971). He describes "Roddy" as one of his leading pals.[19]

Appearances edit

Roderick Glossop appears in:

He is mentioned in several stories, including:

Adaptations edit

Television edit

  • In the 1965–1967 television series The World of Wooster, Sir Roderick Glossop was portrayed by Paul Whitsun-Jones.[20]
  • In the 1990–1993 television series Jeeves and Wooster, Glossop was portrayed in three episodes by Roger Brierley in series 1 and 2, and once by Philip Locke in series 4.[21] Unlike in the original stories, Sir Roderick separates from his first wife and is not a widower. He goes to New York, where he becomes engaged to his American assistant, Myrtle Snap, but quickly finds her to be domineering and leaves her. He also develops a new treatment plan which he calls the "Glossop Method" and treats Lord Bittlesham.
  • In the 2013–2014 television series Blandings, he was portrayed by Geoffrey McGivern in series 2, episode 1, "Throwing Eggs".[22]

Radio edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Dakin, Paul. "Sir Roderick Glossop: Wodehouse's "eminent loony doctor"". Hektoen International Journal. Hektoen Institute of Medicine. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  2. ^ Bennett, P. M. (24 December 1983). "Great doctors in English literature: Sir Roderick Glossop". Br Med J (Clin Res Ed). 287 (6409): 1962–1964. doi:10.1136/bmj.287.6409.1962. PMC 1550215. PMID 6418284.
  3. ^ a b Cawthorne (2013), pp. 222–223
  4. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 102–104.
  5. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Thank You, Jeeves, chapter 1, p. 13 .
  6. ^ Wodehouse (1968) [1966], Plum Pie, chapter 1, pp. 7–8.
  7. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1923], The Inimitable Jeeves, chapter 7, p. 74.
  8. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1923], The Inimitable Jeeves, chapter 7, p. 76.
  9. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1923], The Inimitable Jeeves, chapter 8, p. 79.
  10. ^ Cawthorne (2013), pp. 56–57, 66.
  11. ^ Cawthorne (2013), pp. 67, 70.
  12. ^ a b c Garrison (1991), p. 82.
  13. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1960], Jeeves in the Offing, chapter 20, p. 190.
  14. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Thank You, Jeeves, chapter 17, p. 208.
  15. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1960], Jeeves in the Offing, chapter 1, p. 8.
  16. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1960], Jeeves in the Offing, chapter 10, p. 104.
  17. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Thank You, Jeeves, chapter 1, p. 8.
  18. ^ Morris, J. H. C. (1981). Thank You, Wodehouse. St. Martin's Press. pp. 60–61. ISBN 0-312-79494-0.
  19. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1971], Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 6, p. 59. He is also mentioned in chapter 12.
  20. ^ Taves (2006), p. 176
  21. ^ Taves (2006), pp. 189–198.
  22. ^ "Blandings, Series 2, Throwing Eggs". BBC One. BBC. 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  23. ^ "What Ho, Jeeves!: Part 3: Honoria Glossop". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  24. ^ "What Ho, Jeeves!: 1: Chuffnell Regis". BBC Genome Project. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  25. ^ "Thank You, Jeeves!". LATW. L.A. Theatre Works. 2017. Retrieved 25 February 2018.

Bibliography

  • Cawthorne, Nigel (2013). A Brief Guide to Jeeves and Wooster. Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-78033-824-8.
  • Garrison, Daniel H. (1991) [1989]. Who's Who in Wodehouse (Revised ed.). Constable & Robinson. ISBN 1-55882-087-6.
  • Ring, Tony; Jaggard, Geoffrey (1999). Wodehouse in Woostershire. Porpoise Books. ISBN 1-870-304-19-5.
  • Taves, Brian (2006). P. G. Wodehouse and Hollywood: Screenwriting, Satires and Adaptations. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0786422883.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1923]. The Inimitable Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513681.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1925]. Carry On, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513698.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1930]. Very Good, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513728.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1960]. Jeeves in the Offing (Reprinted ed.). Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513940.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (1968) [1966]. Plum Pie (Reprinted ed.). Pan Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0330022033.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1971]. Much Obliged, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513964.

roderick, glossop, recurring, fictional, character, comic, novels, short, stories, wodehouse, sometimes, referred, nerve, specialist, loony, doctor, prominent, practitioner, psychiatry, wodehouse, works, appearing, several, jeeves, stories, blandings, castle, . Sir Roderick Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the comic novels and short stories of P G Wodehouse Sometimes referred to as a nerve specialist or a loony doctor he is a prominent practitioner of psychiatry in Wodehouse s works appearing in several Jeeves stories and in one Blandings Castle story Sir Roderick GlossopJeeves Blandings Castle characterRoger Brierley as Sir Roderick Glossop right in the television series Jeeves and WoosterFirst appearance Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch 1922 Last appearanceJeeves in the Offing 1960 Created byP G WodehousePortrayed byPaul Whitsun JonesAndrew CruickshankRoger Brierley and othersIn universe informationAliasSwordfishNicknameRoddyGenderMaleOccupationPsychiatristSpouseLady Glossop nee Blatherwick deceased Myrtle Lady ChuffnellChildrenHonoria Glossop daughter Oswald Glossop son RelativesTuppy Glossop nephew NationalityBritish Though he is initially antagonistic towards Bertie Wooster they become friends in later stories Contents 1 Inspiration 2 Life and character 2 1 Relationship with Bertie Wooster 3 Appearances 4 Adaptations 4 1 Television 4 2 Radio 5 See also 6 ReferencesInspiration editThe character of Sir Roderick Glossop was inspired by Dr Henry Crawford MacBryan who operated a psychiatric nursing home in the hamlet of Ditteridge in the parish of Box Wiltshire near Cheney House where the young Wodehouse spent some of his childhood with his aunts 1 Life and character editSir Roderick Glossop is the father of Honoria Glossop and Oswald Glossop He is first married to Lady Glossop a friend of Bertie s Aunt Agatha and later to Lady Chuffnell aunt of Chuffy Lord Chuffnell He went to school with Lord Emsworth who states that Glossop was an unpleasant boy who had a nasty and superior manner 2 Glossop has a pleasant baritone voice and as a penniless medical student sang at smoking concerts 3 His residences are 6b Harley Street and Ditteredge Hall Hampshire 4 He is formally called a nerve specialist or a brain specialist though Bertie thinks of him as a high priced loony doctor 5 Even after they become friends Bertie still refers to Glossop as the eminent loony doctor 6 He is a well known psychiatrist and according to Bertie practically every posh family in the country has called him in at one time or another 7 He is described as serious minded by Bertie Wooster s Aunt Agatha who tells Bertie that Sir Roderick is President of the West London branch of the anti gambling league drinks no wine disapproves of smoking and due to an impaired digestion can only eat simple food She also says that he does not approve of coffee as he considers it the root of half the nerve trouble in the world 8 When Bertie sees Glossop in Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch he describes Glossop as an extraordinarily formidable old bird stating He had a pair of shaggy eyebrows which gave his eyes a piercing look which was not at all the sort of thing a fellow wanted to encounter on an empty stomach He was fairly tall and fairly broad and he had the most enormous head with practically no hair on it which made it seem bigger and much more like the dome of St Paul s I suppose he must have taken about a nine or something in hats Shows what a rotten thing it is to let your brain develop too much 9 In that story Glossop has lunch with Bertie to judge whether or not Bertie is mentally sound and fit to marry Honoria Incidents arise that lead him to render a negative judgment especially when Glossop who strongly dislikes cats is surprised by three cats in Bertie s flat This incident is often recounted in later stories with the number of cats being exaggerated as twenty three In Bingo and the Little Woman Glossop corroborates a claim that Bertie is mentally unsound These stories appear in The Inimitable Jeeves 10 He forbids the marriage between Bertie s friend Charles Biffy Biffen and his daughter Honoria in The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy much to Biffy s relief He also appears in Without the Option Both stories are collected in Carry On Jeeves 11 In Jeeves and the Yule tide Spirit in Very Good Jeeves he is the unintended victim of a prank when Bertie punctures his hot water bottle In this story Glossop mentions that he is nervous about fires 12 In Thank You Jeeves he has been a widower for two years and wants to marry Myrtle Lady Chuffnell 12 Glossop obtains the use of Chuffnell Hall as a clinic funded by J Washburn Stoker 3 In Jeeves in the Offing he pretends to be a butler at Brinkley Court named Swordfish the name being suggested by Bobbie Wickham in order to surreptitiously observe one of the guests Wilbert Cream and judge his sanity 12 It is also stated in this novel that Glossop still runs the clinic at Chuffnell Regis and that Myrtle has become Lady Glossop suggesting that they are married 13 Glossop is mentioned in the last Jeeves short story Jeeves and the Greasy Bird Outside the Jeeves canon Glossop appears in the Blandings Castle and Uncle Fred novel Uncle Fred in the Springtime in which he is impersonated by Pongo Twistleton s Uncle Fred at Blandings Castle In Cocktail Time he is a member of the Demosthenes Club which is situated immediately opposite the Drones Club and is briefly seen at the Demosthenes Relationship with Bertie Wooster edit Though they are not friendly towards each other in the early stories Glossop bonds with Bertie in Thank You Jeeves 1934 when they both have to endure going about the countryside wearing blackface As Bertie tells Jeeves From now on there will always be a knife and fork for Bertram at the Glossop lair and the same for Roddy chez Bertram 14 Inconsistencies in the relationship between Bertie and Glossop arise in the later novel Jeeves in the Offing 1960 as they do not seem to be on terms of friendship in the beginning of the story When Bertie learns his Aunt Dahlia is going to have lunch with Glossop Bertie states that Glossop was a man I would not have cared to lunch with myself 15 However they become friends in Jeeves in the Offing after they bond over their realization that they each stole biscuits from the school headmaster s study as children They start addressing each other as Bertie and Roddy 16 Notably in the 1965 short story Jeeves and the Greasy Bird Bertie tells Jeeves that he and Roddy are good friends citing the ordeals they shared in Thank You Jeeves 17 Sir Roderick has not yet married Lady Chuffnell in this story To explain why Bertie and Sir Roderick are not already friends at the start of Jeeves in the Offing Wodehouse scholar J H C Morris suggested that Bertie and Sir Roderick had an undisclosed quarrel sometime after Thank You Jeeves and before Jeeves in the Offing implying that Jeeves and the Greasy Bird occurs before this quarrel 18 Bertie continues to regard Sir Roderick Glossop as a friend in Much Obliged Jeeves 1971 He describes Roddy as one of his leading pals 19 Appearances editRoderick Glossop appears in The Inimitable Jeeves 1923 Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch 1922 Carry On Jeeves 1925 The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy 1924 Without the Option 1925 Very Good Jeeves 1930 Jeeves and the Yule tide Spirit 1927 Thank You Jeeves 1934 Uncle Fred in the Springtime 1939 Jeeves in the Offing 1960 He is mentioned in several stories including The Inimitable Jeeves 1923 Bingo and the Little Woman 1922 Cocktail Time 1958 Plum Pie 1966 Jeeves and the Greasy Bird 1965 A Pelican at Blandings 1969 Much Obliged Jeeves 1971 Adaptations editTelevision edit In the 1965 1967 television series The World of Wooster Sir Roderick Glossop was portrayed by Paul Whitsun Jones 20 In the 1990 1993 television series Jeeves and Wooster Glossop was portrayed in three episodes by Roger Brierley in series 1 and 2 and once by Philip Locke in series 4 21 Unlike in the original stories Sir Roderick separates from his first wife and is not a widower He goes to New York where he becomes engaged to his American assistant Myrtle Snap but quickly finds her to be domineering and leaves her He also develops a new treatment plan which he calls the Glossop Method and treats Lord Bittlesham In the 2013 2014 television series Blandings he was portrayed by Geoffrey McGivern in series 2 episode 1 Throwing Eggs 22 Radio edit In the 1973 1981 radio drama series What Ho Jeeves Sir Roderick Glossop was voiced by Andrew Cruickshank in an adaptation of The Inimitable Jeeves 23 and by John Graham in an adaptation of Thank You Jeeves 24 Guy Siner voiced Sir Roderick Glossop in the 1998 L A Theatre Works radio adaptation of Thank You Jeeves 25 See also editList of Jeeves characters an alphabetical list of Jeeves characters List of P G Wodehouse characters in the Jeeves stories a categorized outline of Jeeves characters List of Jeeves and Wooster characters a list of characters in the television seriesReferences editNotes Dakin Paul Sir Roderick Glossop Wodehouse s eminent loony doctor Hektoen International Journal Hektoen Institute of Medicine Retrieved 3 January 2018 Bennett P M 24 December 1983 Great doctors in English literature Sir Roderick Glossop Br Med J Clin Res Ed 287 6409 1962 1964 doi 10 1136 bmj 287 6409 1962 PMC 1550215 PMID 6418284 a b Cawthorne 2013 pp 222 223 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 102 104 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Thank You Jeeves chapter 1 p 13 Wodehouse 1968 1966 Plum Pie chapter 1 pp 7 8 Wodehouse 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves chapter 7 p 74 Wodehouse 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves chapter 7 p 76 Wodehouse 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves chapter 8 p 79 Cawthorne 2013 pp 56 57 66 Cawthorne 2013 pp 67 70 a b c Garrison 1991 p 82 Wodehouse 2008 1960 Jeeves in the Offing chapter 20 p 190 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Thank You Jeeves chapter 17 p 208 Wodehouse 2008 1960 Jeeves in the Offing chapter 1 p 8 Wodehouse 2008 1960 Jeeves in the Offing chapter 10 p 104 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Thank You Jeeves chapter 1 p 8 Morris J H C 1981 Thank You Wodehouse St Martin s Press pp 60 61 ISBN 0 312 79494 0 Wodehouse 2008 1971 Much Obliged Jeeves chapter 6 p 59 He is also mentioned in chapter 12 Taves 2006 p 176 Taves 2006 pp 189 198 Blandings Series 2 Throwing Eggs BBC One BBC 2019 Retrieved 24 March 2019 What Ho Jeeves Part 3 Honoria Glossop BBC Genome Project Retrieved 18 November 2017 What Ho Jeeves 1 Chuffnell Regis BBC Genome Project Retrieved 18 November 2017 Thank You Jeeves LATW L A Theatre Works 2017 Retrieved 25 February 2018 Bibliography Cawthorne Nigel 2013 A Brief Guide to Jeeves and Wooster Constable amp Robinson ISBN 978 1 78033 824 8 Garrison Daniel H 1991 1989 Who s Who in Wodehouse Revised ed Constable amp Robinson ISBN 1 55882 087 6 Ring Tony Jaggard Geoffrey 1999 Wodehouse in Woostershire Porpoise Books ISBN 1 870 304 19 5 Taves Brian 2006 P G Wodehouse and Hollywood Screenwriting Satires and Adaptations McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0786422883 Wodehouse P G 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves Reprinted ed Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513681 Wodehouse P G 2008 1925 Carry On Jeeves Reprinted ed Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513698 Wodehouse P G 2008 1930 Very Good Jeeves Reprinted ed Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513728 Wodehouse P G 2008 1960 Jeeves in the Offing Reprinted ed Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513940 Wodehouse P G 1968 1966 Plum Pie Reprinted ed Pan Books Ltd ISBN 978 0330022033 Wodehouse P G 2008 1971 Much Obliged Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513964 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roderick Glossop amp oldid 1217539900, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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