William and his friends constantly get into mischief, defying adults and Violet Elizabeth Bott despite the trouble it causes, showing that boys will be boys.William and his friends constantly get into mischief, defying adults and Violet Elizabeth Bott despite the trouble it causes, showing that boys will be boys.William and his friends constantly get into mischief, defying adults and Violet Elizabeth Bott despite the trouble it causes, showing that boys will be boys.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination total
Browse episodes
Photos
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaHugh Cross, playing Mr. Brown, had previously played Robert Brown in an earlier movie version of the stories.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Arena: Blondes: Diana Dors (1999)
Featured review
Over the years I've read all of Richmal Crompton's 38 William books over and over again, some of the 1950's radio scripts, heard all of Martin Jarvis's wonderful audio books, seen all of the films and most of the many TV series, so here's what I think. This particular ITV (London Weekend Television) series of Just William was conceived, executed and broadcast at just the right time - 26 episodes in total shown at Sunday tea-times in 2 series during 1977/8. For my money Adrian Dannatt as William, Bonnie Langford as Violet Elizabeth and Diana Dors as Mrs. Bott (to only name a few) were perfectly cast, the best there ever was. The rest of the cast were uniformly marvellous too, in fact cast and crew entered into the spirit of the thing and it looked like all enjoyed themselves.
The sweet little girl in white (1/4), first broadcast 27.02.77: This is where the Botts arrive and it's immediately arranged that William and Violet Elizabeth shall be friends and go away and play. The Outlaws (William, Ginger, Douglas and Henry) try to play Red Indians but just can't cope with the irrepressible ever-lisping VE and try to run away from her with alarming results. An absolute classic, bettered only by the original story.
Two good turns (2/11), first broadcast 8.1.78: Rigidly boring Uncle Frederick comes to stay along with his endless memories, mainly of his stamp collection. One of the sub-plots involved William's glamorous sister Ethel being unintentionally slandered by him as a boozy thief all because she had a cold. Hilarious stuff, RC surely would have approved!
These 2 episodes were recorded only 9 months apart, but Dannatt had grown noticeably larger in the latter, and although he still looked and sounded like William he obviously couldn't continue much longer getting away as an 11 year old. All in all it was an amazing achievement, from a time when UK family TV was generally dire, depicting a time long gone on a minimal budget successfully and getting the stories over almost perfectly. The BBC had another go in the '90's, threw more money at it and got the period right but not the characters. Maybe they should have used Thomas Henry's original illustrations from the books as a guide instead of using their own more expensive ideas. Why on Earth isn't the whole series out on DVD (2006)?
9/10
The sweet little girl in white (1/4), first broadcast 27.02.77: This is where the Botts arrive and it's immediately arranged that William and Violet Elizabeth shall be friends and go away and play. The Outlaws (William, Ginger, Douglas and Henry) try to play Red Indians but just can't cope with the irrepressible ever-lisping VE and try to run away from her with alarming results. An absolute classic, bettered only by the original story.
Two good turns (2/11), first broadcast 8.1.78: Rigidly boring Uncle Frederick comes to stay along with his endless memories, mainly of his stamp collection. One of the sub-plots involved William's glamorous sister Ethel being unintentionally slandered by him as a boozy thief all because she had a cold. Hilarious stuff, RC surely would have approved!
These 2 episodes were recorded only 9 months apart, but Dannatt had grown noticeably larger in the latter, and although he still looked and sounded like William he obviously couldn't continue much longer getting away as an 11 year old. All in all it was an amazing achievement, from a time when UK family TV was generally dire, depicting a time long gone on a minimal budget successfully and getting the stories over almost perfectly. The BBC had another go in the '90's, threw more money at it and got the period right but not the characters. Maybe they should have used Thomas Henry's original illustrations from the books as a guide instead of using their own more expensive ideas. Why on Earth isn't the whole series out on DVD (2006)?
9/10
- Spondonman
- Apr 7, 2006
- Permalink
- How many seasons does Just William have?Powered by Alexa
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content