Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Thake and the French Widow

Beachcomber learns the gregarious toff has lost his heart - and most of his valuables - to a bewitching Parisian femme fatale. Read by Leslie Phillips.

Written by J.B. Morton.

Beachcomber receives word from Paris that the gregarious toff has lost his heart - and most of his valuables - to a bewitching femme fatale...

In 1924 the writer J.B. Morton adopted the name 'Beachcomber' and began a humorous column in the Daily Express which was to run for over 50 years. Reading about the odd lives of Beachcomber's characters - whether they were nonsensical, puritanical, pompous or simply insane - became part of the ritual of breakfast throughout the land.

A typical example of Beachcomber's gift for creating what G.K. Chesterton described as "a huge thunderous wind of elemental and essential laughter," is Mr Thake.

Out of print since the 1930s, The Adventures of Mr Thake is a collection of letters to Beachcomber, sent home from the calamitous travels abroad of a gentleman of considerably more leisure than sense. Oswald Bletisloe Hattersley Thake is, to be blunt, an upper-class twit.

Described affectionately as "a caricature of his nation" here we have the fascinating spectacle of a Wooster with no Jeeves to rescue him. Whether he is losing his heart to young gold diggers on board the S.S. Lutetia while losing his hat overboard and wondering whether to stop the ship, or being fleeced in the nightclubs of Paris, Thake never quite understands what is happening to him - or why...

Reader: Leslie Phillips

Producer/Abridger: Neil Cargill
A Pier Production for Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4.

15 minutes

Last on

Fri 25 Apr 2014 04:00

Broadcasts

  • Thu 16 Jul 2009 15:30
  • Thu 23 Dec 2010 15:30
  • Thu 24 Apr 2014 11:00
  • Thu 24 Apr 2014 21:00
  • Fri 25 Apr 2014 04:00