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#tuppy glossop
skippiefritz · 8 days
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you guys will never guess what my new hyperfixation is
(designs liable to change, ik its unrealistic for a british person to be so pink but yk, character design)
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makiitabaki · 3 months
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ModernAU!Bertie this, ModernAU!Jeeves that...
But why do we forget about ModernAU!Tuppy? 😔
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bloomfish · 26 days
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iconic tuppy glossop moment
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phantomstatistician · 2 months
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Fandom: Jeeves
Sample Size: 1,173 stories
Source: AO3
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kermit-p-hob-brainrot · 7 months
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Every time tuppy appears on screen I have vile hatred consume me. He deserves to die
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jeevesbattle · 8 months
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Jeeves and Wooster Showdown
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Series 1, Episode 1 - Jeeves Takes Charge
Under pressure from his aunt Agatha, Bertie seems doomed to head to the altar with Honoria Glossop. But his faithful servant Jeeves concocts an ingenious plan to ensure that Bertie is spared from the horror of matrimony.
Series 1, Episode 2 - Tuppy and the Terrier
While Bertie decides to propose to the frivolous Bobbie, his friend Tuppy embarks on an affair with an unsuitable opera singer, despite Aunt Dahlia's disapproval. Soon, Jeeves has Bertie singing to the rafters to land Tuppy in hot water.
Series 1, Episode 3 - The Purity of the Turf
Lord and Lady Wickhammersley invite Bertie to Twing Hall, where he attends a village fete with his friend "Bingo" Little. Although Lady Wickhammersley is adamantly opposed to gambling, Bertie and Bingo bet on some of the games, forcing Jeeves to save them.
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goopyboy420 · 2 months
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Call me Bertie Wooster the way she makes my tuppy glossop.
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funnuraba · 20 days
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Modern Wodehouse (or "Jeeves get iPad")
-Ukridge canceled
-Jeeves briefly wrenched from Bertie's employment when the startup he was hired through goes belly up
-Spode super-canceled
-Ten women go viral for exposing "Tuppy from London"
-Stiffy dumps Stinker for refusing to try pegging. (Bertie: Trying jeggings, did she say? JEEVES: No, sir. BERTIE: Ah. Speaking of jeggings-- JEEVES: No, sir.) Jeeves eventually reveals a Bible verse that convinces Stinker pegging can be a god-honoring experience
-Ukridge re-canceled
-Lady Constance furious with entire younger Threepwood generation after finding their groupchat where they have a running tournament to see who can bait her into saying the most unhinged thing about Mr BaXtEr
-Mr Mulliner and the Oldest Member have competing 132-part TikTok stories
- Stilton threatens Bertie's life for saying "all coppers are blighters"
-Rodney Spelvin gives up on his Timothy Bobbin poetry after entering a charity livestream of Winnie the Pooh's Home Run Derby
-Ukridge debuts 4th, uncanceled alt account; Corky exposes him to Gawker
-George Cyril Wellbeloved accuses Psmith of cosplaying socialism and Psmith deflects by explaining polyamory to him
-Lady Constance takes Lord Emsworth's iPad away because he won't stop looking at his livestream of the Empress sleeping
-Sir Roderick Glossop recommends Bertie LSD, first combatively and later as a friend. Jeeves starts quoting Reefer Madness around the home ("It has been observed that if you do drugs, sir, you go to Hell before you die." "And who observed that, Jeeves?" "The late Captain Lou Albano, sir, speaking in his capacity as Super Mario.")
-Rosie M. Banks writes billionaire CEO Marine shifter omegaverse HEA romance; Lady Constance considers inviting her to Blandings but then actually picks up a book and is immensely disturbed by their taboo themes of marrying poor people
-Aunt Dahlia was really into the DIY zine scene and refuses to take Milady's Boudoir digital
-Bingo in hot water after throwing little Algernon's iPad into the fireplace over a Baby Shark incident
-Literally everyone assumes Baxter and Lady Constance are having an affair, but finally Julia hires someone to hack their Facebook DMs, and it's just the dryest, most autistically formal exchanges any two human beings have ever produced and Julia is like 😑 Connie... only you would pick a man so stuffy that neither of you even thinks of having an affair in the middle of your affair
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As Flies To Wanton Boys
read it on AO3 at https://ift.tt/89YaERv " by sandwichsapphic Suddenly Bertie’s a very selfish person. Suddenly he doesn’t want to think about a Games where he didn’t call out to Jeeves. Maybe this is all there is to their lives now: a tiny damp cave, bloodied bandages, and love. Maybe it’s like that allegory. He’d ask Jeeves when he awakens. For now, he continues petting Jeeves’s sleeping head, watching his chest slowly rise and fall, matching the lilt. If he sings something, he hopes he’s quiet enough. -- To the Capitol, the Hunger Games are an honour, a spark of hope that must be contained, a spectacle. To the Districts, they are a death sentence, a televised execution in a manufactured setting. But for the first time in history, for Bertie and Jeeves to find and keep each other, they have to be more than that. They have to be a performance. They have to be a love story. Words: 57098, Chapters: 23/23, Language: English Fandoms: Jeeves - P. G. Wodehouse, Jeeves & Wooster Rating: Mature Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death Categories: M/M Characters: Reginald Jeeves, Bertram "Bertie" Wooster, Honoria Glossop, Hildebrand "Tuppy" Glossop, Dahlia Travers, Roderick Spode, Roberta "Bobbie" Wickham, Claude Cattermole "Catsmeat" Potter-Pirbright, Agatha Gregson, George "Boko" Fittleworth Relationships: Reginald Jeeves/Bertram "Bertie" Wooster, Honoria Glossop & Bertram "Bertie" Wooster Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Hunger Games Setting, 74th Hunger Games, welcome welcome, rated m for games typical violence, Hurt/Comfort, jeeves and bertie are basically katniss and peeta, take a wild guess who's who, honoria and bertie bonding, Angst, copious king lear references, because all bertie and jeeves do is flirt through literary quotes " read it on AO3 at https://archiveofourown.org/works/52028608
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‘Jeeves,’ I said. ‘A rummy communication has arrived. From Mr. Glossop.’
‘Indeed, sir?’
‘I will read it to you. Handed in at Upper Bleaching. Message runs as follows:
‘When you come tomorrow, bring my football boots. Also, if humanly possible, Irish water-spaniel. Urgent. Regards. Tuppy.’
‘What do you make of that, Jeeves?’
‘As I interpret the document, sir, Mr. Glossop wishes you, when you come tomorrow, to bring his football boots. Also, if humanly possible, an Irish water-spaniel. He hints that the matter is urgent, and sends his regards.’
"The ordeal of young Tuppy", P. G. Wodehouse
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I've watched the first two seasons of this show without seeing many (if any) actors I recognize from other things, and now, in the last episode of the second season, Tuppy Glossop just showed up?
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mywingsareonwheels · 3 years
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TIL that Bertie Wooster’s doorman is called Jarvis
- this would explain everything about Jarvis’s patience with Howard Stark. He’s had to deal with a) Bertie, b) Bertie’s friends, c) BERTIE’S AUNTS on a regular basis. Being Howard’s gentleman’s-gentleman is a doddle by comparison.
- oh Gods, now I’m imagining Bertie meeting Peggy.
- oh dear.
- Bertie will obviously be middle-aged by this point. This does not mean he won’t make a fool of himself.
- worse, Tuppy is there. He will *definitely* make a fool of himself.
- both Bertie and Tuppy fall in love with Peggy and decide that a) at least one of them has a chance, b) an appropriate response to this situation is to engage in various shenanigans against Steve.
- Bucky suddenly finds himself whenever they’re on leave in London needing to thwart a number of ludicrous schemes and practical jokes so that Steve never finds out what’s going on. All while pining after Steve himself.
- Jeeves ends up assisting Bucky with this while pretending to help Bertie, and they develop a profound mutual respect.
- Falsworth turns out to be a distant relative of Bertie’s. His loyalty is nevertheless to Steve, and he ends up resolving the whole situation by appealing to Bertie’s better nature. Tuppy’s solo efforts at shenanigans are much easier to thwart.
- Peggy notices quite a lot of this but decides it’s beneath her dignity to get involved.
- Steve notices absolutely nothing.
- after the war, Peggy and Jarvis learn the full story from Falsworth. And many years later, Jarvis ends up telling Howard’s young son about it whenever the kid needs cheering up.
- which is how one evening when the Avengers are all having dinner together Tony manages to render Steve speechless and Bucky mortified by telling the tale of “how Sergeant Barnes once saved Captain America from having his hot water bottle punctured in the middle of the night”.
- Natasha is never, ever, ever letting Bucky or Steve live this down.
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makiitabaki · 2 months
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bloomfish · 26 days
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u don't need to know anything about these guys just pick based on silliness of name
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adrunkgiraffe · 3 years
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New chapter of Newly Minted Relations is out! Tuppy Glossop has no rights! Honoria tries to get rights! Agatha should lose them! All is setting up for a tense meeting!
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wotwotleigh-prime · 4 years
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Jeeves and Wooster vs. Plum, Part 2
S1e2: Tuppy and the Terrier
The second episode of Jeeves and Wooster is again based on three of the short stories, all of which were eventually published in Very Good, Jeeves: “Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit,” “Jeeves and the Song of Songs,” and “Episode of the Dog McIntosh.” There are also elements borrowed from “Jeeves and the Kid Clementina,” which was published in the same book.
One general difference I wanted to mention before I go on is that the TV episodes are not arranged in the same order as the stories and novels. For the most part, it doesn’t really matter, but it does lend a slightly different feeling to the development of events and the relationships between the characters. For example, Bertie spent a lot more time early in the stories bouncing around in America, whereas most of that takes place later in the show. These particular stories take place after most of Bertie’s American adventures in the book!timeline.
Anyway, let’s look at how these episodes stack up against their corresponding stories!
There are a few general changes here that make a great deal of sense. For instance, the three main stories involved here seem to take place over a longer period of time in the book (maybe a few months), whereas in the episode they are compressed into a few days, or maybe a couple of weeks at the most. The order of events is somewhat changed to help the stories fit together more seamlessly, too. For instance, McIntosh is with Bertie from the very start of the episode, meaning he’s there through the events of both “Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit” and “Episode of the Dog McIntosh.” Bertie also first meets Cora when he’s at Bobbie Wickham’s country house at the start of the episode.
Also, as the title suggests, “Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit” was originally a Christmas story, not that the Christmas setting really matters that much. The only thing that’s really lost is Jeeves’s brutally chipper “Merry Christmas, sir!” when he greets Bertie in the morning after he’s spent a terrible night sleeping in an armchair post-water bottle incident. Oh Jeeves, you magnificent bastard.
But there are several other big changes to the events of “Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit” that I really don’t get. First of all, Bertie’s rival in the water bottle war was originally Tuppy Glossop, not Barmy Fotheringay-Phipps. Bertie had sworn ~*~*~HIDEOUS REVENGE~*~*~ against Tuppy for betting him he couldn’t swing across the ropes and rings above the Drone’s swimming pool, which ended with Bertie being forced to drop into the pool in full evening attire when he found that Tuppy had looped back the last ring. This was a long-running joke in the short stories and novels, and something for which Bertie never completely forgave Tuppy.
I’m not sure why they chose to change this, because A) it’s hilarious, and B) Tuppy’s right there the whole time in the episode! I guess they just wanted an excuse to feature Barmy? Anyway, this also necessitated giving Bertie a reason to get back at Barmy, hence the extended golf sequence at the beginning where Barmy shows up Bertie in front of Bobbie Wickham.
Also, in the story, Jeeves was particularly salty because they had been planning a Christmas vacation to Monte Carlo, which Bertie canceled in order to visit Bobbie Wickham’s family home. Jeeves’s big goal, other than souring Bertie on Bobbie, was to get the Monte Carlo vacation back on track so he could chill at the casino. Instead, we have a more low-key disagreement over Bertie’s hideous golf trousers, which is an element borrowed from “Jeeves and the Kid Clementina.”
Finally, the original victim of all that water bottle piercing was Sir Roderick Glossop, who was replaced with the new characters Prof. and Madame Cluj. Again, I’m not sure why this was changed. In the short story, the whole incident reinforced Sir Roderick’s notion that Bertie was insane, so Jeeves’s gambit was a double whammy against two marital threats (Honoria and Bobbie).
There are also, as in many of the TV episodes, little touches here and there that seem calculated to make Bertie seem a little dumber. For instance, in “Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit,” Bertie is the one who uses the word espièglerie in reference to Bobbie, not Jeeves (although, as usual, he second-guesses himself about whether it’s the right word).
Otherwise, the events of the episode are fairly similar to those of the stories in question. One difference is that Bertie had already met Blumenfield and son in the short stories, in the early story “Jeeves and the Chump Cyril.” (This story is adapted in the season 3 episode “Introduction on Broadway.”) Bertie is alarmed at the prospect of meeting Blumenfield Jr. again. He’s afraid the kid will tell him he has a face like a fish just like he did to Cyril, in which case Bertie fears he will not be able to resist “doing his upper maxillary a bit of no good.” (“Perhaps the young gentleman will not notice that you have a face like a fish, sir,” says Jeeves. Harsh, bro.) It is for this reason that Bertie takes off during the lunch and isn’t around to stop Bobbie from giving away McIntosh.
The sequence where Bertie witnesses Jeeves giving Blumenfield Sr. the McIntosh clone and freaks out is also a change from the story. Originally, Jeeves explains what he has done after the fact. It’s a solid change, IMO, because that scene is hilarious.
It’s also worth noting that Bobbie comes off more sympathetic in the original story than she does in the TV episode. She actually apologizes to Bertie for troubling him with the lunch at his apartment, and, even though she’s the one who gives the dog away in the first place, she ultimately helps Bertie with the scheme to get him back. Bertie is also sympathetic to her desire to make a hit with Blumenfield, and doesn’t seem to hold a lot of ill-will regarding the water bottle prank.
One more minor note: In “Episode of the Dog McIntosh,” Bertie makes reference to the song “I Lift Up My Finger and I Say Tweet Tweet,” which Bertie performs in the season 3 episode “Right Ho, Jeeves.”
The segment with Cora Bellinger and everyone in the universe singing Sonny Boy is a solid adaptation of “Jeeves and the Song of Songs” with few differences that are really worth mentioning. There are changes, but they’re pretty minor. I am sad that we miss out on this particularly Extra monologue from Bertie after Tuppy’s performance of Sonny Boy, though:
“’Come, Jeeves,’ I said, and those standing by wondered, no doubt, what had caused that clean-cut face to grow so pale and set. ‘I have been subjected to a nervous strain unparalleled since the days of the early Martyrs. I have lost pounds in weight and permanently injured my entire system. I have gone through an ordeal, the recollection of which will make me wake up screaming in the night for months to come. And all for nothing. Let us go.’” 
@cuddyclothes (I will cross-post this and Part 1 to G_S later!)
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