"Tee Off, Mr. Bean" is the twelfth episode of the British television series Mr. Bean, produced by Tiger Aspect Productions and Thames Television for Central Independent Television. It was first broadcast on ITV on 20 September 1995.[1]
"Tee Off, Mr. Bean" | |
---|---|
Mr. Bean episode | |
Episode no. | Episode 12 |
Directed by | John Birkin |
Written by | Robin Driscoll Rowan Atkinson |
Original air date | 20 September 1995[1] |
Running time | 25:25 |
Guest appearances | |
Marilyn Finlay David Battley Grant Masters Jacqueline Defferary | |
Plot
editPart One
editMr. Bean goes to the launderette where he experiences a series of mishaps. Firstly, he realises that the cost of washing has increased from £2 to £3, so he takes out another one pound coin from a specially designed envelope in his trousers. A black belt thug (Grant Masters) arrives and rudely pushes Bean away into the next front-load washing machine. Bean then proceeds to put his laundry, which consists of some shirts, a inflatable pool toy, a lampshade, his Teddy, a welcome mat, two oversized fuzzy dice and a few pairs of underpants (each labelled with a different day of the week), into the washing machine.
Bean realises he only put five pairs of underwear in the machine and assumes the missing pair is Wednesday's, only to remember it's today, meaning he’s wearing them. He changes behind a partition but mixes up his trousers with a lady's skirt (Jacqueline Defferary). Wearing the skirt, Bean walks by the thug who playfully jeers him when he figures it out. Bean then spots a pair of underwear on the floor labeled Sunday, realizing the missing pair he was supposed to put it and not Wednesday's. He ponders retrieving the other pair, but has no choice but to put them on as the machine’s still running. However, the thug steps on them as he tries to put them on.
Finally, having had enough, Bean decides to get revenge by switching out the man's softener with a cup of black coffee from the vending machine. This works, as the man does not register this while pouring it in, but when he gets suspicious and sniffs the cup, Bean is forced to drink his cup to make it appear as if he is drinking coffee. Later, the thug berates the launderette's manager as his martial arts gear have come out all stained and discoloured from the coffee.
After retrieving his mutated washing (including a shrunken Teddy) from the clothes dryer, Bean attempts to retrieve his trousers from the lady's wash by climbing into a dryer, just as she returns. Not noticing Bean is inside, the lady closes the door and turns the machine on, resulting in Bean spinning inside the dryer along with the clothes.
Part Two
editBean heads to a golf course to play a game of mini golf. He scores a hole in one on the first hole, but on the second hole, he hits the ball onto the open grass. The owner (David Battley) orders him to play properly by using the club to get the ball back to the course and not with his hands. After accidentally hitting the ball outside the golf course, Bean goes on a very elaborate journey as the ball ends up on a bus, inside a lady's shopping bag (she is later seen explaining the scene to a police officer), on a boy's ice cream cone, up the exhaust pipe of a Proton Saga (causing the engine to explode), down a drain, into a litter bin, into a rubbish collection vehicle and finally onto the village green.
When Bean attempts to hitchhike back to the golf course, the first car that drives in is the blue Reliant, which Bean ignores although the unseen driver opens the door for him. When another car pulls up, Bean cuts out the patch of turf the golf ball landed on with a penknife in order to allow him to return to the course without physically touching the ball.
As the sun sets and the ending credits roll, Bean makes it back to the course just as it is closing for the night and finally rolls the ball into the second hole, before leaving with a final score of 3,427 strokes.[2]
Cast
edit- Rowan Atkinson – Mr. Bean
- Grant Masters – launderette bully
- Jacqueline Defferary – launderette woman
- David Battley – golf course owner
- Marilyn Finlay – woman driver
Production
editThe opening featured a new recording of the choral theme, performed by the Choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. Act 1 was recorded at Teddington Studios before a live audience. The music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is played in Act 1 too.
The Vauxhall Omega car that stops to give Bean a lift has the (already established) theme tune to The Vicar of Dibley (another Richard Curtis comedy) playing on the stereo. The music was also composed by Howard Goodall. The golf course is close to Boulters Lock in Maidenhead – just south of the junction between Ray Mead Road and Derek Road. The Village Green is in Littlewick Green near Maidenhead – also seen in the episode where Teddy enters the Pet Show. The shops where Mr. Bean attempts to putt his ball out of a lady's shopping bag are located on Shifford Crescent, Maidenhead.
Despite the village green and the lady's shopping bag incident being filmed in Maidenhead, Bean was seen boarding a South London 405 bus when his golf ball bounces into it. This bus route runs from Redhill to West Croydon station and is many miles away from Maidenhead, even though the filming location for this scene is on Ray Mead Road, Maidenhead.
References
edit- ^ a b "Mr Bean — Timeline". Tiger Aspect Productions Ltd. Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
- ^ Nutters with Putters. Prints of Pirates. 2008. pp. 40–. ISBN 978-0-9560799-0-9.
In "Tee off Mr Bean", Rowan Atkinson's character gets a hole-in-one on the first and 3,427 on the second.