"Never Too Old" is the final episode of the ninth and final series of the British televisionsitcomDad's Army. It was originally broadcast on Sunday, 13 November 1977, the same day of the Remembrance Sunday 1977 Commemorations.
Mrs Fox stops by the church hall in search of Jones, but she is met by Godfrey, who tells her that the rest of the platoon has gone for a march and will not be back for some time. Mrs Fox then tells Godfrey that she was going to call Jones to "put him out of his misery".
When the platoon arrive back, they notice that Jones is missing. Pike and Frazer then reveal that he failed to turn right on the march and just kept walking straight. Jones then arrives late in a very cheerful mood and asks Mainwaring for a private talk. He reveals to Mainwaring and Wilson that he has asked Mrs Fox to marry him and wants Mainwaring's permission to do so. Mainwaring agrees, and Mrs Fox telephones and tells Jones that she will marry him.
At the wedding ceremony, Mainwaring has agreed to give Mrs Fox away and Wilson has agreed to be best man. The reception follows, and Mainwaring is surprised when Wilson turns up in his uniform from the First World War (having been forced to do so by Mrs Pike who has hidden his trousers), revealing he was a captain. Wilson is then surprised when he learns he must toast the matron of honour, Mrs Pike.
A much-needed change of pace is welcome when everyone celebrated the happiness of the wedding, but it is drastically cut short when the Colonel informs Mainwaring of an invasion alert and thinks it may not be a bluff. Jones and Pike are then sent to keep watch at the pier where Mrs Fox comes to meet them. While Jones and Mrs Fox are discussing their future, Mainwaring and the rest of the platoon arrive with a bottle of champagne to drink to Jones' good health. Hodges interrupts them and tells them that the invasion alert was a false alarm and the stand down order had been given half an hour earlier. Hodges claims it is just as well, because Mainwaring and his platoon would be "no good" against real soldiers. After Hodges leaves, Mainwaring, Wilson, Jones, Fraser, Pike and Godfrey all agree that "no-one is getting past them" and that there are "hundreds of men just like them" who are willing to fight for their freedom.
In the end, Wilson suggests that they make a toast to the Home Guard. Mainwaring agrees and the platoon raise their glasses as they turn towards the camera to say in unison: "To Britain's Home Guard".
The principal cast's wives and girlfriends who held Equity cards appeared as wedding guests during this episode's wedding scene.[1]
Deaths
John Laurie died on 23 June 1980 aged 83, Arthur Lowe died on 15 April 1982 aged 66, John Le Mesurier died on 15 November 1983 aged 71, Arnold Ridley died on 12 March 1984 aged 88, Clive Dunn died on 6 November 2012 aged 92 and Ian Lavender died on 2 February 2024 aged 77.
As of 2024, there are no surviving Dad's Army principal cast members.
In a 2000 interview with writer/historianGraham McCann, series co-writer David Croft recalled that final day of filming "was a very emotional evening. The production gallery were unusually quiet throughout the recording, and, as the end drew near, there were plenty of people with lumps in their throats.'[1]
This episode was rebroadcast on BBC One on Monday, 8 May 1995, as part of the programming celebrating the 50th anniversary of VE Day.[2]
Reception
"Never Too Old" attracted an average of 12,524,000 viewers, and scored an Audience Appreciation Index of 77.[1] The Audience Research Report for the episode was highly positive: 'It was felt that all the characters had been beautifully portrayed [...] The production, too, was highly praised for bringing out a convincing sense of period and for paying great attention to detail. Altogether, it was generally agreed that the programme had always been magnificent, that the cast could not have been better chosen and it was sad to see the series come to an end.'[1]
Paul Fiddick, writing for The Guardian the day after broadcast on 14 November 1977, wrote that the series was 'one of the jewels of TV comedy'. He went on to write: 'It is bound to be remembered for sentiment and nostalgia, and it's made the most of those, but that makes it all the more necessary to record, as the absolutely final credits roll, that it has given us finer farces, straighter faces, richer characterisation, and a deal more social observation, than most of the most pretentious dramas, and always kept us guessing which would turn up next. [...] It will be missed.'[1]