21 February (1991-02-21) – 4 April 1991 (1991-04-04)
Doctor in the House is a collective name for seven separate British and Australian television comedy series inspired by the "Doctor" books of English author Richard Gordon. [1] The books had also previously been adapted as a series of cinema films. The television versions were less directly based on the Gordon books than was the film series, but were instead half-hour sitcoms chronicling the misadventures of a group of medical students, and their later checkered careers as doctors.
The same theme music — "Bond Street Parade" by Alan Tew — was used for all of the "Doctor" television series, including the Australian series Doctor Down Under.
Characters
The television series employed a set of characters completely different from the original book series (the film and radio series used the characters from the books).
Michael Upton (Barry Evans), an easy-going, serious and somewhat anxious son of a doctor who is essentially following in his father's footsteps. Upton was the central character of the first two series, but Barry Evans left the show following Doctor at Large.
Duncan Waring (Robin Nedwell), Michael's best friend and roommate. He is just as bright as Upton, but far less serious in his studies, although he generally does well. After Barry Evans left the show, Nedwell returned as Waring to become the focus of the show. Duncan Waring appears in all of the series except Doctor at Large, and is the main protagonist of the last five.
Dick Stuart-Clark (Geoffrey Davies), a thirtyish student who deliberately fails his courses in order to take advantage of his late grandmother's will, which bequeathed him a large sum of money for each year he is in medical school. He later becomes an anesthetist who prefers partying and chasing women to his medical duties. Dick Stuart-Clark is the only character present throughout all seven series. Davies and Nedwell essentially became a double act in many of the later episodes of the franchise.
Paul Collier (George Layton), a less competent student and friend of Upton and Waring. His character left the series after Doctor in Charge, but Layton continued to write scripts for the subsequent series.
Lawrence Bingham (Richard O'Sullivan), a brilliant, but arrogant and irritating doctor who believes he is the best of all possible doctors. He marries the equally obnoxious Dr. Mary Parsons (Helen Fraser) in the series Doctor in Charge. His need to continually impress her is the source of much comedy. O'Sullivan departed after Doctor in Charge to star in Man About the House
The main antagonist is the well-respected and ill-tempered surgeon Professor (later Sir) Geoffrey Loftus (Ernest Clark). Many of the plot lines revolve around the students' attempts to meet his demanding expectations. Another hospital official with whom the students have contact is the Dean (Ralph Michael), who is more interested in the hospital's Rugby union team than he is in medicine.
Other characters in the early episodes, some of whom later reappeared for single episodes in subsequent series, include:
Danny Hooley (Jonathan Lynn), an Irish medical student who is a friend of Waring, Collier, Upton and Stuart-Clark. He later returns as an 'out-of-work doctor' in the Doctor in Charge episode "Should Auld Acquaintance be Forgot?"
Huw Evans (Martin Shaw), a Welsh medical student, another friend of the four students. He reappears as a very nervous expectant father in the episode "Mother and Father Doing Well".
Dave Briddock (Simon Cuff), another friend of the students. He spends part of the series living with Helga, his Swedish girlfriend.
Guest stars
Notable guest stars throughout the run of the series and its sequels included:
Tenth series (7 episodes) broadcast from 21 February to 4 April 1991
Writers
Unusually for a British situation comedy series Doctor in the House did not depend on a single writer or partnership to write the scripts. The writers who worked on the series are often better known for their other work. Monty Python's Graham Chapman and John Cleese and The GoodiesGraeme Garden and Bill Oddie were among the regular writers. Chapman and Garden both trained as doctors. Graeme Garden also appeared as a "Television Presenter" in the episode "Doctor on the Box".
While keeping mostly to the conventions of the situation comedy genre, the shows occasionally stretched the boundaries of what was seen on television. One script by Cleese called for Michael Upton to rip away a woman's dress in a single movement (she was hiding a key he needed in her cleavage). Another featured a stripper collapsing on stage mid-act with suspected pneumonia. A script by Garden and Oddie included a scene played out using cartoon drawings of the performers, in the style of a teenage romance magazine, while the actors voiced their lines.
The building used as the fictional St. Swithin's Hospital is, in fact, the old Wanstead Hospital (based in Wanstead, London, E11). A number of years ago it was converted into a residential building and is now called Clock Court. It is a listed building based on Hermon Hill, within the London Borough of Redbridge. Before becoming a hospital it was an orphanage for children whose parents were lost at sea, and the architecture of the building depicts images of boats carved into the intricate stone. A number of celebrities are rumoured to have lived there over the years including the actor Gary Lucy (The Bill), and Heart FM radio DJ Paul Hollins.
International telecasts
Australia
The show proved to be very popular in Australia, where the series Doctor Down Under was filmed and based.
North America
During the 1970s and 1980s, the five London Weekend Television series were syndicated in the United States and Canada by Group W Productions. The umbrella title Doctor in the House was used for all shows, and episodes from different series were sometimes shown out of sequence. The episodes appeared on both commercial and Public Broadcasting Service stations.
DVD Release
The five London Weekend Television series were released complete on a Grenada Network 20-disc box set entitled Doctor on the Box in 2009. As of 2024, the set is available only from third-party resellers.
Notes
British doctors study medicine at the undergraduate level, so the characters were new to independent living and university life.
Ernest Clark, who played the part of Professor Loftus in the television series, also appeared in the original film version of Doctor in the House. He also played the part of Prof. Sir Loftus' identical twin brother, Capt. Norman Loftus, heading the cruise ship in Doctor at Sea.