Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 282,824 playable programmes from the BBC

A feature film starring Jerry Lewis and Jill St John
Jerry Lewis, top comedy star of the 1950s, plays Raymond Phiffier, a walking disaster area in Tuttle's department store. Raymond is in love with Barbara, unaware that she is heiress to the Tuttle fortune. And neither of them know that Barbara's mother is plotting to break up the romance ...
Contributors
Screenplay By: Frank Tashlin
Screenplay By: Harry Tugend
Directed By: Frank Tashun
Raymond Phiffier: Jerry Lewis
Barbara Tuttle: Jill St John
Phoebe Tuttle: Agnes Moorehead
Mr Tuttle: John McGiver
Mr Quimby: Ray Walston
Shirley: Francesca Bellini
Mrs Rothgraber: Nancy Kulp
Lady wrestler: Peggy Nondo
Mattress customer: Mary Treen
Dowager: Isobel Elsom
Cop: Richard Wessel
Gourmet manager: Fritz Feld
Roberts: John Abbott
Smith: Jerry Haisnek

The feature film starring Dinah Sheridan, Jenny Agutter and Bernard Cribbins with William Mervyn, Sally Thomsett, and Gary Warren
'... they were not railway children to begin with ... they were just ordinary suburban children, and they lived with their father and mother in an ordinary redbrickfronted villa ...'
E. Nesbit 's famous story is brought to the screen in Lionel Jeffries ' enchanting film which perfectly captures the magic of the book.
Contributors
Screenplay By: Lionel Jeffries
Based on the Novel By: E. Nesbit
Produced By: Robert Lynn
Directed By: Lionel Jeffries.
Mother: Dinah Sheridan
Perks: Bernard Cribbins
Old gentleman: William Mervyn
Father: Iain Cuthebertson
Bobbie: Jenny Agutter
Phyllis: Sally Thomsett
Doctor: Peter Bromilow
Ruth: Ann Lancaster
Peter: Gary Warren
Russian: Gordon Whiting
Aunt Emma: Beatrix MacKey
Mrs Perks: Deddie Davies
Bandmaster: David Lodge
Jim: Christopher Witty

BBC One London

About BBC One

BBC One

About this data

While most of the data in the BBC’s Programme Index is drawn from Radio Times and BBC programmes pages, a minority of listings have been compiled using the BBC’s own historical documents and early BBC listings printed in contemporary newspapers.