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Richard 'Bingo' Little appears in a number of books by the renowned comic author, Called English literatures performing flea, P. G. Wodehouse, pictured in 1904, became famous for his complex plots, ingenious wordplay, and prolific output. Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse (October 15, 1881 - February 14, 1975) was a prolific English comic writer whose career spanned nearly seventy years. Described by Sean OCasey...
P. G. Wodehouse. Bingo Little is a friend of the dim-but-lovable Critics saw Bertie Wooster, here portrayed by Hugh Laurie in ITVs Jeeves and Wooster series, as detrimental to the worldwide image of a young British man. Bertram Wilberforce Bertie Wooster is the foppish, dim-witted, and very wealthy co-protagonist of P. G. Wodehouses Jeeves stories. A British...
Bertie Wooster, one of Wodehouse's most famous creations, and a member of the The fictional Drones Club, located in Dover Street, London, (where a real club, the Arts Club, is based) was created by English comic novelist P. G. Wodehouse. It features in many of his Jeeves and Wooster and Blandings Castle stories. A drone is a male bee or ant that does...
Drones Club in Dover Street, London. He has a tendency to fall in love with most young girls he comes across, but is apt to fall just as quickly out of love with them when he sees someone else. This is not out of spite; he's just a very indecisive young chap. Among his hearts' desires have been the formidable Honoria Glossop, her friend Daphne, and Mrytle, the barmaid of the Five Crowns in Twing. After much heart-ache and falling in love with girls he saw on the bus, Bingo settled down and actually married the romance novelist Rosmary M. Banks. The union was then blessed with a son, Algernon Aubrey. He thenceforth lived happily ever after, occasionally falling into some loony scrape or other, often involving his pal Bertie Wooster. |