Number 6 jumped overboard from the gun
runner’s boat sometime in the night and he goes swimming off in the direction
of the light projected from a lighthouse which could be seen in the distance. So
Number 6 actually swam a good length of the English Channel! When Number 6 eventually comes round,
he’s lying on the beach at Beachy
Head. It’s
already daylight, so any time after dawn, perhaps as late as 8am, there is just
no way of knowing. It took him time to scale the chalk cliff, thankfully there
had been some recent cliff erosion which aided him in that. From the cliff edge
Number 6 makes his way in land, encountering a gypsy camp. He’s given a mug of
tea, or broth, and sent on his way, a road having been pointed out to him.
There is a police roadblock, there being an escaped prisoner about. Number 6
avoids this, and manages to get into a moving van and goes to sleep. At the
sound of a police siren, he jumps out the back of the van, and into the traffic
in Park
Lane
in London. The journey from Beachy Head to London would take roughly two and a half
hours, depending on the average speed of the Luton Van.
Number 6, having no money for bus or taxi, sets
off across London on foot until he finally reaches his
home in Buckingham
Place.
However there is a new inhabitant in his home, a Mrs. Butterworth, to whom the
nameless exile spends time talking, taking nourishment, washing, shaving, and
gaining fresh clothes. Mrs. Butterworth then lends Number 6 her {his} car in
order for him to get about easier.
When he set off, how did Number 6 know that
he had to make two calls, one in town, and one in the country? Who did he see
after seeing the bureaucrat sat behind that desk in the London office, not the Colonel obviously. He
might have been told by the bureaucrat that the Colonel was at his country
residence. But Number 6 already knew that when he told Mrs. Butterworth he had
the two calls to make. So how did he know that after months of incarceration in
The Village? It could very well be that seeing Number Six arrive back in London
on March 18th, that day being a Saturday in 1967, he knew that the
Colonel would not be in his office, but at his country residence. So perhaps
there’s not so much mystery about this, as Number 6 may well have been aware of
that during his former employment.
It could very well be that the residency
went with the position of Colonel. So it didn’t matter which Colonel was in residence
at the time Number 6 went to make his call. Only that he knew he would get to
meet “a” Colonel there.
By the time Number 6 reaches the Colonel it appears to be the afternoon, after all he said to the Colonel that he was sorry to interrupt an afternoon’s golf. Or on the other hand, perhaps Number 6 simply made a sarcastic comment! So having reached the afternoon, there was even less time to check the details in Number 6’s report, let alone to organise the help of a Naval Commander, with his navigational skills, and Royal Air force Group Captain to organise the Gloster Meteor Jet aircraft. Not to mention sending a local police constable to check on the gypsy encampment, which had already packed up and moved off and the remains of the fire was cold. As well as Special Branch questioning Mrs. Butterworth. All of which couldn’t be put into action until after Number 6’s debriefing with the Colonel and Thorpe.
And what of the Colonel? In the closing credits of ‘The Chimes of Big Ben’ the actor Kevin Stoney is credited as Colonel J, but he is not actually referred to as such in the episode, simply as Colonel. So might not the “J” in Colonel J. stand for…..James, as in Colonel James in ‘Many Happy Returns,’ because in that episode Number 6 calls the Colonel by his first name James {Colonel J.}. So thinking outside the box, might not both the Colonel in ‘Chimes’ and MHR be the same Colonel, but played by two very different actors?
By the time Number 6 reaches the Colonel it appears to be the afternoon, after all he said to the Colonel that he was sorry to interrupt an afternoon’s golf. Or on the other hand, perhaps Number 6 simply made a sarcastic comment! So having reached the afternoon, there was even less time to check the details in Number 6’s report, let alone to organise the help of a Naval Commander, with his navigational skills, and Royal Air force Group Captain to organise the Gloster Meteor Jet aircraft. Not to mention sending a local police constable to check on the gypsy encampment, which had already packed up and moved off and the remains of the fire was cold. As well as Special Branch questioning Mrs. Butterworth. All of which couldn’t be put into action until after Number 6’s debriefing with the Colonel and Thorpe.
And what of the Colonel? In the closing credits of ‘The Chimes of Big Ben’ the actor Kevin Stoney is credited as Colonel J, but he is not actually referred to as such in the episode, simply as Colonel. So might not the “J” in Colonel J. stand for…..James, as in Colonel James in ‘Many Happy Returns,’ because in that episode Number 6 calls the Colonel by his first name James {Colonel J.}. So thinking outside the box, might not both the Colonel in ‘Chimes’ and MHR be the same Colonel, but played by two very different actors?
The problem with Colonel James of MHR being different to the one in
‘Chimes,’ how would Number 6 know that he was calling on a different Colonel to
the one he met in The Village during ‘The Chimes of Big Ben?’ He couldn’t
possibly have known. There was no way he could have known that while
incarcerated in The Village. And if it had turned out to be the same Colonel
from ‘Chimes’ when Number 6 went to call on the Colonel at his country
residence, surely he would have known that he couldn’t trust the Colonel
because of his part in the deception he carried out in The Village!
We are not privy to when Number 6 and the
Colonel first met in ‘Many Happy Returns,’ and therefore we have no way of
judging the initial exchanges between the two men, how they reacted towards
each other. However during the de-briefing session they did appear at ease with
each other. More than that, the Colonel referred to Number 6 as an old, old
friend. So they had known each other for quite some time. Number 6 having called
the Colonel by his first name “James.” And yet in having a different Colonel
for ‘Many Happy Returns’ they played that same clever trick they played in
‘Arrival,’ when they replaced the first Number 2. That action put Number 6 back
to square one, having to begin all over again with a new Number 2. Thus once having explained about The Village to the Colonel
during ‘The Chimes of Big Ben,’ he then had to go over it all again with a new
Colonel in ‘Many happy Returns.’
Then there’s the question of Thorpe. Why
was Thorpe with the Colonel at his country residence? There discussing other
business would be one answer, I cannot see Thorpe playing a round of golf with
the Colonel. He was hardly dressed for it, unlike the Colonel. Other than that,
it could be thought that Thorpe accompanied Number 6 from the office in London to The Colonel’s country residence.
And it does appear that Thorpe has replaced Fotheringay!
So, a
search area had been calculated, 1,750 square miles, and then there’s the
journey and time taken in getting to the airfield, and then there is the flight
time to Gibraltar to take into consideration, which would take about a couple
of hours more or less, and after that to begin that search of 1,750 square
miles. As Number told the Colonel, he’ll sweep as far as they could that day,
and again tomorrow…… and as the Colonel added “And tomorrow and tomorrow.”
And finally two other details should be
taken into consideration. On March 18th sunrise was at 6:19am, and sunset was at 6:13pm. As it was full daylight when Number 6
woke up, it couldn’t possibly have been much before 7am. In order for the Gloster Meteor Jet
to take off from the airfield somewhere in England, to arrive at RAF Gibraltar for
refuelling, and to begin the search in daylight, would have meant leaving the
airfield at about three o’clock. {What was the milkman doing delivering milk at that late
hour? The impression given by the milkman that its first thing in the morning!}
This would greatly restrict the start of the search of those 1,750 square miles
that day. Most likely the start of the search for The Village would not have
commenced until the next day, due to the lack of daylight hours after reaching Gibraltar. And lets not forget that it was
daylight when Number 6 found The Village, so that had to be the next day. And
if not the day after, then the day after that, tomorrow and tomorrow, and
tomorrow. It is suggested in ‘Many Happy Returns’ that Number 6 arrived back in
The Village on March 19th, that day being his birthday, and by the
suggestion of a birthday cake presented to him by Mrs. Butterworth. “Many happy
returns” she said to Number 6. But the cake wasn’t a birthday cake. Yes Mrs.
Butterworth said she would bake him a cake if he promised to return. The
Prisoner returned hence the cake, a sort of welcome home cake. It’s impossible
for everything, from when Number 6 woke up on that beach, to when he was
returned to The Village to all have happened in one day.
The thing with ‘Many Happy Returns’ is there
is a great deal the viewer simply has to swallow, even though reason and logic
tells us it couldn’t possibly be so. But because we are dealing with a piece of
fiction, not the reality of a physical world, then anything is possible.
Footnote: If it can be assumed that Colonel
J. of ‘Chimes’ and Colonel James of MHR are supposed to be one and the same,
{but played by two different actors}. Then scriptwriter Anthony Skene, writer
of ‘Many Happy returns,’ would need to have been briefed about Colonel J. in
Vincent Tilsley’s script for ‘The Chimes of Big Ben,’ by George Markstein in
his capacity as Script Editor. If not, it’s rather a coincidence.
Be seeing you
I agree in general. Just one remark about the search mission. The pilot was, as we know, substituted for a Village agent. Thus, it was the pilot who had to oversee that their search went "plausibly" and the Village was found right on time, not too soon, but also not after 2 or 3 days. Because then No. 6 might have turned to other persons for help, people who he knew he could perhaps trust even more than those from his (former) service. - BCNU!
ReplyDeleteHello Arno,
DeleteAs it happens I've just posted a 'Prismatic Reflection - Revisited,' because I realised I had missed out a couple of important details about the substitute pilot, as well as his disguise as the milkman!
I agree with you in general. However I still see Number 6 as the navigator, and giving the pilot his instructions. But then of course there was only the coastline to search, unless it was an Island. So technically Number 6's navigation didn't matter, just as long as it looked like it was him doing the navigation, and not the pilot. Yes you are right.
Very kind regards
David
BCNU
Just read it! As I wrote in my e-mail, No. 6 may have been excellent in navigating but how could he be sure his compass wasn't manipulated, so the pilot could have taken him basically anywhere? And I also think he was unsuspecting in the first place.
DeleteI also take it that those behind the machinations had to carry out their scheme as quickly as possible in order to prevent No. 6 from getting other people involved that he potentially trusted more. Their disadvantage, however, being that they didn't have aircrafts at their disposal. No so quickly anyway. - BCNU!
Hello Arno,
DeleteWell as we've written before between us, and Jana, anything is possible. And no matter one's own personal viewpoint, certainly 'Many Happy Returns' has proved to be an interesting thought provoking exercise.
I bet Anthony Skene didn't reckon his script for 'Many Happy Returns' could be so complicated!
Very best regards
David
BCNU
As Skene wrote the even more complicated 'Dance of the Dead', I'm sure he knew, after prompting from George Markstein, exactly how tantalising to make 'Many Happy Returns'.
DeleteHi David
ReplyDeleteA very interesting post. Incidentally, I bought the latest copy of Spirit & Destiny magazine (Sept 2015) yesterday and on p.47 there is a lovely full-page picture of Beachy Head cliffs and the lighthouse, together with a profound & uplifting quote. It now graces my wall at work so I can look at it when I daydream of escape!
Love
Nadia
x
Hello Nadia,
DeleteIn the days when I used to go out to work, I would have a postcard of 'the Prisoner' and one of Portmeirion on my desk, so that from time to time I could think of escape!
I wonder if the lighthouse keeper observed the filming taking place on the beach at Beachy Head. The lighthouse was still manned at that time. Certainly he would have been on hand when filming took place at the lighthouse for 'The Girl Who Was Death.'
Very kind regards
David
BCNU