Misplaced Pages

Do-It-Yourself Mr. Bean

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. (July 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Episode of Mr. Bean
"Do-It-Yourself Mr. Bean"
Mr. Bean episode
Episode no.Episode 9
Directed byJohn Birkin
Written byRobin Driscoll
Rowan Atkinson
Original air date10 January 1994 (1994-January-10)
Running time25:28
Guest appearances
Robert Austin
Helen Burns
David Stoll
Rupert Vansittart
Andy Greenhalgh
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Mr. Bean in Room 426"
Next →
"Mind the Baby, Mr. Bean"
List of episodes

"Do-It-Yourself Mr. Bean" is the ninth episode of the British television series Mr. Bean, produced by Tiger Aspect Productions and Thames Television for Central Independent Television. It was first broadcast on ITV on 10 January 1994 and was watched by 15.60 million viewers during its original transmission.

Plot

Part One

An excited Mr. Bean has invited his two friends, Rupert and Hubert, over to his flat for a party during New Year's Eve 1993, and is putting the finishing touches on his decorations, which are not much (a circle of chairs in the living room and a bunch of balloons hanging from the front door). Rupert and Hubert arrive, but they realise that it is not really the party they were expecting: Bean gives his guests party hats made of newspaper, assigns them designated chairs, and the only form of entertainment is a stereo. Bean then goes to the kitchen to prepare refreshments. However, he finds he has almost run out of Twiglets, and so improvises by chopping up a branch of a tree outside his kitchen window with a butcher knife and dipping the twigs in Marmite in an attempt to make them look like twiglets. He then opens a bottle of Champagne but discovers that there is only enough to fill half a glass. Bean improvises again by using a bottle of vinegar and adding sugar to sweeten it.

As the night goes on, it becomes apparent that Rupert and Hubert are not having a good time. They discover that the "food" they have been given is not genuine and refuse to eat it, despite Bean eating his and pretending to like the vinegar. Bean then heads back to the kitchen and takes peanuts from a bird feeder outside and pours them onto a plate. Meanwhile, Rupert and Hubert turn the clock in the living room to just before midnight. When Bean comes back, the clock chimes midnight. They then link hands and sing "Auld Lang Syne" to celebrate. Rupert and Hubert then feign yawning and claim that they are tired, so Bean puts the doorknob back on his door (for some reason he had taken it off and put it into a fruit bowl; this is a running gag throughout the episode) and bids them goodnight. Right outside the door, Rupert and Hubert come across two women who laugh at their paper hats before heading into the neighbour's flat, where a swinging New Year's party is underway. They then ponder whether to leave or go into the party, ultimately choosing the latter.

Meanwhile, Bean is in bed and puts Teddy next to him before turning off the light and going to sleep. However, he hears the countdown process at the party across from him as well as everyone singing "Auld Lang Syne", indicating the real New Year has arrived. Confused, he turns the light back on and takes an alarm clock out of his chest of drawers, which indicates that it is just after midnight (at this point, the clock in the living room shows 1:40). He is angered when he finds out that Rupert and Hubert deceived him and attended the larger party next door, before switching off the light and going back to sleep.

On New Year's Day, Bean drives to the Arding & Hobbs department store in order to take full advantage of the January sales. Bean manages to jump the queue by revealing that the "person" at the front was a dummy which he had placed previously. Bean purchases many items, including an armchair that was on display in the window.

Part Two

Rowan Atkinson recreating the scene from part two of the episode on a Mini at Goodwood Circuit

Unable to fit all his purchases and himself in his Mini, Bean decides to drive it from the armchair atop the roof, using ropes to operate the steering wheel and a broom to operate the pedals. All goes well until Bean is diverted down a steep downhill street. When he loses the head of the broom trying to operate the brakes, he resorts to driving the Mini into the back of a lorry delivering mattresses.

Back at the flat, Bean begins to redecorate with the new items he bought. He first realises that moving the table from in front of the hole in the kitchen wall is impractical, as he can no longer place objects on it through the hole while he is in the kitchen. His solution: just move the hole. After getting exact measurements using three pencils (one in his mouth and one in each hand), he uses a reciprocating saw to cut out a section of the wall before moving it into the original hole. However, he is oblivious to what is on the opposite side of the wall, and cuts through a telephone cable and several pictures in the process.

He then begins to paint the whole living room but finds that the bristles on his paintbrush are dried solid, and they soon fall into the paint can. In a cruel improvisation, he shoves the brush handle into Teddy's rear and uses his head to paint the walls. However, he manages to only get a few lines of paint done before accidentally dripping paint onto his furniture. Bean then comes up with another plan. He carefully covers everything in the living room and kitchen in newspaper and, when he runs out of newspaper to cover his clock, uses the hat Hubert left behind. Bean then places a large firework in the paint can, intending to blow it up. He ignites the fuse and runs out of the flat. At that moment, a tired and hungover Hubert stumbles out of the neighbour's flat and realises he left his hat in Bean's flat and goes in to retrieve it just as the firework goes off. Bean returns to his flat and is satisfied that he successfully painted the wall. However, he is shocked to discover white footprints of Hubert from his front door, and a silhouette of Hubert fetching his hat is frozen onto a section of wall as the only unpainted area.

Extended scene

An extended scene, which is not seen in the original broadcast of the episode, was included in the American broadcasts on HBO as well as some home media versions.

Bean is shopping in the department store, when he sees a chair that he wishes to purchase. Upon approaching the reclining chair, he discovers that a sales assistant is already demonstrating its features to an elderly couple. When Bean realises that the couple wants to take the chair, Bean find the ways of fooling them into thinking it is broken: he unplugs it, which is almost immediately noticed by the assistant. While the elderly woman is enjoyably sitting on the chair, Bean then sneaks up to a control panel on the chair's arm and tampers with the wires inside, unknown to the elderly woman. As the elderly woman tries out the reclining feature this time, it folds over, sandwiching her in the middle; she yells to her hearing-impaired husband for help but is unheard, despite being only a couple of metres away. In addition, Bean turns up the music playing on the store's intercom, to make it harder for her to be heard. Ultimately, she falls backwards.

The scene where Bean decapitated the picture of Princess Diana was cut from the later airings following her death in a car crash in Paris in 1997. Some countries showed the scene after Diana's death.

Cast

Production

Location scenes were recorded on ENG videotape at Arding & Hobbs (run at the time as an Allders department store) in Battersea. Studio sequences were recorded at Teddington Studios, although for safety reasons, part of Act 3 was filmed without a live audience. It was also the first episode produced by Tiger Aspect founder Peter Bennett-Jones.

During its second transmission, the episode was watched by 12.96 million viewers, outrating the final two episodes of the series.

Legacy

MythBusters tested the idea of painting with explosives in Mind Control after being inspired by a rerun of the episode. They first ran tests to see if it was really possible to cover an entire room with paint by exploding a firework in a paint can, but the method was proven impossible by the test.

In a later revisit in Painting with Explosives/Bifurcated Boat, Jamie Hyneman's twist on Mr. Bean's technique using a steel sphere was also proven wrong while Adam Savage's snowflake frame twist on the idea worked, but not well enough to be either fake, confirmed or judged plausible.

The scene Act 2 where Bean uses a brick attached by some string to hold his car and releases the emergency brake was later reused in the episode "In the Pink" from Mr. Bean: The Animated Series where Bean uses the technique in order to arrest the thieves.

In 2009, Rowan Atkinson appeared as Mr. Bean during the Goodwood Revival driving a recreation of the car stunt as part of Goodwood's celebration of 50 years of the Mini.

In 2015, a recreation of the car stunt scene was staged in central London to promote the 25th anniversary of the series, ending with a photo call outside Buckingham Palace.

References

  1. "Timeline". mrbean.co.uk. Archived from the original on 22 September 2013. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  2. The DVD-laser Disc Newsletter. Vol. 173–183. DVD-Laser Disc Newsletter. 1999. pp. 42–. Also featured is Do-It -Yourself Mr. Bean, which contains the segment where he drives a car while sitting on a roof, plus his more destructive than productive efforts to redecorate his apartment. ...
  3. "Mind Control". MythBusters. Season 2006. Episode 52. 3 May 2006.
  4. "Mr. Bean to make first 'live' appearance at Goodwood Revival to honor Mini turning 50".
  5. "1977 Austin Mini – the 2009 Goodwood Revival "Mr Bean Mini"".
  6. "Mr. Bean celebrates 25th anniversary by recreating famous scene outside Buckingham Palace". Entertainment Weekly.

External links

Mr. Bean
Title character
Episodes
Other media
Related
Categories: