List of IT Ain't Half Hot Mum Episodes - Series 2 (1975)

Series 2 (1975)

Episode No. Episode title Producer and director First broadcast
9 "Showing the Flag" David Croft 2 January 1975
The Sergeant Major tries to train the concert party to lower the flag at sunset. Also starring Ishaq Bux and Barry Sinclair.
10 "Down in the Jungle" David Croft 9 January 1975
The concert party's plane makes a crash landing and the men realise they could be behind enemy lines. Also starring Saad Ghazi, Mohammad Shamsi and Tariq Yunus.
11 "The Natives Are Revolting" David Croft 16 January 1975
The Sergeant Major is determined to find out who replaced the camp's Union Jack with an Indian flag. Also starring Renu Setna.
12 "Cabaret Time" David Croft 23 January 1975
A performance in the Kama Sutra Club gets the concert party and the Battery Sergeant Major into trouble. Also starring Robin Browne, Bobby Dennis, Talat Hussein and Arnold Peters.
13 "The Curse of the Sadhu" David Croft 30 January 1975
Sergeant Williams tempts the wrath of the gods by ejecting a revered holy man from the parade ground. Also starring Minoo Golvala and Ranjit Nakara.
14 "Forbidden Fruits" David Croft 6 February 1975
When the army runs out of "that stuff they put in our tea" the men cannot stop thinking about women. Colonel Reynolds tries to see Mrs Waddilove-Evans when her husband is not home. Also starring Margaret Courtenay, Michael Moore and Yasuko Nagazumi.
15 "Has Anyone Seen My Cobra?" David Croft 13 February 1975
A snake-charmer's cobra goes missing and is found in the Sergeant Major's quarters. Also starring Renu Setna, Rudolf Ramillo, Azad Ali, Ahmed Khalil, Sultan Lalani and Ashwin Patel.
16 "The Night of the Thugs" David Croft 20 February 1975
The concert party take refuge from a rainstorm in a ruined temple and fall victim to a fanatical native sect. Also starring Minoo Golvala. This was the last episode that George Layton starred as Bombardier Solomons.


Read more about this topic:  List Of It Ain't Half Hot Mum Episodes

Famous quotes containing the word series:

    The woman’s world ... is shown as a series of limited spaces, with the woman struggling to get free of them. The struggle is what the film is about; what is struggled against is the limited space itself. Consequently, to make its point, the film has to deny itself and suggest it was the struggle that was wrong, not the space.
    Jeanine Basinger (b. 1936)