Main regular credits: written by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn; drawings by Gerald Scarfe; theme music by Ronnie Hazlehurst.
Main regular cast: Paul Eddington (Jim Hacker), Nigel Hawthorne (Sir Humphrey Appleby), Derek Fowlds (Bernard Woolley).
Open Government (25.02.1980)
With Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), Neil Fitzwiliam (Frank Weisel), John Nettleton (Sir Arnold Robinson), Fraser Kerr, Edward Jewesbury, Norman Mitchell and David Moran.
Produced and directed by Stuart Allen.
The Official Visit (03.03.1980)
With Tenniel Evans (Foreign Secretary), John Savident (Sir ‘Jumbo’ Frederick), Thomas Baptiste, Robert Dougall and Antony Carrick.
Produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby.
The Economy Drive (10.03.1980)
With John Savident (Sir ‘Jumbo’ Frederick), Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), Neil Fitzwiliam (Frank Weisel), Milton Johns, Pat Keen, Patricia Shakesby, William Lawford, Frank Tregear and Norman Tipton.
Produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby.
Big Brother (17.03.1980)
With Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), Neil Fitzwiliam (Frank Weisel), Robert Urquhart, Robert McKenzie, Frederick Jaeger, Andrew Lane, Sheila Ferris and Matthew Roberton.
Produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby.
The Writing on the Wall (24.03.1980)
With Tenniel Evans (Foreign Secretary), John Savident (Sir ‘Jumbo’ Frederick), Neil Fitzwiliam (Frank Weisel) and Daniel Moynihan.
Produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby.
The Right to Know (31.03.1980)
With John Savident (Sir ‘Jumbo’ Frederick), Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), Gerry Cowper, Harriet Reynolds and Roger Elliott.
Produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby.
Jobs for the Boys (07.04.1980)
With Neil Fitzwiliam (Frank Weisel), Richard Vernon (Sir Desmond Glazebrook), Arthur Cox, Richard Davies, Brian Hawksley, John D. Collins and Charles McKeown.
Produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby.
The Compassionate Society (23.02.1981)
With John Barron, Norman Bird, Rosemary Frankau, Stephen Tate, Arthur Cox, Lindy Alexander and Robert Dougall.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
Doing the Honours (02.03.1981)
With John Pennington (Peter), John Nettleton, Frank Middlemass, William Fox, Margo Johns and Anne Maxwell.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Death List (09.03.1981)
With Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), Graeme Garden, Ivor Roberts, Colin McCormack, Michael Keating and Jay Neill.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Greasy Pole (16.03.1981)
With Brenda Blethyn, Freddie Earlle, Jerome Willis, Sheila Fay, Geoffrey Toone, Maureen Stevens, Lindy Alexander and Robert Dougall.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Devil You Know (23.03.1981)
With Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker) and Arthur Cox.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Quality of Life (30.03.1981)
With Richard Vernon, Peter Cellier, Antony Carrick, Zulema Dene, Rex Robinson, Roger Martin and Sue Lawley.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
A Question of Loyalty (06.04.1981)
With John Pennington (Peter), Judy Parfitt, Nigel Stock, Rosemary Williams, Anthony Dawes and John Rolfe.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
With John Nettleton (Sir Arnold Robinson), Diana Hoddinott (Annie), Eleanor Bron, Richard Simpson, Peter Howell, Jeffrey Segal, Donald Pelmear and Talla Hayes.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Challenge (18.11.1982)
With John Nettleton (Sir Arnold Robinson), Ian Lavender, Doug Fisher, Stuart Sherwin, Frank Tregear and Ludovic Kennedy.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Skeleton in the Cupboard (25.11.1982)
With Ian Lavender, Donald Gee, John Pennington and Rosemary Williams.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Moral Dimension (02.12.1982)
With Diana Hoddinott (Annie), Antony Carrick, Vic Tablian, Sam Dastor, Walter Randall and Michael Sharvell-Martin.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Bed of Nails (09.12.1982)
With John Nettleton (Sir Arnold Robinson), David Firth, Nigel Stock, Peter Dennis, Robert East and David Rose.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Whisky Priest (16.12.1982)
With Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), John Fortune and Edward Jewesbury.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
The Middle-Class Rip-Off (23.12.1982)
With John Nettleton (Sir Arnold Robinson), John Barron, Patrick O’Connell, Derek Benfield and Joanna Henderson.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.
Untitled two-minute sketch in The Funny Side of Christmas (27.12.1982)
Party Games (17.12.1984)
With John Nettleton (Sir Arnold Robinson), Diana Hoddinott (Annie Hacker), James Grout, Peter Jeffrey, Philip Stone, André Maranne, Ludovic Kennedy, Anthony Pedley, David Warwick, Laura Calland, Roger Davidson, David Howey, Bernard Losh, Roger Ostime, John Pennington, Martyn Read and Rex Robinson.
Produced and directed by Peter Whitmore.