Laughter in the Classroom
London Weekend Television’s Please Sir! (1968–1972)
Gillian A.M. Mitchell (Author)
Set in a London secondary modern school and televised between 1968 and 1972, the situation comedy Please Sir! was produced for the Independent Television (ITV) network by the newly-formed company London Weekend Television (LWT). Popular with audiences and recognised by many critics as an innovative contribution to the sitcom genre as it evolved during the late 1960s, Please Sir! has nevertheless received remarkably little sustained attention from scholars. That silence is filled by this volume.
Please Sir! featured the lives of young working-class people in a distinctive manner that blended realism and romanticism. In an engaging narrative, Gillian Mitchell explores the programme’s background, its comedic style, cast of characters and depictions of contemporary issues, from educational matters to questions of gender, generation, race and ethnicity. She explores the positive contribution of LWT’s early ambitions to the success of Please Sir!, then turns to the impact on the programme’s immediate and long-term reputation of crises that afflicted LWT as it failed in its audacious bid to change perceptions of the ‘populist’ ITV. Ultimately, the book argues that Please Sir! reveals much about the social, cultural and televisual era in which it was produced.
List of figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 ITV from 1955 to 1968 and the founding of London Weekend Television
2 Situation comedy in the 1960s and the commissioning of Please Sir!
3 The comedic style of Please Sir!
4 Please Sir! and the Secondary Modern
5 Please Sir! and the Sixties: gender and generation
6 Please Sir! and multiculturalism
7 Continuity and crisis: The end of Please Sir!
8 Educational realism, ‘greatness’ and the legacy of Please Sir!
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
DOI: 10.14324/111.9781806551033
Number of illustrations: 11
Publication date: 01 June 2026
EPUB ISBN: 9781806551040
Gillian A.M. Mitchell (Author) 
Gillian A.M. Mitchell is a Senior Lecturer in Modern History at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, UK. She specialises in the history of post-war popular music and popular culture in Britain and North America.
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Laughter in the Classroom
London Weekend Television’s Please Sir! (1968–1972)
Set in a London secondary modern school and televised between 1968 and 1972, the situation comedy Please Sir! was produced for the Independent Television (ITV) network by the newly-formed company London Weekend Television (LWT). Popular with audiences and recognised by many critics as an innovative contribution to the sitcom genre as it evolved during the late 1960s, Please Sir! has nevertheless received remarkably little sustained attention from scholars. That silence is filled by this volume.
Please Sir! featured the lives of young working-class people in a distinctive manner that blended realism and romanticism. In an engaging narrative, Gillian Mitchell explores the programme’s background, its comedic style, cast of characters and depictions of contemporary issues, from educational matters to questions of gender, generation, race and ethnicity. She explores the positive contribution of LWT’s early ambitions to the success of Please Sir!, then turns to the impact on the programme’s immediate and long-term reputation of crises that afflicted LWT as it failed in its audacious bid to change perceptions of the ‘populist’ ITV. Ultimately, the book argues that Please Sir! reveals much about the social, cultural and televisual era in which it was produced.