Carry on Nurse (1959)
Directed by Gerald Thomas

Comedy / Romance

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Carry on Nurse (1959)
The surprising success of Carry On Sergeant (1958) motivated producer Peter Rogers and director Gerald Thomas to immediately begin work on another ensemble comedy in the same irreverent mould.  Having mercilessly lampooned the army and national service, Rogers and Thomas decided to send up another great British institution, the health service.  Carry On Nurse was the second in what was to become one of the most popular and longest-running film series ever made.  It was here that the Carry On format began to take shape, with its trademark bawdy humour and recurring cast of popular regulars.  And it was a format that was an instant hit with the cinema-going public.  Carry On Nurse was the most commercially successful of all the Carry On films (it was in fact the biggest grossing British film of 1959) and its producer and director were not slow in realising what they had created, nothing less than a British cinema phenomenon.  The series would run for 29 films over a 20 year period.

Like Carry On Sergeant before it, Carry On Nurse was adapted from a stage play, Ring For Catty by Patrick Cargill and Jack Beale.  The script was written by Norman Hudis, one of the best of the series' contributors, who worked on several of the early Carry On films.  Although the film is lacking in plot and structure, essentially consisting of a series of vignettes of varying degrees of hilarity, it does have some memorable moments.  Hattie Jacques is the archetypal battle-axe matron, ruling the wards like a Stalinist dictator, able to crush dissent with the merest inflection of her eyebrow.  A manic Kenneth Williams looks like he is about to carve the Sunday joint as he sharpens the knives for an improvised bunion operation.  This is where Leslie Phillips gets to say "Ding, dong..." for the first time.  And then there's the fun with an inappropriately placed daffodil...  To see how this innocent little flower caused a national sensation you have to watch the film.  The Carry On team had arrived, and, like a bunged up interior, it must have seemed that nothing would shift them...
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on Teacher (1959)

Film Synopsis

Ted York and Bernie Bishop are the latest admissions to a men's ward in a busy London hospital, the former a reporter with appendicitis, the latter a boxer with a fractured hand.   Their ward brothers include Oliver Reckitt, an aspiring nuclear physicist, Percy Hickson, who fell off a scaffold, and Jack Bell, a man whose bunion is playing havoc with his love life.   Patients and nurses alike live in mortal dread of the daily visit from Matron, which makes life especially hard for the accident prone student nurse Dawson.   Whilst Ted falls hopelessly in love with his nurse, Jack becomes increasingly anxious to get his operation over and done with.  One evening, having got himself and his fellow patients completely drunk on champagne, Jack persuades Oliver to remove his bunion...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Gerald Thomas
  • Script: Patrick Cargill, Jack Beale, Norman Hudis
  • Cinematographer: Reginald H. Wyer
  • Music: Bruce Montgomery
  • Cast: Kenneth Connor (Bernie Bishop), Shirley Eaton (Staff Nurse Dorothy Denton), Charles Hawtrey (Humphrey Hinton), Hattie Jacques (Matron), Terence Longdon (Ted York), Bill Owen (Percy 'Perc' Hickson), Leslie Phillips (Jack Bell), Joan Sims (Student Nurse Stella Dawson), Susan Stephen (Nurse Georgie Axwell), Kenneth Williams (Oliver Reckitt), Wilfrid Hyde-White (The Colonel), Susan Beaumont (Nurse Frances James), Ann Firbank (Helen Lloyd), Joan Hickson (Sister), Cyril Chamberlain (Bert Able), Harry Locke (Mick the Orderly), Norman Rossington (Norm), Brian Oulton (Henry Bray), Susan Shaw (Mrs. Jane Bishop), Jill Ireland (Jill Thompson)
  • Country: UK
  • Language: English
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 86 min

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