Jeeves and Wooster

Jeeves and Wooster is the name popularly given to a series of humorous short stories and novels by P. G. Wodehouse (1881–1975). Created in 1915, Jeeves continued to appear in Wodehouse's work until his last completed novel Aunts Aren't Gentlemen in 1974, a span of 59 years.

In the series, Jeeves is the highly-competent valet of a wealthy and idle young Londoner named Bertie Wooster. Jeeves becomes Bertie's protector and all-purpose problem solver, devising subtle plans to rescue Bertie and his friends from tiresome social obligations, demanding relatives, brushes with the law, and, above all, problems involving women. Wodehouse derives much comic effect from having Bertie, his narrator, remain blissfully unaware of Jeeves's machinations, until all is revealed at the end of the story.

Both the name "Jeeves" and the character of Jeeves have come to be thought of as the quintessential name and nature of a valet or butler, inspiring many similar characters (as well as the name of the Internet search engine Ask Jeeves). A "Jeeves" is now a generic term in references such as the Oxford English Dictionary.

The series has no official title, and was often referred to as "the Jeeves stories" until the hit ITV series Jeeves and Wooster (22 April 1990 to 20 June 1993) starring double-act Fry and Laurie (with Stephen Fry as Jeeves, and Hugh Laurie as Wooster).

Jeeves and Wooster in Badfic
Most badifc—and, in fact, most fanfic—in this continuum is Jooster (Jeeves/Wooster slash). In badfic, this will involve woobifying Bertie, making him wangst-ridden and using Jeeves as an emotional crutch.

Despite the fact the Sir Michael Horden played the BBC radio versions of both Jeeves and Gandalf, there have been no crossovers revealing that the two characters are secretly the same person.

Jeeves and Wooster and the PPC
So far, there has only been on recorded PPC mission to the Woosterverse: "The Very Edge (of Destruction)" with agents Sean Bellman and Hild.

The only recorded example of a mini from this continuum is Gieves, the mini-Jeeves, a four-inch-tall man in a neat black suit who looked like Stephen Fry. It is not yet known whether all Woosterverse minis are mini-Jeeveses, or whether—like NCIS's mini-LEOs—they are mini version of the character whose name was misspelled.