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Bertie Wooster's Aunt Agatha wishes him to marry the robust Honoria Glossop. His new valet Jeeves arrives just in time to suggest a scheme for eluding matrimony.
Trouble brews when Bertie becomes enamored of the wily Bobbie Wickham. Bertie's old friend Tuppy Glossop dotes on an overbearing opera singer.
Bertie's Uncle George considers marrying a young waitress, much to the dismay of Aunt Agatha. Bertie and Bingo place secret wagers on competitors at a village sports day.
Aunt Dahlia tries to coerce Bertie into giving prizes at a grammar school ceremony in Market Snodsbury. Newt-fancier Gussie Fink Nottle pines for Madeline Bassett at Brinkley Court.
Bertie returns to Brinkley Court, where he undertakes to reunite cousin Angela with Tuppy and Gussie with Madeline. Jeeves concocts an alternate scheme to settle the estranged lovers' differences.
Aunt Dahlia sends Bertie to Totleigh Towers to recover a silver cow creamer belonging to the Travers that has fallen into the hands of Sir Watkyn Bassett.
Gussie Fink Nottle is intimidated by prospective father-in-law Sir Watkyn Bassett and his violent associate Spode. He enlists the aid of Jeeves to help him overcome his fear.
Aunt Agatha's pearls go missing during a seaside holiday. Biffy has misplaced his fiancee.
Bertie's cacophonous trombone playing drives Jeeves to give his notice. Bertie's school chum Chuffy hopes to propose to a wealthy American, one of Bertie's former fiancées.
The always-chivalrous Bertie is called on to protect Pauline Stoker from a mysterious stranger who's been following her about London. Their ensuing trip to Chufnell Regis embroils Bertie in goings-on that include a compromising overnight stay at an inn, a birthday party on the Stoker's yacht, a group of black-face minstrels, and an unlikely alliance with Sir Roderick Glossop, all coming to a head on the night when Old Boggy is said to walk the streets of Chufnell Regis. As usual, Jeeves comes up with a solution to everyone's dilemmas.
Having grown tired of his daily routine, Bertie has determined that children are the answer to his loneliness. Bingo Little seeks his uncle's approval to marry a teashop waitress.
Jeeves and Wooster set sail for New York, hoping for a quiet getaway from Bertie's tyrannical Aunt Agatha. But Bertie can't evade responsibility that easily, and he soon finds himself charged with the exasperating task of looking after a sheltered mother's boy and giving him his first taste of big city life. Tuppy Glossop ventures to New York, as well, to embark on a business scheme of not-so-grand proportions.
Jeeves and Wooster must devise a plan that will allow Bertie's old friend Bicky, an aimless drifter, to deceive his father so that he may remain living in Manhattan and receiving an allowance. At the same time, they must assist recluse wilderness-loving poet Rockmotteller in avoiding city life, when the aunt he depends upon for his livelihood commands him to move to Manhattan and partake of the urban nightlife in her stead. Tangled in the intricate webs of deception woven for his two desperate friends, Bertie finds himself hovering without a place of his own to call home.
A struggling American portrait artist who desires his controlling uncle's approval to marry enlists Bertie's aid. Aunt Agatha places under Bertie's supervision a young man consumed with an unshakeable passion for the theatre.
Having returned from his sojourn in America, Bertie reenters the all-too-familiar world of authoritative aunts and starry-eyed ex-fiancees. A crisis of identity ensues when Bertie steps in to help Gussie Fink Nottle make a lasting impression on bride-to-be Madeline Bassett's demanding Godmother at Deverill Hall, while Bertie is himself meant to be there wooing young Gertrude Deverill.
Everyone at Totleigh Towers feels Sir Watkyn Bassett must be prevented from publishing his scandalous memoirs, as it is feared they will tarnish reputations if they reach the public eye. Meanwhile, Jeeves is distressed by Bertie's engagement to the dictatorial Lady Florence Craye.
Bertie's old friend Bingo Little masquerades as a Bolshevik activist to impress a woman with whom he has become infatuated. Bertie must try to persuade a prominent author to allow her latest novel to be published in Aunt Dahlia's magazine.
While in New York, Bertie commissions a portrait of Aunt Agatha from a young artist whom he hopes to marry. Tuppy Glossop sells a recipe for Cock-a-Leekie soup to an American soup mogul.
Bertie must arrange a secret meeting between two millionaire business tycoons. Meanwhile, fiery-tempered Stilton Cheesewright suspects Bertie has designs on his betrothed, Lady Florence.
Perpetually love-sick Bingo Little has bestowed his affections on a mild-mannered waitress, and once again he implores Bertie to assume the identity of a popular romance novelist to appeal in the name of love to Bingo's disapproving uncle (This plot thread continues from episode #20.). Sir Roderick Glossop hopes to take a bride, but first he has to marry off daughter Honoria, so Bertie must find a suitable means to disengage her revived interest in him as a prospective husband.
Bertie's new mustache comes between Lady Florence and fiance Stilton Cheesewright. Aunt Dahlia requires assistance from Jeeves to retrieve a pearl necklace she has pawned.
An African tribal totem is believed to hold a curse over the Bassett household at Totleigh Towers.
The Ganymede Club book-- containing potentially scandalous information about certain members of the ruling class, as recorded by their personal valets-- has been stolen. The impending wedding between Madeline Bassett and Spode at Totleigh Towers is fraught with complications.