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  1. Further Adventures of Lucky Jim or The New Adventures of Lucky Jim is a comedy television series which first aired on BBC 1 in 1967. Inspired by the novel Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis, it updates the story from the early 1950s of the novel to mid-1960s Swinging London. It stars Keith Barron as the young university lecturer Jim Dixon.

  2. The Further Adventures of Lucky Jim (a.k.a. The New Adventures of Lucky Jim) is a British television sitcom which first aired on BBC 2 in 1982. It is inspired by the 1954 novel Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis, updated to the Swinging Sixties.

  3. The Further Adventures of Lucky Jim: Created by Kingsley Amis. With Keith Barron, Colin Jeavons, Suzy Kendall, Nerys Hughes.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lucky_JimLucky Jim - Wikipedia

    Keith Barron starred in Further Adventures of Lucky Jim, a 1967 seven-episode BBC TV series based on the character and set in the "swinging London" of 1967. This was followed by The Further Adventures of Lucky Jim in 1982, but with Enn Reitel as Jim. In 2003, ITV aired a remake of Lucky Jim with Stephen Tompkinson playing the central ...

  5. The Further Adventures Of Lucky Jim. TV sitcom; BBC Two; 1982; 7 episodes (1 series) It is 1967 and London is swinging. University graduate Jim Dixon has just returned from a year in Holland and he's anxious to swing along with it. Stars Enn Reitel, Glynis Barber, Barbara Flynn, David Simeon, Nick Stringer and Debbie Wheeler

  6. Cast & crew. Trivia. IMDbPro. All topics. Episode list. The Further Adventures of Lucky Jim. Seasons Years. 1967. S1.E1 ∙ Jim's In. Tue, May 2, 1967. Add a plot. Rate. S1.E2 ∙ Jim Cleans Up. Tue, May 9, 1967. Add a plot. Rate. S1.E3 ∙ Look, Why Don't We Go Back to My Place? Tue, May 16, 1967. Add a plot. Rate. S1.E4 ∙ Jim Freaks Out.

  7. 7 x 30 minute episodes. Based on (and updated from) Kingsley Amis’s 1954 novel Lucky Jim, this series related happenings in the life of Jim Dixon (Keith Barron), a cautious lad from Eckersley, Yorkshire, newly arrived in Swinging London in the permissive 1960s.