The ITV series
Redcoats was a docusoap following the lives of Redcoats at Butlins
Minehead and
Bognor resorts. Over three series of 30-minute episodes, it shows the selection process, the Redcoats entertaining the visitors and life behind the scenes. The series was made by Pilgrim Productions.
In fiction The BBC television series
Hi-de-Hi!, written by former Butlins employees
Jimmy Perry (a Redcoat) and
David Croft (a summer show actor), featured the Yellowcoats as a fictional analogue. The title of the show
"Hi-de-Hi" originated with Norman Bradford who claimed to have taken it from an American film; he began using this as a cheer to which the audience spontaneously responded "Ho-de-ho". Another BBC television series,
Doctor Who, featured a 3-part serial entitled "
Delta and the Bannermen", which depicted an alien attack on the fictitious Shangri-La holiday camp (in reality the Butlins camp at
Barry Island). As with the real camp, Shangri-La was staffed with Redcoats played by extras. In the film adaptation of
The Who's rock opera
Tommy (directed by
Ken Russell), Tommy's stepfather Frank (portrayed by
Oliver Reed) becomes acquainted with Tommy's widowed mother (
Ann-Margret) during his employ as a Greencoat at the fictional Bernie's Holiday Camp. The book
The Butlins Girls by Elaine Everest is predominantly set at the Skegness camp in 1946, the first year of its re-opening after the war. It features the fictional redcoats Molly Missons, Bunty Grainger, Plum Appleby and Johnny Johnson. There is also a children's book from the 1960s by Frank Richards called
Billy Bunter at Butlins. In this book, there is a Redcoat known as Freddie, and Billy Butlin himself appears. ==Notable former Redcoats==