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Atkins of Accounts
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Atkins’
job is to make up and distribute the weekly payroll. The C-P clerks
regard this as the most important function in the company. Atkins’
state of health is a matter of continual concern; on pay day he gets
a stream of calls checking he has remembered his spectacles etc. The
staff lurk outside his door when he is counting out the pay, counting
out the notes with him.
The payroll is distributed in little brown envelopes stacked on a tray slung around Atkins’ neck like an ice-cream salesgirl in a cinema. Atkins invariably flings open the door of each department he visits on his rounds with the cheery cry "Wages coming up". Nobody in Chester - Perry's seems to have a bank account. Accounts appear to do nothing other than make up wages and do arithmetic. When their boss leaves they gather round saying things like "ADDios" and "ADDieu". Sometimes Atkins will recruit an assistant. These tend to be young men who fail to understand that the money they are paying out is earned by the staff and who try to pocket the lot. Bristow has a soft spot for Atkins. He finds him deeply sympathetic. After Atkins apologetically hands over a wage packet depleted by Sports & Social Club subscription, Bristow confesses “I'm glad he left when he did. We were both close to tears”. Pay Day is often an emotional event, particularly when Atkins is followed round by Mrs. Chrisp (wedding lists), Hickford (Sports and Social Club subscriptions) and Miss Sunman (leaving presents). Bristow, in some despair, sometimes just holds out his out-tray for the incoming wage packet. Or he may refuse to accept it all on the grounds he has done no work all week and therefore does not deserve it. Atkins, who is supposed to get a signature before he hands over the little brown envelope, does not have an easy time of it. Atkins is first encountered as a bachelor. He courts the typist Miss Rouge, a woman for whom the term 'motormouth' might have been invented. The engagement has its rocky moments when Atkins nearly fall for an attractive young temp, but despite the vicious rumours and gossip that go round the building exactly as fast as Bristow can walk round it (this is not a co-incidence), the wedding goes ahead. Unusually, we learn that he has a first name - Albert. Atkins is one of the very few at C-Ps
to have a home life (he is woken early one morning by Bristow returning
from holiday and anxious not to be missed off the payroll; we see
not only Atkins wearing a nightcap but Mrs. Atkins, nee Rouge as well). He is
keen to entertain his fellow workers and likes to throw New Year parties
- however opinion varies on the social qualities of these get-togethers, typified by this reaction in
strip 3360
.
He also likes to have the lads
in when his wife is away, but seems to be somewhat in awe of her
strip 4150
. (Frank Dickens, in the Big Big Big Bristow Book wrongly attributes
the photo-turning incident to Jones). In later
strips, Mrs. Atkins berates her husband for continuing to work at C-Ps,
amidst "those morons". His defence - "I can't leave, they've put me on
a pedestal".
The rather sad contrast between Atkins' sociable home life and the empty bedsit of Bristow was highlighted in December 1971 Atkins: Well Bristow won't be long now Naturally Atkins is keen to take part in the Buying Department's nativity play. He puts his own special spin as he takes the role of one of the Wise Men In a rather shocking development we learned from Frank Dickens' website in August 2003 that Atkins has set up with the notorious temp Tanzi, whose affections he has stolen from Jones. It is not clear what has happened to Mrs. Atkins (aka Miss Rouge) and, though typical of his behaviour when young, it seems a little out of character for Atkins, about whose imminent retirement Bristow was speculating as long as September 1962. The affair does not appear to have lasted. *note for non-Britons. These were all popular TV progammes of the day. The Queen's broadcast is still going strong.
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