British Comedy Guide

Press clippings

Dave Allen at Peace; Larry Grayson: Shut That Door!

BBC Two remembers Dave Allen in a disappointingly flat biopic, while ITV3 pays homage to the enduringly funny Larry Grayson.

Rachel Cooke, The New Statesman, 5th April 2018

TV review: Dave Allen At Peace, BBC2

An open goal missed by a mile. Watch the documentary instead.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 3rd April 2018

Dave Allen At Peace review

Acting talents aside, you won't learn much about such an important figure in British and Irish comedy from watching this indifferent drama.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 3rd April 2018

Aidan Gillen stars in this thoughtfully constructed biopic of the Irish comedian. It skims swiftly over his celebrity years, though it is interspersed with recreations of some of his sketches and monologues. Instead, it explores the roots of his religious scepticism (sadistic nuns) and his relationships with his father and brother.

David Stubbs, The Guardian, 2nd April 2018

Dave Allen at Peace review

Unlike the comedian's monologues, this biopic lacked a punchline or point.

Gabriel Tate, The Telegraph, 2nd April 2018

David Tynan O'Mahony, better known as Dave Allen, was never worthy. He spent a professional lifetime mocking the Catholic Church that had made his childhood a misery and, though he was in truth a deeply moral man, always managed to look wickedly louche doing it.

Actor Aidan Gillen captured the rhythms of the great comedian's delivery, if not his voice, in Dave Allen At Peace (BBC2), a drama-documentary that explored how the scars of his schooldays, both physical and emotional, shaped his act.

Allen specialised in long monologues with explosive punchlines. This one-off show tried to imitate that, and found it's much harder than it looks.

After an extended set-up, revealing how wee Davey suffered in school ('No good comes from laughing!' shrieked a nun, clipping him about the ear), there wasn't time to say much about his career. One moment he was setting out with his brother as a double act, then he was a solo star 15 years later, drawing barrowloads of complaints on the BBC.

A minute after that, he was a has-been. Yet a long scene was shoe-horned in, with Allen telling a feeble ghost story -- far from his best material.

It was a mystery, too, why so many of the original sketches were remade shot-for-shot. Surely the Seventies footage would have worked just as well. A wicked disappointment.

Christopher Stevens, Daily Mail, 2nd April 2018

Aidan Gillen reveals all about playing Dave Allen

With his wry lampooning of marriage and religion - including his trademark sign-off catchphrase, "May your god go with you" - Dave Allen was a well-loved and ground-breaking TV comedian.

Caren Clark, What's On TV, 29th March 2018

Dave Allen at Peace preview

Much of the show features Gillen performing Allen's celebrated monologues, sitting in his dapper suit, a ciggie on the go, and a glass of whisky next to him, as we are taken on a whistle-stop tour through the life of one of the comedy greats.

Benjie Goodhart, Saga Magazine, 28th March 2018

BBC Two announces Dave Allen biopic with Aiden Gillen

Aidan Gillen will star in a new BBC Two biopic about comedian Dave Allen, "the sit-down stand-up".

British Comedy Guide, 19th September 2017

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