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Have I Got News For You. Alexander Armstrong
Alexander Armstrong

Alexander Armstrong

  • 55 years old
  • English
  • Actor

Press clippings Page 20

The Armstrong and Miller Show has an eclectic mix of characters ranging from Rasta-speaking Second World War RAF pilots, a dentist that loves to tell you where he has previously had his hands while delving deep into a patient's mouth, and not to mention the weekly dregs of society that get interviewed only to reveal they became a teacher - hilarious.

It is hard to create a seamless entertaining comedy sketch show, but Armstrong and Miller for my money have done just that. The huge diversity of characters and the quality of script-writing pours effortlessly through the 42-inch plasma and washes over the reality-fatigued viewer. Pleasure could only really be increased by a glass of Pimms. A great transition to the BBC and a loss for Channel 4.

Mark Lawrence, Broadcast, 12th December 2007

After my blasting of the woefully shoddy The Omid Djalili Show, it's a totally different story on Friday night, thankfully, with Armstrong and Miller. It's good to see some solidly funny sketch comedy for a change, and this has more hits than misses. The big hit of the series are the spitfire pilots with their clipped street slang lines, and this kind of comedy isn't a million miles away from Mitchell and Webb's equally top material. In fact, Armstrong and Miller could be the reformed older brothers of the more anarchic Mitchell and Webb.

Mark Wright, The Stage, 23rd November 2007

If, like Ant and Dec, you've never quite established which is which, let me clear it up for you - Alexander Armstrong is the one who did the Pimms' ads while Ben Miller was the creepy civil servant in Primeval and starred in that sitcom with Sarah Alexander, The Worst Week of My Life. After some very dubious opening titles involving dodgy dancing, there are a surprising number of funny sketches, many of them rather risque for BBC1, including splendid skewering of those 'readers emails' bits on breakfast news programmes.

Gareth McLean, The Guardian, 9th November 2007

When this show started, I thought we'd been transported back ten years - Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller were on the screen together, for a start, but the opening credits also seemed incredibly old-fashioned. Indeed, some would say that the very idea of a sketch show is pretty much passed its sell-by date in any case; that those sublime final Fast Show specials should have marked the genre's end.

But no, Armstrong and Miller are ploughing ahead regardless, and good on 'em. It's always hard to judge a sketch show from its first epsiode, as there'll inevitably be a few sketches which don't appeal, and some characters won't even have been introduced yet. But on the evidence we have so far, I'd give this a tentative thumbs up.

I can't pretend that the laughs were constant throughout this episode, and there were a couple of sketches which you felt you'd seen somewhere before, but when Armstrong and Miller let their imaginations run into darker territory, you could see definite potential for a successful series.

annawaits, TV Scoop, 28th October 2007

Alexander Armstrong interview

Alexander Armstrong tells The Telegraph about the joys of returning to the classic comedy sketch show and his favourite Friday night TV.

Serena Davies, The Telegraph, 20th October 2007

One day, some of these Perrier people will have their own TV series, like Armstrong and Miller. And one day, The Armstrong and Miller Show (C4) will be consistently funny. Armstrong and Miller inhabit that dangerous frontier land of challenging comedy - strong language, heartless jokes, ruthless parodies and media stereotypes - which is actually very agreeable, as it's familiar territory. This is comfort TV; it's what twentysomethings watch instead of Inspector Morse.

Ian Martin, The Guardian, 28th August 1999

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