British Comedy Guide
Arabella Weir
Arabella Weir

Arabella Weir

  • 66 years old
  • British
  • Actor and writer

Press clippings Page 8

Arabella Weir on the Doctor Who Christmas special

Actress Arabella Weir is starring in the Doctor Who Christmas special on Christmas day. Writing exclusively for the Telegraph, she explains why landing a role in 'the biggest, coolest show on television' marks a career high.

Arabella Weir, The Telegraph, 22nd December 2011

Bill Bailey and Arabella Weir in Dr Who Xmas trailer

A new trailer for the Doctor Who Christmas special 2011 has been released, showing stars like Bill Bailey and Arabella Weir in character ahead of the highly anticipated one-off episode.

Rachel Tarley, Metro, 14th December 2011

Bill Bailey to star in Doctor Who Christmas special

Bill Bailey is to appear in this year's Doctor Who Christmas special, with Alexander Armstrong, Outnumbered actress Claire Skinner and The Fast Show's Arabella Weir.

BBC News, 21st September 2011

Arabella Weir: My greatest mistake

Arabella Weir added a cutting comment about someone in an email ... then accidentally copied them in.

Anna Tims, The Guardian, 7th May 2011

This brand new sketch show sees The Fast Show and Down The Line star Simon Day perform as some of his best known creations at The Mallard, a small provincial theatre with not that much room in it. If you want an idea on sort of place The Mallard is, it's best put by the woman in charge of the box office admitting to adding the phrase "Must see" to acts because the tickets are not shifting.

This week, Day starred as his Yorkshire poet persona Geoffrey Allerton, reading some of his poems and extracts from his memoir Marking Time. Day/Allerton's poetry is excellent, making humorous comments on inner city life and going to art-house movies.

His sombre childhood memories were even funnier, covering the bad relationship Allerton had with his father. He mentions that his father, "threw a jar of Marmite at me," and that he showed him a picture of a naked woman, or as Day/Allerton puts it, the, "lady with the lower beard."

The show is not just about Day and his character, but also of the regular staff and visitors of The Mallard. There is surly Rastafarian technician Goose (Felix Dexter) who gets annoyed about being given jobs outside of his remit, the Leeds-born boss Ron Bone (Simon Greenall) who mocks Allerton's supposedly posh background, and there are the two posh mothers (Arabella Weir and Catherine Shepherd) talking about the problems of employing a "frog" as a nanny.

This has all the marks of becoming a really good series. Future episodes will see Day performing as reformed convict Tony Beckton and his Fast Show classic Tommy Cockles.

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 26th April 2011

New situation comedy. And it's one worth catching. Written by and starring Simon Day, its six episodes feature him as different people who turn up to perform at a small theatre (so small there's a real person taking telephone bookings). The first one Day gives us is Yorkshire poet Geoffrey Allerton, whose observations on his own life ("My dad had big hands, like paddles...") bear more than a passing resemblance to one or two voices often heard on the airwaves. Catherine Shepherd, Arabella Weir and Felix Dexter are among the shining support cast.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 20th April 2011

Getting On: my triumvirate of heroines

Jo Brand, Vicki Pepperdine and Jo Scanlan have gifted us a TV classic with their touchingly comic window on the NHS.

Arabella Weir, The Observer, 12th December 2010

And a few other notes, both low and high: why no women on Chain Reaction (R4), where public figures (usually comedians) get to interview other public figures (usually comedians)? Yes, we've had Catherine Tate and Arabella Weir, but we're six series in now. This week's programme, the first in the new batch, began with Robert Llewellyn interviewing Dave Gorman. Gorman was far too pleased with himself; but then, that's the nature of this self-congratulatory series. You may as well call it Blowing Smoke.

Miranda Sawyer, The Observer, 6th September 2009

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