British Comedy Guide
Beattie Edmondson
Beattie Edmondson

Beattie Edmondson

  • 37 years old
  • English
  • Actor, comedian and writer

Press clippings Page 2

Review: Josh, BBC3

It's one of those quirks of scheduling that the new series of flatshare comedy Josh has dropped on the same day that the new series of Curb Your Enthusiasm started on Sky Atlantic. There's definitely a touch of the Curbs in the way that Josh is plotted and also in the way that whatever can go wrong in the main characters' lives will go wrong.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 3rd October 2017

It would have been great if The Wright Way had worked. Ben Elton - instrumental in the creation of classics like The Young Ones and Blackadder - had by 2013 completed his transition from comedy hero to punchline (Get a Grip, his current affairs show featuring Alexa Chung, hadn't helped). Elton's place in the narrative of British TV history was becoming incomprehensible. But The Wright Way, sadly, was irredeemably bad.

Centring on an uptight health-and-safety worker called Gerald Wright (your cue to groan internally), we follow the man of the half-hour as he battles with his daughter, her girlfriend Victoria, and his colleagues. For its laughs, The Wright Way mines the topic of health and safety regulation, which is bad enough for the most radically right-on comedian of the 80s. But its main crime has to be the treatment of Beattie Edmondson, who plays Victoria. Jennifer Saunders' daughter was dealt one of the worst hands in sitcom history when she was cast as the cringe-a-second DJ, who recites youth jargon (and Jamaican patois) so awkward it's like she's a 54-year-old father of three channeling the spirit of a 21-year-old (oh...). Elton may have been willing to further sully his name, but he didn't have to drag the next generation down with him.

Rachel Aroesti, The Guardian, 29th June 2017

Production under way on dog-based film Patrick

Filming is under way on Patrick, a new British comedy film featuring dogs. Beattie Edmondson and Gemma Jones star.

British Comedy Guide, 5th May 2017

Ade Edmondson and Beattie Edmondson interview

Beattie Edmondson has followed her famous parents into comedy -- and now she and father Ade are playing for laughs at the same theatre.

Nick Curtis, Evening Standard, 27th October 2016

The Birthday Girls answer Punchline's burning questions

Birthday Girls interview.

Punchline UK, 15th August 2016

Comics performing at Live from the Pleasance

Lucy Porter, Tez Ilyas, Michelle Wolf, Tom Ward, Birthday Girls and Ben Hanlin.

Ryan Barrell, The Huffington Post, 11th August 2016

Birthday Girls: 10 Edinburgh Fringe questions

Birthday Girls answer 10 questions about their 2016 Edinburgh Fringe show.

British Comedy Guide, 9th August 2016

Birthday Girls on their Edinburgh Fringe return

Birthday Girls chat about sketch comedy's missing generation, the importance of a bruising Fringe experience and how to cultivate the exact aroma of a deep fat fryer

Ben Venables, The Skinny, 29th July 2016

Fringe preview: 10 sons and daughters of the famous

Comedy seems to be producing dynasties, with a new generation of performers coming from famous parents. All of these comedians are forging their own paths, but their heritage is notable...

Chortle, 20th July 2016

A (super) group effort

Sketch comedy troupes Massive Dad, Lazy Susan and Birthday Girls have banded together to form an all-powerful eight-member supergroup. Ben Williams meets Massive Lazy Girls to talk collaboration and teamwork.

Ben Williams, Fest Mag, 18th July 2016

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