Press clippings Page 3
Review: Fleabag, Series Two, BBC Three/BBC One
So follow that. After the seismic success of the first series of Fleabag the action picks up 371 days and some hours later, with the family gathered for an important celebratory dinner. But this is Phoebe Waller-Bridge's Fleabag, it's never going to be an uneventful meal is it, as an early scene in which a bloody nose is wiped makes abundantly clear.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 4th March 2019Fleabag series 2 review
Welcome back our broken, mischievous, frank-talking friend.
Steve Bennett, Chortle, 4th March 2019Fleabag is back - and it's better than ever
Phoebe Waller-Bridge deftly sidesteps the difficult second album problem in an assured series premiere for the hit BBC3 comedy, says Huw Fullerton.
Huw Fullerton, Radio Times, 4th March 2019Fleabag series 2 review
Andrew Scott joins the cast and Olivia Colman returns as the venomous stepmother in Phoebe Waller-Bridge's masterful comedy.
Sarah Hughes, i Newspaper, 4th March 2019Bill Paterson interview
From the Citizens' to Fleabag, why the Scottish actor loves playing awkward.
The Scotsman, 1st March 2019Baking comedy drama Love Sarah now filming
Celia Imrie is starring in a new comedy drama film about an extended family of three women starting a fashionable London bakery, now filming.
British Comedy Guide, 22nd January 2019Seasonal shenanigans of a different sort course through Ben Wheatley's new film Happy New Year, Colin Burstead, a nightmarish vision of familial disharmony starring Kill List's Neil Maskell as the eponymous host of a New Year's Eve get-together that starts going pear-shaped before his extended family even get through the door of the Downton Abbey-style heritage home he's rented for them. Hayley Squires, Charles Dance, Bill Paterson and Doon Mackichan are among the top-notch cast Wheatley has assembled to play Colin's squabbling relatives, but it's Sam Riley's appearance as the black sheep of the family that pushes everyone ever closer to the edge, particularly Colin, whose beleaguered, unappreciated effort to honour his family ties feels like an apt representation of the chaos of Brexit-era Britain.
Alistair Harkness, The Scotsman, 30th November 2018The anthology nature of Inside No. 9 allows the duo to experiment with different styles and in the opening instalment, entitled Zanzibar, they've decided to tackle Shakespearean farce. Set in the ninth floor of the titular hotel, we're introduced to a group of guests who participate in various room swaps and cases of mistaken identity throughout the half hour running time. Based on A Comedy of Errors, one of the Bard's plays that I'm unfamiliar with, the crucial part of the plot sees Rory Kinnear take on dual roles; a powerful prince and a man about to propose to his disinterested girlfriend. Throughout the piece we're also introduced to the prince's devious bodyguard (Shearsmith), an amnesiac pensioner and her camp son (Marcia Warren and Pemberton), a suicidal Scotsman (Bill Paterson), an open-minded call girl (Tanya Franks) as well as a flippant stage hypnotist (Kevin Eldon). Providing key exposition throughout the piece are the Zanzibar's bellboy (Jaygaan Ayeh) and his chambermaid girlfriend (Helen Monks) who help to participate in the confusion. I personally thought the decision to perform all of Zanzibar in iambic pentameter would get annoying quickly but instead I relaxed into the flow and ultimately felt like the decision paid off. After the initial set-up, the gags began to flow, and I found myself laughing out loud at least three times throughout the piece thanks mainly to the quick-witted nature of the dialogue and the comic timing of the ensemble cast. Praise must go to Warren for portraying a doddery old dear who takes on a thankless task and to Kinnear for convincingly playing two very different characters. Furthermore, I felt that both Eldon and Franks shone in smaller yet vital roles and Ayeh held his own against many more established comic players. Zanzibar put me in mind of prior Inside No. 9 openers Sardines and Couchette; which also took place in a confined setting and were full of big laughs rather than moments of subtlety. However, whilst both of those instalments ended with a rather dark denouement, Zanzibar contained a rare happy ending that you won't find in many Inside No. 9 episodes. Whilst I enjoyed the experimental nature of the episode and found it kept my attention, I prefer when Pemberton and Shearsmith go a little darker with their material therefore I'm looking forward to seeing what awaits me in coming weeks as the fourth series of Inside No. 9 continues.
Matt, The Custard TV, 6th January 2018Inside No.9 review: Deliciously creepy with star cast
With the constant swapping of rooms and the rhyming, scanning dialogue it was without doubt a very clever piece.
Matt Baylis, The Daily Express, 3rd January 2018A triumphant return for Pemberton and Shearsmith
Is there anything to which Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith can't turn their hands?
The Telegraph, 2nd January 2018