British Comedy Guide
Charlie Baker
Charlie Baker

Charlie Baker (I)

  • Stand-up comedian and actor

Press clippings Page 5

Interview with Charlie Baker

We caught up with the multi-talented Charlie Baker to talk about his upcoming Edinburgh Fringe show, his run in London's West-End and much more!

The Angry Microwave, 14th July 2015

Review: Christ's Hospital gig

Horsham's Christ's Hospital is developing something of a surprising alter ego - as a hub of comedy. Held in the grand theatre in the school's grounds, the latest comedy night on Wednesday, March 11, features superb performances from three excellent comics: Russell Kane, Romesh Ranganathan and Charlie Baker.

Harley Tamplin, West Sussex Today, 19th March 2015

Review - Charlie Baker: Baker's Dozen at Firebug

Multi-talented Charlie Baker brought a comedy cocktail to the festival, with a 90-minute blend of humour and melody for his 'Baker's Dozen' set.

Yasmin Duffin, Leicester Mercury, 10th February 2014

This week's new live comedy

Reviews of Chris Martin, Marcel Lucont and Charlie Baker.

James Kettle, The Guardian, 29th December 2012

BBC to pilot studio sitcom from Charlie Baker

Stand-up comic Charlie Baker has written The Home Office, a sitcom about a man trying to setup a business working from home.

British Comedy Guide, 2nd October 2012

Interview: Charlie Baker

An interview with Charlie Baker about his new Fringe show.

Tommy Holgate, The Sun, 29th July 2012

The ubiquitous Griff Rhys Jones's comedy panel series reaches its final episode tonight. Captains Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker are joined by journalist Grace Dent and comedian Rob Rouse. As ever, their knowledge of recent history - and ready wit - are tested via a bewilderingly broad range of archive footage.

Andrew Marszal, The Telegraph, 19th July 2012

Although its derivative format and focus on the relatively recent past makes it feel at times a little like Have I Got Some Really Very Stale News for You, when it hits its stride this Griff Rhys Jones-chaired comedy quiz can provoke an occasional belly laugh. Tonight, comedians Robin Ince and Andi Osho join the reliably acerbic team captains Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker, attempting to answer random questions on a wide range of tentatively historical topics.

Gerard O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 26th June 2012

Yes, it's yet another panel game, although given that this series is only four episodes long rather than the conventional six, you can't help but think Channel 4 don't have much faith in it.

Hosted by Griff Rhys Jones and featuring team captains Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker, A Short History of Everything Else uses old film footage to ask questions about recent history, from the famous to the obscure.

Watching this show, I can't help but think that it's just too much like Have I Got News for You. The key difference, though, is that the questions are too old to be satirical enough and the set is a bit more high-tech. This one actually features TV monitors rather than just turning boards!

Most of the humour in the show come not from the footage, but the panel insulting each other and trying to mock Rhys Jones (mostly over an old beer advert he did). That's all well and good, but it'd be much better if they could get more funny still from their video archives.

If I were a betting man, I'd say before long this show will be history...

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 18th June 2012

The last time I saw Griff Rhys Jones on television was during the Jubilee pageant, when he was meandering up the Thames in a motor launch. I thought he looked miserable then, but that was nothing compared to how fed up he appeared presenting the first episode of the comedy panel quiz show, A Short History of Everything Else (Channel 4). Griff's script opened with: "We're off down memory lane without a seat belt ... because we didn't have to wear them in those days" and went downhill thereafter. His rictus smile throughout was almost certainly pain, though it would be more charitable to put it down to professionalism.

It wasn't just the script that was desperate: it was the concept as well. It was as though someone in the commissioning department had watched a couple of episodes of Have I Got News For You on Dave and come up with the brainwave of dispensing with topicality and making a news show that would feel like a repeat the first time you watched it. From round to round, the format never changed; Griff would make some crap gags to introduce a sequence of archive footage before inviting the two team captains - Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker - along with guests Micky Flanagan and Kirsty Wark to make their own crap gags. I guess it was cheap, but it wasn't funny.

Brigstocke looked for a moment as if he thought he had actually wandered on to the set of a HIGNFY repeat as he gave a passable imitation of an extremely grumpy Paul Merton, looking permanently pissed off and not laughing at anyone else's jokes. But, on reflection, he was probably just annoyed he too had let himself be talked into signing up for such a turkey.

Satire just doesn't work on 30 year-old archive footage. Margaret Thatcher gags stopped having any edge the moment Ben Elton started making them in the 1980s. As for the old clips of Elton John having a tantrum and the 70s beer adverts ... For what it's worth, Charlie and Kirsty won by 15 points to 14. The result might seem rather more relevant in five years though, after the show has been repeated a few times.

John Crace, The Guardian, 14th June 2012

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