British Comedy Guide
David Schneider
David Schneider

David Schneider

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

Press clippings Page 4

Radio 4 orders new David Schneider sitcom

Comic David Schneider has written and will star in Births, Deaths And Marriages, a new sitcom for BBC Radio 4.

British Comedy Guide, 20th February 2012

David Baddiel's comedy about a Muslim man (played by charismatic comic Omid Djalili) who discovers he is Jewish and embarks on a quest that leads him into an unlikely friendship with a Jewish taxi driver (Richard Schiff). With cameos from the likes of Matt Lucas, Tracy-Anne Oberman and David Schneider, it's mildly amusing fare.

Catherine Gee, The Telegraph, 5th January 2012

Curb Your Judaism saw David Schneider ponder why Britain's Jewish comics often avoid looking to their religious background for material, unlike their opposite numbers across the pond.

This was a hotchpotch of a documentary with different contributors - among them David Baddiel, Matt Lucas and writers Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran - all offering their thoughts on why Jewish humour has largely stayed in the closet. Could it be the effect of political correctness? The performer's fear of being pigeonholed and not making the mainstream? It wasn't clear whether the programme sufficiently answered any of these questions. Perhaps placing the debate in some kind of historical and/or social context would have helped as well as hearing the thoughts of the American performers mentioned.

Lisa Martland, The Stage, 13th October 2011

Peter Sellers, Sid James, Bud Flanagan. All Jewish. Who knew? I certainly didn't and it's just one fascinating tidbit unearthed by stand-up David Schneider as he explores why British Jewish comedy is not as successful as its American counterpart.

The most popular reason seems to be that British Jews were more likely to be assimilated into mainstream culture, though David Baddiel does come up with a far-fetched theory that the benefits of political correctness bypassed Jews, meaning that black and Asian people had comedy TV shows while Jews didn't.

The programme is scattered with wonderful Yiddish - "kvetching", "schmaltzy", "shiksa", "sheitel" - and offers a superb chance to hear Matt Lucas (yes, he's Jewish too) describe his plans for a sitcom about a Jewish family in great detail.

David Crawford, Radio Times, 11th October 2011

David Schneider fans clamour for his return to Twitter

Fans of David Schneider, the comedian and actor, have taken to Twitter to complain about the star's silence on the social networking site.

Harry Wallop, The Telegraph, 9th May 2011

David Schneider: A Look Back at The Day Today

The Day Today revolutionised TV comedy and changed the way we watched the news forever. David Schneider reveals what it was like to be part of the phenomenon that brought us 'Uzi Lover', 'Kiddy Stare' and Alan Partridge.

Alex Godfrey, Sabotage Times, 12th April 2011

David Schneider: Twitter to stand-up & being counted

The Tories' demise interrupted his solo career, but now he is back on stage and leading the comedy front in the AV referendum Yes campaign. Matt Chorley meets David Schneider.

Matt Chorley, The Independent, 3rd April 2011

In round two, more jokers try to outwit each other: zany stand-up Josie Long, comic writer Robert Popper and - the most impudent by far - actor David Schneider. Success will be rewarded with a "Lucas" - the newest, most arbitrary award around, named after jovial host Matt Lucas. Tonight he's after nominations for the most incomprehensible British accent, least practical pet and best war. That's if his guests can get a gag in edgeways: Lucas can't help jumping in with rib-tickling anecdotes, while selecting winners even more random than his categories. Not that we're complaining; this knocks the socks off the average, smug awards do.

Claire Webb, Radio Times, 4th March 2010

The 100 Funniest People On Twitter

We asked our 75,000 followers to nominate the Tweeters that regularly made them laugh - the ones that were frequently mentioned got added to the pile.

The Poke, 7th December 2002

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