British Comedy Guide

Eve

Press clippings Page 163

The Authorised Biography of Kenny Everett - review

The real Kenny Everett remains obscured in this cliched, sanitised life story.

Rachel Cooke, The Observer, 15th September 2013

Interview: Steve Nallon

Steve Nallon, best known for impersonating Margaret Thatcher in Spitting Image, is touring in the comic play Cissie & Ada: A Hysterical Rectomy.

John-Paul Stephenson, Giggle Beats, 12th September 2013

Lee Evans: I'll never go back to Hollywood

Lee Evans has turned his back on Hollywood after landing his dream role in the West End.

Alistair Foster, Evening Standard, 11th September 2013

The IT Crowd: Top Seven Moments

Looking back over the first four series we've found the best moments of The IT Crowd...

The Huffington Post, 10th September 2013

Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope working on new 'dramedy'

Philomena writers Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope are already working on another British 'dramedy' script.

Wendy Mitchell, Screen Daily, 8th September 2013

You're never too successful to learn

The comedian is surely the eternal student. They never stop observing, they carry a notebook, they have to be aware of every fad and fashion. Surprising, then, that so many of them seem to give up on watching their colleagues at some point in their careers.

Julian Hall, The Stage, 6th September 2013

Opinion: Can you ever really give up stand-up?

Can you ever really give up being a comedian? This thought has occurred to me a number of times recently.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 4th September 2013

Why feminism has never been so funny

At the Edinburgh fringe, new comedy icons Bridget Christie and Adrienne Truscott took on the F-word. I can't wait to see what they and their patriarchy-smashing pals do next.

Mathilda Gregory, The Guardian, 3rd September 2013

Whatever you do, don't peer Through The Keyhole

Keith Lemon's new take on the classic formula is the worst kind of garish, self-congratulatory Saturday night TV guff.

Julia Raeside, The Guardian, 31st August 2013

A Touch of Cloth 2: As wonderfully bonkers as ever!

The gag rate in A Touch of Cloth can actually be exhausting. Visual gags, rhyming gags, Cloth gags and mocking gags are in abundance here, but the brilliance of the script means that you never lose sight of the crime story at the centre.

Natasha Sporn, The Custard TV, 26th August 2013

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