Eve
Press clippings Page 40
Cunk On Everything review
This is a book you can dip into and not be disappointed. In fact, if you plan on buying this as a Christmas gift I recommend you buy two because you'll want to keep this.
Kate Stone, Funny Women, 31st October 2018Dylan Moran, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury - review
Dishevelled, disillusioned Irish comedian Dylan Moran is a poet of misery, a louche and laconic narrator of perpetual disappointment. He's also very, very funny.
Leon Burakowski, The Shropshire Star, 31st October 2018Inside No. 9's live episode was exceptionally clever
Television history, urban myth, horror tradition, all bound together and delivered at a breakneck pace through live television.
James Cooray Smith, The New Statesman, 30th October 2018Julia Davis, on new show Sally4Ever
Julia Davis, writer and star of an acclaimed new sitcom about a lesbian affair, talks about why she's not interested in playing happy families.
Dominic Maxwell, The Times, 29th October 2018Sally4Ever episode 1 review
Even the most dedicated Davis fan might not be quite ready for this new Sky Atlantic series.
Sean O'Grady, The Independent, 26th October 2018Sally4Ever episodes 1 & 2 review
On the basis of just the first two episodes, this might be Davis' most boundary-pushing show yet, so who knows what horrors and delights she has in store for us in the rest of the seven-part series.
Sophie Davies, Cult Box, 26th October 2018TV review: Sally4Ever, Sky Atlantic
All I know is I'll be sticking around for the ride. So Julia Davis must be doing something right.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 25th October 2018Julia Davis: the anger that went into making Sally4Ever
"This goes to a lot of places and is probably more ambitious than anything I have done before"
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 25th October 2018Sally4Ever review
A singular mix of humiliation, emotional agony and bodily fluids skewers the viewer in exquisite agony.
Lucy Mangan, The Guardian, 25th October 2018Sally4Ever, review
Julia Davis fans will be intrigued but this bleak comedy feels frustratingly familiar.
Alice Vincent, The Telegraph, 25th October 2018