
Fry & Laurie
- Double act
Press clippings Page 2
Video: 20 of Fry & Laurie's best bits
Hurrah, and indeed, huzzah. As either Stephen Fry or Hugh Laurie themselves might say.
Andrea Mann, The Huffington Post, 15th May 2012Fry & Laurie to reunite for new project
Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie are set to reunite for a new project, although details about the endeavour are not yet known.
British Comedy Guide, 14th May 2012Fry & Laurie - Reunited | TV Review
GOLD couldn't have gone far wrong with this well-judged and timely reunion, with public affection for Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie - once one of comedy's biggest double acts - sky high at the moment.
Liam Tucker, TV Pixie, 25th November 2010Fry & Laurie Reunited is huge ratings success for Gold
A total of 1.1m individuals tuned into the programme, helping to make Gold the biggest pay only channel in the country.
UKTV, 25th November 2010Fry & Laurie tagged all-time favourite British comedy
Readers of the USA-based Tellyspotting blog have voted Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry as the favorite British comedy couple of all-time.
Tellyspotting, 16th February 2010A bout of Fry v Laurie
On Sunday two of Britain's national treasures, whose surnames have been entwined in the public consciousness since their comedy show A Bit of Fry and Laurie first aired on BBC Two in 1988, compete for our affections. At 9pm, you can see Stephen Fry as a Norfolk solicitor in Kingdom. Meanwhile at the same time on Sky 1, you could watch House, starring Hugh Laurie as a medical genius. It's time to decide who is better - Fry or Laurie?
Stuart Jeffries, The Guardian, 4th June 2009A Bit of Fry and Laurie is coming out on DVD. Fantastic news. [...] Of course, as each series arrived it got progressively worse, culminating in the unwatchable fourth season (and see here for some quotes on that), with Peter's Friends-rank guest stars lurking around Hugh's piano. Nevertheless, at its peak it remains the finest comedy ever seen on British TV. Fact.
Graham Kibble-White, Off The Telly, 10th January 2006The start of A Bit of Fry and Laurie (BBC1) a couple of weeks ago was so self-absorbed, so steadily unfunny, that, as Bertie Wooster used to say, only the fact that I couldn't think of anything refrained me from saying something pretty stinging. Frankly, I thought it might be me. Perhaps, like a vulture with a heavy head cold, I couldn't distinguish between a smash hit and a nasty accident. Circumstances were guaranteed this week's show a rating which should dinge the feeling. Luckily, it is better. Or my head cold is.
Nancy Banks-Smith, The Guardian, 27th February 1995I can't but feel that Fry is wrong for Jeeves. Too young for one thing but he will still be wrong when he is too old. However, Fry and Laurie are probably indissoluble like Damon and Pythias or Crosse & Blackwell.
Nancy Banks-Smith, The Guardian, 15th April 1991