British Comedy Guide
Jennifer Saunders. Copyright: Comic Relief
Jennifer Saunders

Jennifer Saunders

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

Press clippings Page 21

"Did Iron Age woman have Playtex to guide her?" shouts a young Rik Mayall to a reluctantly undressing Jennifer Saunders. So begins Dawn French's superbly bizarre comedy set at a summer school offering a course in 'Iron Age Living', also starring Robbie Coltrane and Peter Richardson.

Catherine Gee, The Telegraph, 20th March 2015

Jennifer Saunders: Joanna Lumley made me write film

The first draft of the sitcom movie is in. Now it's Joanna Lumley's turn to "buckle down"...

James Gill, Radio Times, 3rd February 2015

Comic Relief Bake Off lineup is cause for celebration

In the bleak winter TV schedules, there's nothing quite like watching celebrities being rubbish at baking. And, from Dame Edna Everage, Jennifer Saunders and Victoria Wood to Alexa Chung and Zoella, this time I've actually heard of all but one of them.

Heidi Stephens, The Guardian, 3rd February 2015

Edina and Patsy should not come back

Twenty years after first starting work on its script, Jennifer Saunders has this week promised that the Absolutely Fabulous movie will finally begin filming some time this year.

Jon O'Brien, Metro, 5th January 2015

Jennifer Saunders reveals 'euphoria' for Ab Fab script

Sweetie darling! Jennifer Saunders reveals her 'euphoria' after finally completing first draft of Absolutely Fabulous movie script.

Louise Saunders, Daily Mail, 5th January 2015

Absolutely Fabulous movie WILL happen in 2015

Jennifer Saunders, 56, is determined that the film, titled Edina and Patsy, will be made by the end of the year.

Nigel Pauley, The People, 3rd January 2015

Radio Times review

It would be tempting to think that the focus of this story is its creator, David Walliams, who was no stranger to rocking a frock in Little Britain and Come Fly with Me. But the comic actor turned children's writer has a serious point to make in this uplifting version of his debut novel.

Our hero is 12-year-old Dennis (Billy Kennedy), who lives with his couch-potato dad and unreconstructed brother. Dennis is missing his mother, who has left home to live with a roofer, but he soon finds an escape.

A gifted footballer, Dennis also discovers through his new friend Lisa (the school's coolest girl), that wearing dresses makes him happy. How will he reconcile his interests, or sneak past his fashion-police teachers?

Walliams's knack of championing the outsider and celebrating difference shines out of a story he says isn't autobiographical, but is "very personal". It's no wonder such a quality cast signed up, including Jennifer Saunders, Tim McInnerny, Steve Speirs and James Buckley, who has some of the best lines as a supremely negative PE teacher. Even supermodel Kate Moss gets to shake a tailfeather, and Walliams allows himself a cameo as a camp referee.

It's a refreshingly unusual Christmas treat with a punch-the-air final act, and a great use of Queen - have a guess which song they use.

Mark Braxton, Radio Times, 26th December 2014

David Walliams' children's story is one of the bolder festive family offerings this year - and not just because it isn't set in a soft-focused past. If you've read the novel, you'll know it's about a 12-year-old cross-dresser who comes into his own after a chance encounter with a fashion mag. Walliams stars alongside Jennifer Saunders, James Buckley, Meera Syal and Kate Moss.

Richard Vine, The Guardian, 24th December 2014

Jennifer Saunders interview

Playing a loopy language teacher is a dream for Jennifer Saunders - and that's just one of the absolutely fabulous projects she has on the go.

James Rampton, The Daily Express, 21st December 2014

A young lad spots Kate Moss in a Vogue fashion spread and falls in love - with frocks. Twelve-year-old Dennis is fed up with everything after his parents split; could dressing up as "Denise" cheer him up? Yes, it turns out, in this sweet-natured adaptation of David Walliams's children's book (following previous Crimbo versions of his Gangsta Granny and Mr Stink).

OK, so Moss's cameo doesn't display any hidden thespian talents and everything is resolved extremely conveniently, but it aims to celebrate difference and individuality, which can't be too bad, given how our commercially-driven youth culture too often tells kids that there's a "right" way to look. And with Jennifer Saunders, James Buckley, Tim McInnerny and Walliams himself popping up among the grown-ups, there's enough here to keep kids and hungover adults amused.

Andrea Mullaney, The Scotsman, 20th December 2014

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