British Comedy Guide
8 Out Of 10 Cats. Jimmy Carr. Copyright: Zeppotron
Jimmy Carr

Jimmy Carr

  • 52 years old
  • English
  • Writer, stand-up comedian and executive producer

Press clippings Page 30

Adrienne Truscott: nudity, 5-star reviews & Jimmy Carr (Link expired)

Whether she decides to go commando or not, Adrienne Truscott is bound to get our knickers in a twist again, writes Kate Copstick.

Kate Copstick, WOW247, 3rd August 2015

Derby Arena venue is no laughing matter

"Terrible" acoustics and a "massive" queue for one bar has been the verdict for Derby Arena's first major entertainment performance. And the headline act of the comedy festival, comedian Jimmy Carr, even took a side swipe at the choice of venue during his performance there on Friday night. The TV funnyman joked to the audience: "Whose idea was it to hold this gig here?"

Martin Naylor, The Derby Telegraph, 14th July 2015

Princess Beatrice dines with Jimmy Carr

Princess Beatrice went out for dinner with Jimmy Carr and his partner Karoline Copping on Monday night.

Female First, 1st July 2015

Jimmy Carr interview

It is one of Jimmy Carr's favourite sounds. It is not applause, or waves of laughter. Instead, it is the moment that laughter curdles into shock.

Will Ramsey, Hull Daily Mail, 12th May 2015

Murder in Successville is ridiculous. Each week it takes a real-life celebrity, and places them in the middle of a fictional murder mystery, which they must help to solve. Successville, where these crimes take place, is populated by celebrities doing ordinary jobs, only these "celebrities" are impressionists doing their versions of those celebrities doing ordinary jobs. It's part sketch show, part structured reality show and part quiz show. Its jokes are largely crude and scatological. Everyone is on the verge of laughter throughout.

In the opening episode, the celebrity stooge is Jamie Laing from Made in Chelsea. I've never seen Made in Chelsea, so he well could have been the impressionist's version of Jamie Laing, though a passing colleague saw him on my screen, confirmed it was the real Jamie Laing and declared him to be "the worst". Laing plays a rookie cop tasked with cracking the murder of Strictly Come Dancing judge Bruno Tonioli, who, in Successville, is a chef married to chief suspect Darcy Bussell. Neither are played by themselves. Local gangsters Alan Carr and Harry Styles are not themselves, either. Nor, disappointingly, is ballistics expert Taylor Swift actually played by Taylor Swift.

This is a very, very silly show. For the first half I was torn between feeling extremely pleased something so anarchic and daft had been commissioned by the BBC in the first place, and willing it to be just that little bit funnier, and less reliant on jokes about bumming. But eventually, it got me. Laing gamely plays along as he is directed towards increasingly absurd situations, such as interrogating Alan Carr's underworld "sister" Jimmy Carr, who communicates only in that seal-bark laugh.

If Laing really is a villain in Made in Chelsea, then Murder in Successville is a remarkable act of rehabilitation for him. He just can't stop giggling, and it's helplessly contagious. This is the same silly joy that comes from sitcom blooper reels, or performers corpsing during live comedy, or trying not to laugh when you're getting told off. It's not particularly sophisticated, but it is surprisingly charming, and perhaps some of those remaining BBC Three-on-TV viewers might have stumbled across it and been charmed by it, too.

Rebecca Nicholson, The Guardian, 7th May 2015

Review: Acid-tongued Jimmy Carr 'scandalises' audience

Forbidden chuckles echoed around the theatre as a scintillating Jimmy Carr scandalised his audience in Bournemouth last night.

Toby Wadey, Bournemouth Echo, 22nd March 2015

With 12 series already under its belt, you most likely know the drill when it comes to Keith Lemon's puerile panel show, packed with racy games and jibes at everyone from Katie Hopkins to Kim Kardashian. This new run sees Fearne Cotton and Holly Willoughby return as team captains, alongside guests including Jimmy Carr and former fill-in captain Gino D'Acampo. Here's hoping that the phonic charades of "Don't Show Keith Your Teeth" and toilet-based Chinese whispers "Shouting One Out" are slated for a reappearance.

Hannah J Davies, The Guardian, 19th March 2015

Jimmy Carr slammed for 'ageist' Madonna HRT joke

Jimmy Carr sparked outrage among viewers during last night's Brit Awards ceremony when he made a joke about Madonna's age on stage.

The Mirror, 26th February 2015

With a little liquid still left in that particular game show crossover sponge, here's another splash of word-wrangling whimsy from the Cats crew, with Jimmy Carr, Sean Lock and Jon Richardson joined by Reginald D. Hunter and British comedy award-winner Aisling Bea in search of those elusive eight-pointers. The lexicographical gold-panning is overseen, as ever, by Susie Dent, with assistance from Holly Walsh. As for which format to remix next, how about 8 Out of 10 Cats does The Crystal Maze?

Mark Jones, The Guardian, 23rd January 2015

Radio Times review

Here's the kind of knowledge-nugget many QI fans might appreciate. Tonight, Stephen Fry offers a scientific explanation for the phenomenon of walking into a room, then forgetting why you went there. It's not just brain decay, he reassures us, but a possible hangover from our evolutionary past, whereby crossing a threshold, moving from one environment to another, in some way resets our mental state.

Now where was I? Oh yes, so also on the show are Jimmy Carr, who, love him or loathe him, is on flying form, Suggs and Claudia O'Doherty, as well as the very QI line: "I can't believe you're being so blasé about this Stephen - you've killed a unicorn."

David Butcher, Radio Times, 16th January 2015

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