Press clippings Page 29
Probably the best comedy drama currently on television, the third series of Getting On is still getting the laughs, although there's been quite a few changes.
For starters, the staff have been transferred to a new, brighter hospital. But this hasn't stopped Nurse Kim Wilde (Jo Brand), Sister Den Flixter (Joanna Scanlan) and Dr. Pippa Moore (Vicki Pepperdine) each - in their own way - trying to cope with their workload and each other. Their former matron, Hilary Loftus (Ricky Grover), has also now taken a consultancy role in the hospital, meaning he's just background noise - though he could have a say in who the hospital keeps as staff...
Most of the laughs come from the relationships between the three lead characters, helped along by solid acting and some cracking writing. Pippa had the best scenes in this opening episode, especially when chatting to some student doctors in the hope that they'd be interested in her latest medical project: an examination of "post-65 vulvas". Wonderfully funny, if slightly icky.
The drama is also coming off well, especially between Den and Hilary. This episode sees the staff going for medical check-ups, which sees Den discovering something shocking. I'll say no more.
Getting On's one of the best shows around, but as it is hidden away on BBC Four it's not given as big a profile as other shows. Maybe it might be time for a move to BBC Two?
Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 22nd October 2012Jo Brand's superlative Getting On returned for a third series. Thanks to its vérité stylings and politically inflected setting, this barely-comedy set in the NHS backwaters has oft been compared with The Thick of It, while shamefully acquiring nothing like its profile. Meanwhile, their fundamental differences are encapsulated in their respective main characters' voices: Peter Capaldi's barbaric bark and Brand's low-level drone.
Anyway, last week's opener had the central trio - Brand's nurse, Joanna Scanlan's matron, and Vicki Pepperdine's fabulously callous doctor - in a new-fangled ward but struggling with the usual mix of bureaucratic absurdities and each other. That it successfully interwove a distressing scene of an old woman having a panic attack and the line "I think you would have enjoyed getting your teeth into my vaginal atrophy" tells you all you need to know about the show's rare, nay American, sophistication.
Hugh Montgomery, The Independent, 21st October 2012Jo Brand: 'I'd like to be a national disgrace'
Jo Brand, whose routines used to have men in the audience crossing their legs in fear, has mellowed somewhat. Perhaps it's all the knitting.
Emily Dugan, The Independent, 21st October 2012Review: Sick humour runs riot as Jo Brand & co returned
Getting On was back with a heady mix of Jo Brand and vaginal atrophy and although its the comedic equivalent of picking a scab, it's funny enough to get away with it.
Keith Watson, Metro, 18th October 2012Jo Brand, Vicki Pepperdine and Joanna Scanlan - Terri in The Thick Of It - are back on duty for a third series of the deliciously downbeat hospital comedy. With an eye for detail that packs a hypodermic punch, it's a bleakly comic picture of an NHS bedevilled by jargon and box-ticking, with 'cultural diversity cupcakes' the least of Nurse Kim and Sister Den's mounting problems. If you didn't laugh you'd cry.
Larushka Ivan-Zadeh and Carol Carter, Metro, 17th October 2012Getting On is a tiny triumph, a mournful, relentlessly downbeat sitcom that isn't actually funny but somehow makes you laugh even while you're pummelled by its bleak portrait of the NHS.
Its three writers and stars - Vicki Pepperdine, the Bafta-winning Jo Brand, and Joanna Scanlan - return to a new ward and a new health trust in the third series. But nothing much has changed.
Dr Pippa Moore (Pepperdine) is painfully self-obsessed and lacking in empathy ("I've had a mini-break to celebrate my decree nisi"), nurse Kim (Brand) cares but is buried by a landslide of political correctness, while sister Den (Scanlan) tries to keep her head above the jargon.
At times it seems that everyone talks but no one listens, and there are some comically excruciating scenes involving the clipped and hopeless Pippa as she tries to discuss her female genitalia project.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 17th October 2012Jo Brand: I'm still a man-eating radical feminist
The comedian and actress on why The X Factor makes her cringe, Getting On's US remake and her first crush on Blue Peter's John Noakes.
Claire Webb, Radio Times, 17th October 2012A welcome and timely return for this hospital sitcom, which might not be a gag-fest in the traditional sense but has established itself as a worthy addition to the canon of workplace comedies. As we rejoin the gang, they're establishing themselves on a new ward. Consultant Pippa (Vicky Pepperdine) is still buzzing around irritatingly. Sister Den (Joanna Scanlan) is making mountains out of molehills. And nurse Kim (Jo Brand) is calmly getting the job done, while nipping out for an occasional fag and bearing the brunt of the odd hissy fit from her senior colleagues. Tonight, an old lady is suspected of hypochondria and Hilary, who's now inspecting on behalf of a private healthcare organisation, is poking his nose in. Funny, charming and gently subversive.
Phil Harrison, Time Out, 17th October 2012If Getting On (BBC4), Jo Brand, Joanna Scanlan and Vicki Pepperdine's sitcom set in a geriatric ward, makes it to a ninth series, I'll be very happy. Though to call it a sitcom is to do the show a disservice, as it's got far fewer gags and many more laughs than most. As well as being darkly funny - old age and death are both subjects rich in humour for the self-aware, the middle-aged or the deeply unpleasant - Getting On is also tender and surprisingly moving, as Nurse Kim (Brand) and Sister Den (Scanlan) try to ignore Dr Pippa (Pepperdine) and treat the patients with an entirely believable mixture of indifference and respect.
Most of all, everything about this show feels real and unforced: from what's included - such as the sheet shortages - to what's not. Few of the patients speak; fewer still have any visitors. Getting old is most definitely not for wimps, and Getting On should be prescribed viewing for everyone.
John Crace, The Guardian, 17th October 2012A third series for the scalpel-sharp comedy set in a geriatric ward. Co-written by its stars Jo Brand, Joanna Scanlan and Vicki Pepperdine, it manages to veer between the truthful and the ridiculous in capturing life in an efficiency-driven NHS hospital. Stoic Nurse Kim Wilde (Brand), fraught Sister Den Flixter (Scanlan) and officious Doctor Pippa Moore (Pepperdine) are now working out of a new ward, K2, at a hospital, St Jude's, close to their old one. The equipment might be better but the familiar issues remain among their sick, dying and occasionally hypochondriac patients.
Simon Horsford, The Telegraph, 16th October 2012