Press clippings Page 15
A 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 2012Return of the dry medical comedy starring and written by Jo Brand, Vicki Pepperdine and Joanna Scanlan, and set in the geriatric ward of an NHS hospital. Kim, Den and Pippa move to ward K2 in St Jude's while their own hospital closes for a possible (but in no way guaranteed) refurb. Meanwhile, Pippa is causing her usual brand of chaos/inconvenience (inchaosvenience?) - dumping her baggage, figuratively and literally, all over her colleagues. Perfectly judged performances and great writing.
John Robinson, The Guardian, 15th October 2012The first episode of the new series features one shocking absence - Malcolm Tucker languishes in opposition and is nowhere to be seen as yet - and of hints that the compromises of coalition are an open goal to for satirists. A botched schools policy dominates the opening episode. It's the brainchild of the Coalition's junior partners but - at the behest of fearsomely irritating spin doctor Stewart Pearson (Vincent Franklin) - it's launched by Roger Allam's crusty traditionalist Peter Mannion, who palpably neither knows nor cares about the initiative. Before long, Mannion's taken his daily 'gaffe dump' and is branded a 'fibre-optic Fagin' - could the government really be proposing the idea of getting kids to design apps to pay for their higher education? As you may have gathered, many of the names remain the same, they're just on different sides of the government/opposition equation. But some things never change. Still bumbling along in the background - hilarious, admirable, pitiful - are civil servants Glenn Cullen (James Smith) and Terri Coverley (Joanna Scanlan). Terri wants out but she's 'too expensive to get rid of.' Glenn is sadder still - when his new colleagues aren't ignoring him completely, they're comparing him to 'a week-old party balloon.' Yet does Glen hold the key to the show's essence? Glenn loses every battle he fights...
Phil Harrison, Time Out, 8th September 2012BBC Four's Getting On to be adapted for America
American network HBO are to pilot a US version of Getting On, the BBC Four comedy drama starring Jo Brand, Joanna Scanlan and Vicki Pepperdine.
British Comedy Guide, 15th August 2012If you're chilled by the winter evenings, try Ruth Jones's warm Welsh lilt of a show. It'll put a spring in your step to match its heroine. Single mother-of-three Stella is wearing a smile wider than the Rhondda Valley, thanks to a night with her new fella Sean.
It means heartbreak for lollipop man Alan, who's even sporting a toupee in a bid to impress her. Maybe his luck will change with hopeless but hearty life coach Nancy Crock (a lovely turn from Joanna Scanlan). But the thrust of the episode is Stel's suspicion that her son-in-law-to-be, Sunil, is playing away. What will she tell her expectant daughter Emma?
Stella is funny and friendly - who wouldn't want to live in Pontyberry? - with beautifully surreal touches to give it some bite, like the horse who lives in the house opposite. Beaut!
Mark Braxton, Radio Times, 10th February 2012Cornwall's grumpiest GP moves to a new home on Monday night - but the big question is whether he'll be making good on his threat to move to London.
Of course he won't. The idea of the blood-phobic doctor taking up a post as a surgeon was laughable and now he has a baby with Louisa, (Caroline Catz) there's even more reason to stay.
Not that he sees it that way in the slightest. Oh no. As loyal fans of the show will know, the good doctor must always be gently chivvied into following the script for normal human behaviour - despite himself.
His brain simply hasn't been programmed for complex social interactions and the possibility that his grouchiness is in fact down to Asperger's syndrome is almost impossible to ignore tonight.
Just watch the way that he holds his baby son like an unexploded bomb, or hear how he refers to people by their ailments rather than by name and the diagnosis becomes clearly obvious.
But don't expect the new GP to spot it. The incoming Dr Dibbs (Getting On star Joanna Scanlan) has already installed herself in his surgery and she has enough ailments of her own to worry about him.
But as Martin Clunes stays put for series five, two other cast members won't be returning.
Katherine Parkinson (who played dippy receptionist Pauline) has moved on and there's some news about auntie Joan that's so shocking, the doctor almost registers a flicker of emotion. But it is almost.
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 12th September 2011The charmless, socially inept, emotionally disconnected, rude and unpleasant Dr Martin Ellingham (Martin Clunes) returns as a new dad for a fifth series of this much-loved chunk of escapism.
His dim schoolteacher lover Louisa Glasson (Caroline Catz) has just given birth to a baby boy (we pick up exactly where we left off at the end of the previous series in 2009), temporarily halting the Doc's escape to a new job in London. Cradling the mite as if it's a missile that could go off at any moment, Martin finds he can't let go of Portwenn and his old job, particularly as his replacement, Dr Dibbs (The Thick of It's Joanna Scanlan) is nervous and her overbearing husband (Robert Dawes) is insufferable.
I suppose part of Doc Martin's charm is its predictability, so you'll be able to see exactly where all this is heading, as the episode, eschewing all the rules of drama (a plot, an engaging lead character), potters along in the Cornish sunshine.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 12th September 2011The ratings-gobbling Martin Clunes vehicle is back for a fifth run, following a two-year gap, to reclaim its crown from New Tricks as the nation's favourite TV drama. Clunes stars as miserable medic Dr Martin Ellingham (the surname's an anagram of series creator Dominic Minghella's, trivia fans). As the eight-part run begins, he's struggling to come to terms with new fatherhood and poised to leave picturesque Cornwall to resume his career as a high-flying surgeon in London. Only there's two problems: a personal tragedy and the fact that his replacement as village GP, the newly-qualified Dr Di Dibbs (Joanna Scanlan from The Thick of It), is dangerously incompetent.
Michael Hogan, The Telegraph, 9th September 2011The second series of the sitcom set in an NHS geriatric ward opened up even darker, richer seams of black comedy than the first. Written by and starring Jo Brand (world-weary Nurse Kim Wilde), Vicki Pepperdine (tactless Dr Pippa Moore) and Joanna Scanlan (Sister Den Flixter), it was directed by The Thick of It's Peter Capaldi - and the influence of the political comedy was evident in every frame. The posturings of hierarchy and bureaucratic idiocy were skewered relentlessly, scatological humour was allied to brutal deadpan, and the timing was perfect. Getting On also hid a beating heart at its centre that gave it surprising emotional power.
Chris Harvey, The Telegraph, 31st December 2010It's a girls' night out at London's Theatre Royal as Victoria Wood is joined on stage by some very funny ladies in aid of The British Heart Foundation.
While raising awareness about heart disease in women (see, the show's title makes sense now), the Queen of Comedy and her cohorts will tickle our funny bones with stand-up, sketches and music.
The line-up includes Nighty Night's Julia Davis; Joanna Scanlan and Vicki Pepperdine from BBC Four's Getting On; Jessica Hynes of Spaced fame; rising star Andi Oshi; and the two Brands, Jo and Katy. Not Russell Brand's new pop star wife - the other one. The one with the Big Ass.
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 21st December 2010