British Comedy Guide
Kylie Minogue
Kylie Minogue

Kylie Minogue

  • Australian
  • Singer

Press clippings Page 2

James Corden: It is insane that this is my life

Having had an amazing year, James Corden discusses what he misses about the UK - you'll be surprised! - and his duet with Kylie Minogue.

Adrian Lobb, The Big Issue, 21st December 2015

Radio Times review

The Force Awakens is here! Surely you've seen it already? If not, build the excitement still further with a sofa full of Star Wars stars. Carrie Fisher, the original Princess Leia - back for the new movie, albeit no longer as merely a princess, but as General Leia - is on the show, which is good news given her fondness for talking bluntly and frankly.

Her younger co-stars John Boyega and Daisy Ridley might be more circumspect, although Boyega has shown great wit and equanimity in the face of a few crackpots who think a story about spaceships and aliens shouldn't feature black actors.

Also chatting, and singing: Kylie Minogue.

Jack Seale, Radio Times, 14th December 2015

Radio Times review

Alan Carr: Chatty Man may have won the 2014 Royal Television Society Award for best entertainment performance, but there's no doubt that The Graham Norton Show is the one that attracts the best A-list guests.

Settling down on his sofa are Hollywood stars Russell Crowe (who indiscreetly voted Cate Blanchett the best on-screen kisser the last time he appeared on the show) and Cameron Diaz (who lassoed a fake cow - don't ask - but this time is probably plugging her relationship comedy The Other Woman).

Joining them are The Voice UK mentor Kylie Minogue and Richard Ayoade, whose new movie The Double has just opened.

Jane Rackham, Radio Times, 4th April 2014

Marc Warren's Hey Diddly Dee [was] a lame comedy about a flailing Andy Warhol musical prepping for its West End premiere. Peter Serafinowicz plays the aging, egotistical star; Kylie Minogue his leading lady and Mathew Horne his browbeaten understudy.

Crammed with creaking theatrical cliches - superstitions and la-di-da luvvies - it treats theatre with patronising contempt. David Harewood gives a corking cameo as the pandering director, but based on this effort, Warren should be banned from coming within 100 yards of a writing implement.

Matt Trueman, The Guardian, 23rd May 2013

The first in a new series of Playhouse Presents, Hey Diddly Dee was an extremely enjoyable, deliciously dark comedy about a dismal West End production's final day of rehearsals.

Tensions are already running high when obnoxious star Roger Kite (Peter Serafinowicz) denigrates the production in front of the cast, humiliates his understudy (Mathew Horne) and unceremoniously dumps his co-star mistress (Kylie Minogue). But most recklessly of all, Kite threatens the theatre's lucky cat - never a good idea, given the theatre world's preoccupation with superstition and the supernatural.

Writer and director Marc Warren throws in every conceivable showbusiness cliche and mixes them up to fun effect. The story itself gets a little lost, and the ending is confusing to say the least, but the performances from the starry cast are terrific. I particularly enjoyed David Harewood, fresh from being blown up in the series finale of Homeland, as the hapless director trying and failing to keep his volatile star sweet.

Harry Venning, The Stage, 19th April 2013

Peter Serafinowicz, Mathew Horne and Kylie Minogue star in this comedy-drama about the cast of a new Andy Warhol musical putting up with Serafinowicz's monstrous star turn, until the theatre's mysterious cat gets involved. Actor Marc Warren writes and directs a delightful tale of the unexpected, and Serafinowicz has the time of his life swanning about in Warhol's wig. Another treat tucked away on Sky Arts. Keep an eye on them: turn your back for a second and you could miss a gem.

Julia Raeside, The Guardian, 18th April 2013

Mathew Horne: I talked Kylie into being a man-eater

Gavin & Stacey's Mat Horne roped in an old pal to play a saucy actress in his latest TV project - Kylie Minogue.

Emma Cox, The Sun, 18th April 2013

They gave us Jon Hamm and Daniel Radcliffe sharing a bath in A Young Doctor's Notebook and now we've got Kylie Minogue gyrating to The Velvet Underground - Sky Arts' Playhouse Presents... certainly has pulling power.

In Hey Diddly Dee, a star-studded cast - Mathew Horne, Peter Serafinowicz, Homeland's David Harewood sporting a Brummie accent - find themselves caught up in a theatrical black comedy which trips them back to Andy Warhol's Factory glory days, with a potentially fatal clash of ego and ambition.

Oh, and a scene-stealing black cat.

Carol Carter and Christopher Hooton, Metro, 18th April 2013

Kylie Minogue, Mat Horne and Peter Serafinowicz? Maybe we shouldn't be surprised. With casting coups including Emma Thompson, Harry Shearer and Daniel Radcliffe, the first run of 'Playhouse Presents' established itself as an amiably eccentric short-drama strand to watch.

This series opener, written and directed by Marc Warren, is a messy curio, but not without merit. Serafinowicz is the stage star with an ego inversely proportionate to his talent; Kylie his vampish co-star with a secret; and Horne the gofer with acting ambitions of his own. All three are brought together under flailing director David Harewood (excellent) for a doomed fringe production based on Andy Warhol's life.

It's an odd blend of slapstick, satire and Twilight Zone-ish mystery, and showcases Warren's direction more flatteringly than the uncertain writing. The pacing and tone are haphazard, but occasional sequences impress (in particular the Warhol 'Venus in Furs' montage which plumbs remarkable depths of intentional awfulness) and the performances just about hold it together.

Gabriel Tate, Time Out, 18th April 2013

If we're being honest, the Sky Arts channels aren't usually our first port of call when we're lazing on the sofa with grease from a doner kebab dripping into our trouser-less laps. However, this week marks the return of the rather brilliant Playhouse Presents, a series of expertly-done standalone dramas and comedies. And in a DS-friendly development, the first one features an appearance from Aussie pop princess Kylie Minogue.

She stars alongside Homeland's David Harewood, Peter Serafinowicz and Mat Horne in Hey Diddly Dee, a short written and directed by Mad Dogs actor Marc Warren, telling the tale of a West End Andy Warhol biopic that takes a tragic and mysterious turn.

Daniel Sperling, Digital Spy, 14th April 2013

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