
Lee Mack
- 56 years old
- English
- Actor, writer and stand-up comedian
Press clippings Page 33
For reasons never really explained - well, beyond the fact that the letters board presents a fine opportunity for puerile mischief - the Cats mob have become a little smitten with Countdown: this is the third mash-up between the shows in little over a year. Jimmy Carr again hosts, though Sean Lock is away on tour, so regular captain Jon Richardson pairs up with gruff Welshman Rhod Gilbert to take on Rob Beckett and panel show pro Lee Mack. Over in dictionary corner, Countdown veteran Susie Dent is joined by the marvellous Tim Key.
Gwilym Mumford, The Guardian, 12th April 2013One of TV's most unlikely - but no less enjoyable for that - cross-fertilisations returns as the 8 out of 10 Cats comedy quiz team takes over (for the third time) the veteran words and numbers game Countdown. Once again, Jimmy Carr replaces Nick Hewer in the presenter's chair, while Jon Richardson is joined by Rhod Gilbert to take on fellow comedians Lee Mack (replacing absent captain Sean Lock) and Rob Beckett. In Dictionary Corner with Countdown's Susie Dent is performance poet Tim Key, while Rachel Riley gets less welcome assistance from beardy Joe Wilkinson.
Gerard O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 11th April 2013Sky orders 14-part entertainment series hosted by Lee Mack
Sky has commissioned a 14-part series of Duck Quacks Don't Echo, a new entertainment series hosted by Lee Mack.
British Comedy Guide, 11th April 2013he big difference this time around is that Tim Vine has now left, meaning that Lee Mack has no comic foil. Tim's disappearance was explained early on in this episode as he is apparently on a work placement in Germany. Meanwhile Tim's sister Lucy (Sally Breton) had a dilemma when she ran over the rabbit of a client's daughter after a successful business meeting. As this was Not Going Out, Lucy did the most illogical thing namely to get Lee to return the body of the rabbit to its owner. However due to a number of misunderstandings, Lee ends up returning the wrong rabbit and so the usual string of comic capers begin.
To be fair, not much has changed in the world of Not Going Out and I have to say I really didn't miss Tim Vine all that much. I feel by this point Mack and Breton to have enough chemistry to carry a sitcom together and this episode really demonstrated it. Thankfully Katy Wix's Daisy is still around and in this first episode had some great one-liners though I'd like to see her be the focus of a few more storylines now she's one of the major players.
Not Going Out may not be the most original comedy around but there's no denying that it's still funny after six years. Mack knows how to both write and deliver a funny line while his two female co-stars are also excellent at bouncing of him. So far 2013 has been a dire year for UK sitcoms so I'm glad that there's finally something on TV that at least makes me laugh once in a while.
Matt Donnelly, The Custard TV, 7th April 2013A welcome return for Lee Mack's likable sitcom, and veritable gag-alanche of pithy one-liners. When Lucy (Sally Bretton) attempts to secure a contract with a client at his house, she ends up accidentally running over his daughter's pet rabbit. It's just the start of a masterclass in situation escalation, encompassing kidnapping, hare-brained helpers ... and beating a second rabbit to death with a torch. "Hopefully, it had Duracell batteries in it. It's what the bunny would have wanted."
Ali Catterall, The Guardian, 5th April 2013At the launch of the sixth series of Not Going Out, its star Lee Mack said the absent Tim Vine - who played Tim, Not Going Out's good-natured voice of reason and a perfect foil for Mack - would be replaced by an "abstract concept". What he meant was there'd be a lot more plot and story to make up for the Vine-sized gap. You'll be able to see what he was getting at in a very farcical opening episode involving dead rabbits.
All the usual Not Going Out tent-poles are in place; the quick-fire gags at which Mack is the unsurpassable master, the silly situations (very silly, as it turns out) and the excellent Sally Bretton and Katy Wix as Lucy and Daisy. It's frantic, frequently funny and refreshingly unpretentious. But you'll miss Tim Vine. I do.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 5th April 2013The return of Not Going Out
Lee Mack's Not Going Out returns to the BBC for its sixth series this evening, with an episode that proves there is life after Tim Vine...
Simon Brew, Den Of Geek, 5th April 2013Lee Mack's reliably straightforward sitcom returns for a sixth series with Lee reluctantly coming to the aid of flatmate Lucy after she runs over a potential client's pet rabbit. Complications follow in the form of mistaken identity, a troublemaking parrot and some car keys falling down a drain. It's nothing new, yet it feels oddly novel: long-running, über-traditional sitcoms are currently few and far between.
Judging by the first half of this opener, that might not seem like a great loss. Laboured witticisms come at the expense of proper dialogue, with jokes and puns of wildly varying quality crowbarred into the script at any opportunity. But in those moments when the action builds to almost perfectly constructed silliness, Mack's wooden acting, the stock plot, incessant recaps and broadly etched set-up (Tim Vine's exit from the show is explained with thundering lack of subtlety seconds in) start to gel. Nowadays, we might prefer our farce in more coherent and intelligent surroundings, but you'd have to be pretty serious about comedy to begrudge this steadfast sitcom its enduring success.
Rachel Aroesti, Time Out, 5th April 2013Why is Britain so bad at stand-up sitcoms?
As Lee Mack returns for a sixth series of Not Going Out, Leo Benedictus asks if a British stand-up comedian has ever made a really good sitcom.
Leo Benedictus, The Guardian, 5th April 2013Not Going Out gets seventh series & Christmas specials
Lee Mack has confirmed that Not Going Out will return for a seventh series, and two Christmas specials.
British Comedy Guide, 5th April 2013