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Lee Mack
- 56 years old
- English
- Actor, writer and stand-up comedian
Press clippings Page 50
Although everyone gets his or her own punch lines, Lee responds to almost everything with a joke - we're meant to see it as a half-charming character defect - and so there's one every few lines when he's around. That relentlessness is eventually funny in itself - it's the Henny Youngman Effect, it wears you down. The pace is rapid and the tone is dry, and the rhythms and melodies of the jokes are particularly English and at times seem to jump back 50 years to the days of Tony Hancock and Kenneth Horne.
LA Times, 20th May 2008Despite the slightly serialised element hovering over the relationships, the show mostly relies on Mack's rapid delivery of jokes, which would be more palatable if the other characters didn't persistently question his subconscious motivations in using humour to hide his feelings. There's nothing like constantly being reminded you're watching a sitcom to undermine caring at all about the modest plots.
Although slacker comedy represents a well-worn staple, that conceit takes on a rather strange quality when said slacker passes the age of 25. At a certain point, Lee seems less like an unpredictable free spirit than that annoying guy sleeping on Kate's couch and unsettling the neighbors.
Variety, 19th May 2008NOT GOING OUT - A New BBC Sitcom
This is exactly what sitcoms should be all about. Funny, edgy, uncompromising and ultimately the right kind of distraction. These Brits truly know how to make anything sound and look funny so we know that this show can do very well here in the US. A must-watch!
Daemon's TV, 29th April 2008Lee Mack Interview
An interview with Lee Mack
Dominic Maxwell, The Times, 24th November 2007Have you ever wondered what would happen if the worlds of Stars In Their Eyes and the cult 70s show The Indoor League combined? No, me neither, but the result is rather amusing.
They are two of Lee Mack's choices as he gatecrashes Sean Lock's studio for a chat about the best and worst TV programmes.
It's great when TV programmes are taken out of context, especially ones from the 70s. And The Indoor League is TV gold. Where else could you see cheese skittles being played? Sean is looking forward to the spin-off series, Cheese Skittlers' Wives.
The Mirror, 6th August 2007The writing is sharp and clever, if a little self-indulgent: the inclusion of three zany elements (depressive author, Lee's job packing Christmas crackers, and circus skills class) in a single episode seemed to me to be trying a bit hard, when the core of the comedy has to be the interplay between Lee, Kate and Tim.
Unfortunately some of the best lines were lost; Lee's delivery was so fast that he didn't give them space to breathe, and the audience's early laughter often swamped the killer line.
A more serious problem is the location: whatever one may say about Men Behaving Badly, Extras, or even Two Pints of Lager, they all have a distinctive locale, a real place where these characters and their relatives live. In contrast, Not Going Out is set in a vague generic city, the same city as Coupling, with an anonymous flat, anonymous bar, anonymous office, and characters with no history.
A Few Words, 11th October 2006