British Comedy Guide
Derry Girls. Clare Devlin (Nicola Coughlan). Copyright: Hat Trick Productions
Nicola Coughlan

Nicola Coughlan

  • 37 years old
  • Irish
  • Actor

Press clippings Page 6

Cracking Brexit and borders with the Derry Girls

They're back. Say hello again to the Fab Five as the Derry Girls get ready for series 2 with Adrian Lobb.

Adrian Lobb, The Big Issue, 4th March 2019

TV preview: Derry Girls, C4

This is a show that rarely hits a bum note.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 4th March 2019

Derry Girls interview

Maiden City takes cast and crew to its heart.

Kelly Allen, Belfast Telegraph, 4th March 2019

Derry Girls talk about their platform for change

Stars of the hit show told The Big Issue what causes they're willing to fight for in this week's magazine as Nicola Coughlan heads to Westminster to protest Northern Ireland's abortion laws.

Hannah Westwater, The Big Issue, 24th February 2019

Derry Girls mural in Derry is finished

The giant artwork takes pride of place in Derry's city centre.

Flora Carr, Radio Times, 28th January 2019

Derry Girls captures teenage girlhood everywhere

Many shows about teens don't push past cliches - but Derry Girls gives us complex, unpredictable characters who are never completely in control.

Nadine von Cohen, The Guardian, 19th January 2019

The 50 best TV shows of 2018: No 6 - Derry Girls

The year's breakout comedy was a giddy mix of poignancy and nostalgia - and its subject matter couldn't have been timelier.

Shilpa Ganatra, The Guardian, 13th December 2018

Derry Girls cast assemble for series two read-through

Actor Nicola Coughlan showed the sneakiest of peeks of the Channel 4 comedy.

Thomas Ling, Radio Times, 1st October 2018

Written by Lisa McGee (who also wrote London Irish), Derry Girls was commissioned for a second series after just one episode, and you can see why. While the initial idea - the antics of 1990s Northern Irish schoolgirls, juxtaposed with the Troubles - doesn't sound too promising, the series has managed to drag giggles out of chip shops, sullen Ukrainian visitors, fake Virgin Mary miracles and more, with the Troubles mainly relegated to a grim background hum or even, sometimes, a mere traffic-related inconvenience.

The result is a fast-paced comedy flipbook, evoking the likes of The Inbetweeners, Father Ted and Bad Education, with a soundtrack featuring everything from Madonna to Vanilla Ice. While the Derry Girls actors range in ages from 20s to early 30s, they and the lone British schoolboy (Dylan Llewellyn) look the part, and you don't have to suspend disbelief as they clatter about like the Irish St Trinian's, led astray by delinquent, foul-mouthed, boy-crazy Michelle (Jamie-Lee O'Donnell).

In the last episode of the series, elastic-faced Erin (Saoirse-Monica Jackson) took over the school magazine (proposed cover line: "Shoes of the world"), her earnest sidekick, Clare (Nicola Coughlan), came out as a lesbian, and fey Orla (Louisa Harland) was declared "gifted" at step aerobics. Other characters include menacing Granda Joe (p]Ian McElhinney]), weary Da Gerry (Tommy Tiernan), intense Ma Mary (Tara Lynne O'Neill), eccentric Aunt Sarah (Kathy Kiera Clarke) and acerbic headmistress-nun Sister Michael (Siobhan McSweeney). Derry Girls isn't perfect - sometimes the manic, fizzy-pop energy veers too far into ice-cream headache territory - but there's plenty to justify that second series.

Barbara Ellen, The Guardian, 11th February 2018

Finishing this week was Derry Girls; Lisa McGee's semi-autobiographical sitcom set during the height of the troubles in Northern Ireland in the 1990's. When I wrote about the first episode I talked about how my favourite moments involved the family of the comedy's protagonist Erin (Saoirse-Monica Jackson) specifically her parents Mary and Gerry (Tara Lynne O'Neill and Tommy Tiernan) and her granddad Joe (Ian McElhinney). This assertion proved to be an accurate assessment of Derry Girls as I personally felt the family scenes clicked more than when Erin had to overcome a series of problems with her cousin Orla (Louisa Harland) and hapless friends Clare and Michelle (Nicola Coughlan and Jamie-Lee O'Donnell) as well as Michelle's awkward English cousin James (Dylan Llewellyn). The scenes with the youngsters felt awfully cartoonish as if they'd been lifted from the pages of a Beano-esque comic strip with the actresses not helping the cause by overplaying their parts. Conversely the scenes between Erin's family were well-constructed and well-played including a subplot in the fourth episode where Mary and sister Sarah (Kathy Kiera Clare) where horrified when they'd learnt Joe had a new lady friend. I similarly enjoyed the fifth episode where the family were going on their annual holiday that coincided with the Orange March and discovered that they were harbouring a stowaway who wanted to cross the border. But it was Thursday's finale that showed the most promise as every character was perfectly utilised and the comedy felt more authentic than it had done throughout the series. Whilst the storyline involving Erin's family and a lost camera shop docket was hilarious as ever, it was the plot revolving around the girls which provided more memorable moments. With Erin single-handedly attempting to run the school's magazine, she stole a story from an anonymous pupil writing about how hard it was to be secretly gay. When the author of the piece was revealed to be Claire, Erin questioned her friendship with her only for the pair to come together to support Orla's strange step-aerobic-themed entry to the school's talent show. This was the first time where an episode of Derry Girls impressed me and I finally saw what others who'd be raving about the comedy all series had seen from the outset. I'm now hoping that the already-announced second will capitalise on the promise evidenced in the series one finale because if it does Derry Girls could be one of Channel 4's best sitcoms of the last few years.

Matt, The Custard TV, 10th February 2018

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