Press clippings Page 18
Sarah Millican: When I eat a pasty I should feel wrong
"To bridge the gap between series of The Great British Bake Off I have fallen into some bad habits..."
Sarah Millican, Radio Times, 13th May 2013Sarah Millican: I am intelligent. I've been on QI...
"I had this feeling that people looking at me could tell that my education was limited. Like when you think people can tell you're a virgin."
Sarah Millican, Radio Times, 6th May 2013How Sarah Millican struck comedy gold
A Bafta nomination for her TV show, multi-million pound earnings from DVDs - everything seems to be going right for the Geordie comedian.
Vanessa Thorpe, The Observer, 5th May 2013Sarah Millican banks £2m in just 12 months
She is a relative newcomer to our TV screens, but Sarah Millican is already earning as much as film stars and Premier League footballers.
Daily Mail, 29th April 2013BAFTA TV Awards 2013 nominations announced
The nominations for the 2013 BAFTA TV Awards have been announced. Sarah Millican, Graham Norton and Alan Carr are amongst the 29 comedy-related nominations.
British Comedy Guide, 9th April 2013Sarah Millican: in Oz you can swear on TV bare legs
"I expected some sort of reaction. Maybe women covering their children's eyes. Or at least all of the men crying. No one noticed. YAY!"
Sarah Millican, Radio Times, 1st April 2013Sponsored innuendo, anyone? Graham Norton hosts seven hours of celebrity chat to raise money for Comic Relief. He's gunning for the Guinness world record for most questions asked on a TV chatshow, and Keith Lemon, Sarah Millican and Russell Tovey are among the stars queuing up to answer them. Terry Wogan and Nick Grimshaw are ready to take the hot seat once Norton runs out of chat (unlikely) and to give viewers a break from his lovable face. With music from Example, Hurts and Laura Mvula.
Hannah Verdier, The Guardian, 7th March 2013If his chat show is anything to go by, Graham Norton could keep up his chirpy line in celeb quizzing in his sleep. Which is just as well, for tonight he embarks on a mammoth six-hour chat-athon in a Guinness Book of World Records bid to pose the most questions asked on a TV chat show. All in aid of Comic Relief. Our Graham's not flying solo, though - Frank Skinner and Terry Wogan are on the subs bench and there's music from Example, Paloma Faith, Hurts and Laura Mvula. Celeb guests chatting along include Louis Smith, Martin Freeman, Russell Tovey, Heston Blumenthal and Sarah Millican.
Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 7th March 2013Graham Norton will be prattling on (or, to be strictly accurate, on and on and on and on and on and on and on...) in a Comic Relief fundraiser tonight on BBC Three[/]. Yep, another one.
Comic Relief's Big Chat With Graham Norton will kick off at 7pm, and unless the whole thing goes tits-up and he develops laryngitis or something, it'll continue into he early hours - by which point, and here's the thing, our host hopes to have smashed the world record for the most questions asked on a TV chat show.
Among his many guests will be Martin Freeman, Sarah Millican and Louis Smith, with the likes of Frank Skinner and Nick Grimshaw doing co-host stints.
Mike Ward, Daily Star, 7th March 2013Norton foregoes the usual physical challenges beloved of Comic Relief for a more sedentary affair: attempting to set the Guinness world record for most questions asked on a TV chat show, which should see him broadcasting into the wee hours of Friday morning. We can only hope that Graham also dispenses with his usual tipple of wine with guests, otherwise this chatathon is going to get very messy.
So far guests announced as appearing on the sofa include Ronnie Corbett, RT's Sarah Millican, Martin Freeman, Elle Macpherson, James Nesbitt, Louis Smith, Heston Blumenthal, Warwick Davis, Russell Tovey and Jimmy Carr, though you wouldn't bet against an American superstar or two turning up, too. Music acts will include Example, Paloma Faith, Hurts and Laura Mvula.
Graham will be assisted by co-hosts Terry Wogan, Frank Skinner and Nick Grimshaw, and viewers can help, too, by submitting questions via Twitter and Facebook. And by donating money.
David Crawford, Radio Times, 7th March 2013