British Comedy Guide
Sarah Millican
Sarah Millican

Sarah Millican

  • 49 years old
  • English
  • Writer, executive producer and stand-up comedian

Press clippings Page 28

Sarah Millican interview

Stand-up, curveballs and Monday nights... Sarah Millican chats to Den Of Geek.

Simon Brew, Den Of Geek, 29th November 2011

British Comedy Awards public voting nominees announced

David Mitchell, Graham Norton, Jack Whitehall, Jo Brand, Miranda Hart and Sarah Millican to battle it out in British Comedy Awards 2011 public poll.

British Comedy Guide, 28th November 2011

My secret Life: Sarah Millican, comedian, 36

An interview with Sarah Millican.

Holly Williams, The Independent, 26th November 2011

The bits that end up on the cutting room floor of a panel show are invariably better than what goes out for broadcast, so you can expect some even funnier or risqué tall stories and banter in this series finale of outtakes. Featured with regulars David Mitchell and Lee Mack are the always-entertaining Dara O'Briain and Frank Skinner, plus leading ladies Sarah Millican and Miranda Hart.

Sharon Lougher, Metro, 25th November 2011

Judging by the line-ups for the third series of this programme, I think it's safe to say that Dave are running low on suitable locations to film. The first episode featured Ardal O'Hanlon performing in Dublin, a city which the programme's already covered in the last series when Jason Byrne performed there. Later in the series, Stephen K Amos is performing in London, Jack Whitehall's location in the first series. And Reginald D Hunter is performing in Edinburgh, which, as far as I know, isn't where he lives currently. It's certainly not his hometown, although since that would mean filming in America you can excuse Dave for not going there...

In terms of the first edition of the series, O'Hanlon seemed to be performing well, but like many an occasion on this programme I was more impressed by the guests he had performing alongside him. This episode featured one-liner stand-up Gary Delaney (who, out of interest to northern comedy fans, is Sarah Millican's boyfriend) and Josie Long. I probably favoured Delaney's one-liners over Long's narrative, if I'm honest, but both demonstrated why they're two of the most sought after comedians in the country.

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 21st November 2011

Northern star: interview with Sarah Millican

Emma McAlpine speaks to the popular Geordie comic about her incredible year, from taking over the Assembly Hall in Edinburgh to meeting Puff Daddy.

Emma McAlpine, Spoonfed, 15th November 2011

Sarah Millican's dirty laugh - interview

When her husband left her, Sarah Millican's unusual response was to tour Britain trying to make people laugh. The comic tells Stephanie Merritt about her Geordie toughness, the quiet humour of her miner father - and the absurdities of sex.

Stephanie Merritt, The Observer, 13th November 2011

I once sat through an edition of Would I Lie to You? without laughing. No, you're right - that's a lie. You try keeping a straight face as Sarah Millican tells the story of what she did when caught short while stuck in her car in a traffic jam. Or as Jon Richardson turns into "Trevor Travel-Planner" in his attempt to discredit Frank Skinner's tale about being taken to A&E in an ice-cream van while on holiday. But it's Lee Mack and David Mitchell who steal everyone's thunder with their by now familiar posh-versus-common, southern-versus-northern tirades.

Jane Rackham, Radio Times, 14th October 2011

BBC Two confirms Sarah Millican Show commission

Stand-up comedian Sarah Millican is to host her own series for BBC Two, it has been confirmed.

British Comedy Guide, 13th October 2011

Ruth Jones dips her toe into chat, something she's done before at Christmas and Easter. Let's hope it doesn't become more than a seasonal sideline: this show is 40 minutes of pleasing fluff, but I'd swap it for four minutes of her writing or acting.

First onto the cheery, retro sofa is Sarah Millican, who's a trusted guest because she's inoffensive without being bland. She gets away with discussing her attraction to gorillas while still seeming cuddly and safe. Animal-based innuendo becomes a theme thanks to Jonathan Ross, who's less cuddly but as always has a lot of wit behind the smut. Episodes star Stephen Mangan arrives last, offering a random but funny anecdote about an Israeli immigration official.

It all feels like an unfinished pilot, or a dream about a 1970s chat show with modern guests.

Jack Seale, Radio Times, 29th August 2011

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