British Comedy Guide
Stefan Golaszewski
Stefan Golaszewski

Stefan Golaszewski

  • Writer and director

Press clippings Page 4

RTS Awards 2019 winners include Mum and Derry Girls

Derry Girls, Lesley Manville, The Last Leg, Romesh Ranganathan, Mum writer Stefan Golaszewski and the stars of Inside No. 9 and The Big Narstie Show were amongst the winners at the Royal Television Society Awards 2019.

British Comedy Guide, 19th March 2019

Comedies up for RTS Awards 2019

The nominees for the RTS Awards 2019 include Famalam, Detectorists and Derry Girls. Lesley Manville, Sian Gibson, Daisy May Cooper, Samson Kayo and the stars of Inside No. 9 and The Young Offenders are nominated for acting prizes.

British Comedy Guide, 5th March 2019

The second series of this exquisitely bittersweet family sitcom piled on the agonies of uncertainty for Lesley Manville's titular character Cathy. The two will-they-won't-they storylines established in the first series continued: would Michael, the best friend of Cathy's late husband, ever get to reveal his feelings for her, and would Cathy ever tell her son's inane girlfriend Kelly to just, please, shut up? While those agonies could feel unbearable at times, writer Stefan Golaszewski maintained a charming levity and the cast was superb, with Peter Mullan's deadpan Michael a particular delight.

David Crawford, Radio Times, 27th December 2018

Mum: season two finale review

Would Cathy and Michael's on-off romance finally be well and truly on? The finale kept us guessing till the end.

Sarah Hughes, The Guardian, 27th March 2018

Mum, episode 6, Fireworks Night, BBC2 review

This episode is ultimately about Cathy and Michael.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 27th March 2018

Will sitcom's odd couple bow out with a kiss?

It has made us weep, laugh and scream. As Mum concludes, Lesley Manville and Peter Mullan explain why its slow-burn romance is so compelling.

Sarah Hughes, The Guardian, 26th March 2018

How Mum creator relit our love for sitcom

Stefan Golaszewski has written two of the BBC's best-received sitcoms of recent years. Him & Her took viewers into the lives of 20-somethings Steve and Becky in their cramped flat in London. Mum - starring Oscar nominee Lesley Manville (Phantom Thread) - is pulling in viewers with its painfully tentative romance between recently widowed Cathy and old friend Michael.

Vincent Dowd, BBC, 8th March 2018

Mum, which has returned for a thoroughly deserved second series (with a third already commissioned), has been described, wrongly to my mind, as "gentle" - normally a killer blow to any comedy's self-respect. True, nothing much happens as Lesley Manville's Cathy, widowed at the opening of the first series, turns a wistful 60, her contemplation of the moment wholly shot by the scattergun inanities of her son's girlfriend, Kelly, swinging her heels on the rickety kitchen table ("It's wobbly, isn't it! I'm worried it's going to break!"). But behind Manville's wearily kind eyes, everything is going on in these nothings. Wrangles over family, over forgiveness, over whether and how far to indulge the blitherings of a spoiled generation - and they don't come much more blithery than Kelly (Lisa McGrillis), possibly the finest room-temperature IQ since Father Dougal.

Nothing (and everything) continues to happen as we meet, handily enough, Cathy's splendidly foul-mouthed parents, her inept brother Derek, his scene-stealing gorgon of a girlfriend, Pauline - Dorothy Atkinson, itch-febrile with societal one-upmanship. And, of course, Cathy's putative love interest, shy pal Michael, his every hesitant tenderness rebuffed by his own personality.

There's one scene, Michael and brother Derek passing a moment with small talk, which writer Stefan Golaszewski simply took to wicked, Ayckbournesque lengths. "I cut my toenails this morning," Derek tells Michael, who can only smile and nod helplessly. Derek feels the need to fill the void. "Yeah. So... got a lot more room in my socks." "Um... good feeling?" "One of the best, mate. One. Of. The. Best." It perfectly encapsulates the appalling slide into well-meaning drivel that can befall the best of us. In this, the silence of a banality left hanging, Mum excels, as (of course) do Manville, and Peter Mullan as Michael.

If there's a criticism, it's that at times it feels like it's only sane, bright, selfless Cathy and Michael against the gaggle of grotesques in their world. I also wonder just how much thicker Kelly can be made to look, and whether the comic potentials of the word "carvery" weren't exhausted around 1977. But these are mere niggles. A true delight.

Euan Ferguson, The Guardian, 25th February 2018

Although completely different in terms of quality, Stefan Golaszewski's Mum shares similarities with Hold the Sunset as both feature women-of-a-certain age trying to balance relationships with their sons with the idea of new romances with men they've known for years. Now in its second year, Mum reunites us with Cathy (Lesley Manville) on her sixtieth birthday as her family prepare to take out for a carvery at a local pub. Golaszewski quickly reunites us with all of the series' main players most notably Cathy's dimwit son Jason (Sam Swainsbury) and his ditzy girlfriend Kelly (Lisa McGrillis) who surprise her with a collection of banners and balloons adorning the house which inform the neighbours of her age. What I love so much about Mum is the small conversations that Golaszewski is so brilliant at crafting including Pauline (Dorothy Atkinson), the partner of Cathy's brother Derek (Ross Boatman), asking her about what a carvery involves. Snobbish Pauline is a brilliant creation and her trying to figure out what the three types of potatoes served at Cathy's birthday dinner provides one of many hilarious moments. Also on hand to celebrate Cathy's 60th is Michael (Peter Mullan); one of her late husband Dave's best friends and someone who is clearly besotted with her. The last series of Mum built up to Michael and Cathy holding hands, and it appears that this series will focus on whether these long-time friends will begin a romantic relationship. However, it appears as if Michael is still reticent about whether he will reveal his true feelings for Cathy especially as Jason doesn't seem to be his biggest fan. The other big storyline throughout this series appears to be Jason and Kelly's search for a new flat and the fact that this will result in Cathy living alone. The brilliant thing about Mum is that it's set over a year meaning that Golaszewski can create realistic reasons why the main characters would be in Cathy's house all at once. It also allows the central stories to move along quite quickly with the audience having to fill in the gaps of what's happened to the characters since the last episode. Although not up there with some of the best episodes of series one, the series two opener of Mum still had some funny moments whilst also setting out the big stories that will populate the next five weeks. Manville continues to be brilliant in the lead role whilst Mullan's subtle performance as Michael is beautifully realised and Atkinson steals almost every scene she's in as the ghastly Pauline. Overall, Mum is a well-observed and brilliantly written series and I'm so glad that a third series has already been announced as I just love spending time with these characters.

Matt, The Custard TV, 24th February 2018

Mum review - cliched take on the reality of being a mum

Lesley Manville suffuses her character with warmth and melancholy, but there is more to motherhood than 'keep calm and carry on ironing'.

Chitra Ramaswamy, The Guardian, 21st February 2018

Share this page