British Comedy Guide
Kingdom. Peter Kingdom (Stephen Fry). Copyright: Sprout Pictures / Parallel Film & Television Productions
Stephen Fry

Stephen Fry

  • 67 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer, comedian and author

Press clippings Page 40

Stephen Fry reveals attempted suicide

Stephen Fry has revealed in a podcast interview that he was hospitalised last year after attempting to commit suicide.

British Comedy Guide, 5th June 2013

Top 20 comedy shows in London - June

Featuring Stephen Fry, Aziz Ansari, Bill Bailey, Stewart Lee's alter-ego, Reggie Watts, charity fundraisers, Banana Cabaret, the Funny Side, and loads more...

London Is Funny, 2nd June 2013

Stephen Fry figure unveiled in Norwich

A figure of Stephen Fry, designed by children, has been unveiled in Norwich.

BBC News, 24th May 2013

Stephen Fry to curate Royal Opera House festival

Stephen Fry is to curate this year's Deloitte Ignite festival at the Royal Opera House exploring the work of the Giuseppe Verdi and Richard Wagner.

BBC News, 23rd May 2013

Stephen Fry turns himself into an app

The QI presenter and proficient Twitter user has gone virtual to broadcast his thoughts to the nation's smart phones.

Ellie Walker-Arnott, Radio Times, 21st May 2013

Taking a lead from 2010's Frost On Satire, Sir David takes a look at another endangered comedy format, the sketch show. Charting the last 50 years of wanton skittery, Frost speaks to masters of shows past such as Stephen Fry, Ronnie Corbett and Michael Palin, taking in the highs and lows of the format. No preview tapes were available, so whether we'll be treated to the notoriously barbed "Timmy Williams Coffee Time" sketch from Moty Python's Flying Circus, a barely disguised pop at imperial-phase Frost himself, we have yet to find out.

Mark Jones, The Guardian, 13th May 2013

The best contacts book in entertainment gets dusted off once more as David Frost recruits Michael Palin, Stephen Fry, Michael Grade et al to look at the rise - and perhaps fall - of the sketch show. The question posed at the outset - has the sketch show had its day? - is a pertinent one, although not answered in the 15-minute taster we were able to see.

Still, we can promise plenty of clips, both unfamiliar (some lovely corpsing from the early days of live variety shows) and over-familiar (Andre Preview, The Frost Report's class sketch). With any luck, a very watchable primer to a comedy format that should ideally be as easy to watch as it apparently is hard to master.

Gabriel Tate, Time Out, 13th May 2013

Cartoonist Ronald Searle's naughty public schoolgirls are back - this time rebooted for the 21st century. So as well as the sexy sixth formers, the rabble of lacrosse-stick waving young'uns are now split into cliques such as geeks and emos. Despite a cast over-crammed with the likes of Russell Brand and Stephen Fry, Ealing Studios' kidult comedy could never rival the golden 1950s black-and-white classics starring Alastair Sim and Joyce Grenfell. But try not to compare them and it is a jolly enough, if surprisingly 'safe', watch - no Asbos here, just girlish high spirits. It's worth seeing just to catch Rupert Everett, in headscarf and tweeds, as headmistress Camilla Fritton - think a mix of Ab Fab's Patsy and the former Mrs Parker-Bowles. His seduction of Colin Firth's nervous school inspector is even more of a hoot than your French teacher sitting on a whoopee cushion.

Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 8th May 2013

Stephen Fry hails Peter Cook's 'extraordinary genius'

Stephen Fry has paid tribute to the 'extraordinary genius' of Peter Cook, saying he is 'part of the DNA of all British comedy that came after him'.

Chortle, 25th April 2013

Review: The Establishment Club with Stephen Fry

Stephen Fry's tributes to Peter Cook during Keith Allen's Establishment Club at Ronnie Scott's had a charming Radio 4 quality to them, says Dominic Cavendish.

Dominic Cavendish, The Telegraph, 25th April 2013

Share this page