British Comedy Guide
Inside No. 9. Steve Pemberton. Copyright: BBC
Steve Pemberton

Steve Pemberton

  • 57 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer and executive producer

Press clippings Page 42

League of Gentlemen, episode 3 review

A gleefully twisted end to a glorious comeback.

Ed Power, The Telegraph, 21st December 2017

The League of Gentlemen, BBC2 review

Triumphant return of iconic dark comedy.

Veronica Lee, The Arts Desk, 21st December 2017

The League Of Gentlemen series 4 episode 3 review

The League Of Gentlemen anniversary specials were an absolute triumph.

Den Of Geek, 21st December 2017

The League Of Gentlemen special episode 3 review

An impeccably bonkers farewell.

Adam Starkey, Metro, 21st December 2017

The Gents are still Leagues ahead

Cashing in or not, the Gentlemen have maintained the macabre standards they set at the turn of the Millennium. Old favourites are here, though many of them have aged badly.

Christopher Stevenson, Daily Mail, 20th December 2017

The League of Gentlemen Specials BFI preview and Q&A

This is an as accurate-as-possible transcript of The League of Gentlemen Q&A at the BFI Southbank, an event held to publicly premiere two of the three League of Gentlemen specials.

Dodo's Words, 20th December 2017

The stories behind Royston Vasey's strangest characters

Snub-nosed shopkeeper Tubbs, merciless job-centre tyrant Pauline and oily pederast Herr Lipp have all returned to the delight of fans.

Tristram Fane Saunders, The Telegraph, 20th December 2017

The League Of Gentlemen special episode 2 review

Darker, creepier with huge pay-offs.

Adam Starkey, Metro, 19th December 2017

The League of Gentlemen, episode 2 review

Before The League of Gentlemen's return, there were questions about how a comedy that existed so close to the knuckle - involving transgender taxi drivers, inbred couples, paedo priests, blacked-up circus freaks - could be revived for a more culturally vigilant era. But as well as continuing to shine a loving gaze on this parade of weirdos, the League's creators have modernised by adding subtle allusions to issues like Brexit and (as when Bernice references Ken Loach) inequality. Mercifully it's still in poor taste - nobody turns to this grisly show for social commentary or compassion - but it's still a sharp and characteristically dastardly move. As the real world intrudes on this benighted valley town, we only root harder for its survival.

Laura Snapes, The Telegraph, 19th December 2017

The League of Gentlemen, episode 2 review

Sharp, grisly - and strangely moving.

Laura Snapes, The Telegraph, 19th December 2017

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