British Comedy Guide
Rovers. Doreen Bent (Sue Johnston)
Sue Johnston

Sue Johnston

  • 80 years old
  • English
  • Actor

Press clippings Page 6

Rovers to begin filming at The Space Project

A new six-part comedy for Sky1 starring Sue Johnston is to begin filming in The Space Project in Manchester.

Prolific North, 14th December 2015

Sue Johnston to star in new Sky1 football sitcom Rovers

Sky1 is making Rovers, a sitcom set in the clubhouse of a lower league football club. Written by Joe Wilkinson and David Earl, stars include Sue Johnston.

British Comedy Guide, 9th July 2015

The sublime Love in Recovery wraps up on Wednesday 11th February, with the sixth and final instalment of Radio 4's touching comic drama. Written by Pete Jackson, the series follows the lives of an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting group, made up of characters portrayed by Sue Johnston, John Hannah, Eddie Marsan, Rebecca Front and Paul Kaye, whilst Julia Deakin plays village hall cleaner Marion.

The Velvet Onion, 9th February 2015

This Radio 4 comedy drama is set in an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting room. Each episode focuses on a different character, played by a high-profile cast including Rebecca Front, Sue Johnston, John Hannah, Paul Kaye and Eddie Marsan. Written by Pete Jackson, it is inspired by his own experiences of being in recovery and is based on his attendance at AA meetings, where he says he found support in an unlikely assortment of people. The 15-minute episodes mix drama with black comedy as each character tells their story - from snobbish banker Fiona, who fails to combine her high-pressure job with her compulsive boozing, to journalist Simon, who has delusions of grandeur and a disastrous home life.

Andrew Williams, Metro, 4th February 2015

As Carrie Fisher proved years ago, AA can be ripe for black comedy. And so it provides the setting for Love in Recovery (Radio 4), a brilliant six-part comedy drama written by Pete Jackson. Each of the 15-minute vignettes unspool like manic Canterbury Tales, offering a set of soliloquies built around the awkward weekly meetings of disparate characters.

The first episode saw Fiona (Rebecca Front) unload her tale of shallow excess and isolation in the banking world. "I always thought that you can't have a problem when you're drinking with friends but ... everyone's your friend when you're drinking," she pointed out. Episode two finds Julie (Sue Johnston) giving an unwaveringly powerful portrait of a woman, who attempted to find happiness at the bottom of a glass after her husband of 40 years left her ("He went off with the cleaner who ironically turned out to be a dirty bitch"). Eddie Marsan plays the needy group leader Andy (memorably described as "serial-killer nice"), who is constantly offering the participants biscuits ("they're from M&S"). The series feels sharp and fresh, its realism partly derived from writer Jackson's real

Priya Elan, The Guardian, 22nd January 2015

Radio Times review

"If there's one thing recovering alcoholics aren't short of it's stories," says writer Pete Jackson. And he should know, as this inspired and inspiring sitcom comes from his own experience of being thrown into AA meetings with a truly disparate group of people and then finding that it's more than a problem with drink that binds them together. The fact that Jackson is working with one of the finest comedy casts on radio for years helps as well.

The previous story centred on the aggressive snob Fiona, played by Rebecca Front (be sure to listen on iPlayer if you missed it). This story belongs to Julie (played by Sue Johnston), a woman who did not start drinking, or really living, until she hit 60. Paul Kaye, John Hannah, Eddie Marsan and Julia Deakin are the rest of the players and the series is set to become a classic.

I hope that Radio 4 makes much more use of Jackson over the coming months. He's a comedy writer with talent and a heart.

Jane Anderson, Radio Times, 14th January 2015

Bold, bright, original comedy by Pete Jackson with a sparkling cast. Bold? It's set in a weekly Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. Bright? It's recognisably real but not self conscious about it. Original? It's honest about its characters. Tonight we meet Fiona, a banker who despises everyone se4lse, has only come because her employer made her, says she makes more money than the rest of them put together. Sparking cast? Fiona is played by Rebecca Front, Sue Johnston plays a housewife, John Hannah a journalist and Eddie Marsan is Andy, who runs the group.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 7th January 2015

Blessed with an excellent cast including John Hannah, Sue Johnston and Paul Kaye, this absorbing comedy drama focuses on a group of recovering alcoholics at their AA meetings. Writer Pete Jackson, who has been through the process himself and also co-stars as Johnny, picks up on the members' insecurities as they open up to each other, in some cases even finding love. Today, insufferable banker Fiona (Rebecca Front) marvels at her colleagues' decision to send her there.

Stephanie Billen, The Guardian, 7th January 2015

Pete Jackson's new comedy series comes from his own experience at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. It's funny, wry, recognisable. Each week his characters pool experiences while harbouring reservations. Here, for instance, is Fiona (Rebecca Front), ex-banker, competitive, bit of a snob, a sceptic,. What can she have in common with these losers? Independents Lucky Giant have a stellar cast for this (John Hannah, Sue Johnston) and they shine.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 4th January 2015

The last in the series of the Sue Johnston-led family comedy. It's the day of Liam's pirate-themed birthday party, and he is terrified of pirates. Everything is going to plan, until Paula (Elizabeth Berrington) picks up a cordless drill and all hell breaks loose. Which is less exciting than it sounds. Eileen's friends arrive to save the day and Ray (William Ash) gets ready for a rare visit from his parents, while Maurice uses the occasion to butter up Eileen. It hasn't been the subtlest of comedies, but the cast were great.

Julia Raeside, The Guardian, 11th March 2013

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