Press clippings Page 11
Friday Night Dinner Series 5 confirmed
Channel 4 has confirmed that Friday Night Dinner will return for a fifth series.
British Comedy Guide, 23rd August 2017Review: Twelfth Night - NT Live
Michael Cox reviews 'a very enjoyable staging of one of Shakespeare's best comedies'.
Michael Cox, Across The Arts, 20th April 2017Tamsin Greig decries critic's 'unenlightened vocab'
Actor Tamsin Greig has accused Telegraph theatre critic Dominic Cavendish of using "unenlightened vocabulary" after he claimed her gender-swapped casting in Twelfth Night was contributing to "the death of the great male lead".
Giverny Masso, The Stage, 27th March 2017Tamsin Greig in Twelfth Night will go down in history
There are many lively and engaging performances but, overshadowing them all is Greig's stunning Malvolia, the ultimate killjoy.
Marc Brenner, The Conversation, 20th March 2017Twelfth Night: review
Tamsin Greig's Malvolia is as funny as any Malvolio - and perhaps more painful too.
India Bourrke, The New Statesman, 1st March 2017Review: Twelfth Night, National Theatre
The National Theatre's promotional campaign for Simon Godwin's new Twelfth Night has been all Tamsin Greig, all the time.
Dan Rubins, A Younger Theatre, 27th February 2017Twelfth Night review - on high gender alert with Greig
Tamsin Greig is a magnetic Malvolia in an extravagant production that gleefully refocuses Shakespeare's comedy.
Susannah Clapp, The Observer, 26th February 2017Review of Twelfth Night starring Tamsin Greig
The headline news about the National's new production of Twelfth Night has, of course, been the re-gendered casting of Malvolio as Malvolia, with Tamsin Greig assuming the mantle of the romantically deluded servant infatuated by her mistress, so Malvolia turns out to be a lesbian.
Mark Shenton, London Theatre, 25th February 2017Twelfth Night - a production for our times
Tamsin Greig is a master/mistress of her po-faced comedy in Godwin's revival.
Ian Shuttleworth, The Financial Times, 24th February 2017Twelfth Night, Olivier, National Theatre, review
Tamsin Grieg plays Malvolia, a traditionally male role, in Simon Godwin's new modern-dress production of Shakespeare's classic comedy of mistaken identity, joining the ranks of great actresses, who are tackling meaty Shakespearean roles, including Glenda Jackson as Lear.
Paul Taylor, The Independent, 24th February 2017