Press clippings Page 2
New TV format based on Peter Cook's satirical Establishment club
Peter Cook's satirical brand The Establishment is due to be revived for a new TV series on Russia Today, with a talent search for new comedy voices about to get under way.
British Comedy Guide, 3rd August 2017Victor Lewis-Smith to make Peter Sellers documentary
Comedian and film-maker Victor Lewis-Smith is to make a TV documentary about Peter Sellers.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 22nd January 2017Peter Cook's widow Lin dies at 71
Peter Cook's widow Lin has died at the age of 71.
Chortle, 30th November 2016The Undiscovered Peter Cook (BBC Four, Wednesday) was, among other things, a strong argument against the current fad for decluttering. When Cook died in 1995, his wife Lin locked up his Hampstead house just as it was, with a lifetime of memorabilia scattered about, and refused all requests to look inside. 'Until,' as the unseen presenter Victor Lewis-Smith inevitably put it, 'now.'
In fact, this thumping cliché pointed to the one disappointment about the programme: that the unruly talents of Lewis-Smith and Cook himself were combined to produce a documentary that not only observed TV conventions so scrupulously, but that also treated its subject with a most un-Cook-like reverence.
Happily, there was no denying the quality of the material that Lewis-Smith unearthed from various cardboard boxes, shelves and carpets. Home movies from the 1930s reminded us how posh Cook's upbringing was, by featuring garden parties and servants -- and by being home movies from the 1930s. We also got any number of never-before-seen clips, including from Cook's fabled 1971 chat show, originally planned to last 13 episodes, but pulled after three. (Left with a sudden gap in the schedules, the BBC hastily replaced Cook with a journalist called Michael Parkinson.)
Given the reverent tone -- which was presumably linked to Lin's involvement -- Cook's last years were duly treated with almost Jeeves-like discretion. Cook, Lewis-Smith told us, was by no means the 'tortured genius' of popular imagining, and had 'long periods off the booze', once 'even' giving up for seven months. Yet, despite such efforts, the final sections of this programme were distinctly melancholy too -- not least when Lin rather gave the game away by explaining that she once asked her husband why he drank so much. 'Despair, really,' Cook replied.
James Walton, The Spectator, 17th November 2016Preview - The Undiscovered Peter Cook
To this day Peter Cook is still considered one of the greatest comedians to have ever lived. A key part of the 1960s satire boom, financial backer for Private Eye magazine, and famed for his partnership with Dudley Moore on TV in Not Only... But Also and on record in the foul-mouth Derek & Clive, Cook was even named The Comedians' Comedian to find the comic most admired by other comedians.
Ian Wolf, On The Box, 16th November 2016Inside the secret world of Peter Cook
Two decades after he died we uncover a treasure trove of his comedy gold.
Victor Lewis-Smith, Radio Times, 16th November 2016TV review: The Undiscovered Peter Cook, BBC4
It's the kind of scoop every journalist/documentarist dreams of. Getting access to hitherto unseen archives of someone dead and famous. And that is exactly what Victor Lewis-Smith landed when Peter Cook's widow Lin allowed him to rummage through Cook's personal possessions in his Hampstead mews home that hadn't been touched since his death in 1995. The results have been painstakingly cherry picked and put together to produce this fascinating doc on a man who has already had umpteen fascinating docs made about him.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 16th November 2016Ricky Gervais shares first scathing Office review
The comedian shared a link to the review, penned by critic and producer Victor Lewis-Smith, back when the series debuted in 2001.
Caroline Westbrook, Metro, 4th May 2016Mark Steel calls Victor Lewis-Smith a joke thief
Mark Steel has accused critic Victor Lewis-Smith of stealing his material.
Jay Richardson, Chortle, 4th January 2013Created by and starring a genuine comedic genius, Brendan O'Carroll, Mrs. Brown's Boys is just-about the funniest, cleverest and most seemingly-effortless comedy on British television, deconstructing the classic structures of conventional sitcom and adding great clumps of Rabelaisian filth.
Victor Lewis-Smith, The Independent, 24th December 2012