Press clippings Page 2
Inside No. 9: And The Winner Is... preview
Inside No 9 has been nominated for enough awards in its time - scooping one only yesterday - which may explain how Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith's minds came to be drawn to what happens in the jury rooms where such things are decided.
Steve Bennett, Chortle, 30th January 2018Inside No 9 review: a sly skewering of the TV industry
Screen stories about juries often thrive on tension and suspense. But Inside No 9's latest episode shuns nail-biting matters of life and death in favour of a more shallow enterprise.
Mark Butler, i Newspaper, 30th January 2018Toby Jones, Stephen Mangan, Zoe Wanamaker's Pinter play
Toby Jones, Stephen Mangan and Zoe Wanamaker are to star in The Birthday Party.
What's On Stage, 13th September 2017Inside No. 9 Series 4 guest stars revealed
The list of stars that will appear in Series 4 of Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith's Inside No. 9 have been revealed.
British Comedy Guide, 7th April 2017Wanamaker: My Family axed for being too middle class
BBC bosses told My Family star Zoe Wanamaker that the popular series was axed for being too middle class, the actress has revealed.
The Telegraph, 3rd May 2012The end of an error as BBC1's cutting-edge sitcom My Family closed its net curtains for the last time after a turbulent decade.
Farewell then the cosy world of loveable eccentric Ben, his long-suffering wife Susan... and their charmingly cheeky children.
Frantic neighbours bursting through the door to howls of canned laughter, wisecracking cute kids, crying women, bozo blokes...and constant crises about everything apart from money.
No one's life was ever like this. But millions of fans tuned in year after year. And - presumably - found it funny. So this much-maligned telly success story doesn't deserve to be mocked.
Friday's final episode fizzled out with the sad saga of cousin Kirsty being dumped by text on her hen night. And Ben's lovelorn chum Roger trying to find his blind date in a crowded restaurant by shouting: "Is anyone looking for a Roger?" No laughing matter.
But throughout 11 highly professional series Robert Lindsay and Zoe Wanamaker delivered immaculate performances in one of TV's most enduring comedies.
RIP My Family. Gone but already forgotten.
Kevin O'Sullivan, The Mirror, 4th September 2011My Family, your family, our family
After 114 episodes, My Family takes its final bow tonight. The popular BBC One sitcom stars Robert Lindsay and Zoe Wanamaker as parents Ben and Susan Harper alongside a brood of children, cousins and uninvited house guests, played over the years by Kris Marshall, Daniela Denby-Ashe, Gabriel Thompson, Siobhan Hayes, Keiron Self, Rhodri Meilir and Tayler Marshall.
Jon Aird, BBC Comedy, 2nd September 2011It's lasted 11 long years, 120 episodes and withstood widespread sneering. Now the Harper family bid farewell with the last ever episode of the sitcom that viewers loved but critics loathed. Susan (Zoë Wanamaker) and Janey (Daniela Denby-Ashe) attend an eventful hen party, while disgruntled dentist Ben (Robert Lindsay) is babysitting at home - as ever, with supposedly hilarious consequences. It's time for the curtain to fall: the show's always been impeccably performed, but the writing deteriorated in recent years and ratings have fallen from a peak of 11m to around 4m.
Michael Hogan, The Telegraph, 1st September 2011Love it or loathe it, you can't help feeling a little sad about the impending loss of this dated yet strangely comforting sitcom, which has lasted for 11 series. Tonight Michael and Janey treat their parents, Ben and Susan (Robert Lindsay and Zoe Wanamaker), to a Spanish holiday for their wedding anniversary. But, as you'd expect with the Harpers, nothing is as straightforward as it seems.
Clive Morgan, The Telegraph, 14th July 2011Robert Lindsayp's paterfamilias Ben gets an episode off this week, although seeing as how most of the cast have been sleepwalking through their roles for years in this dated (and now axed) comedy, you'll find it hard to spot much difference. With him out of the way, the path is clear for Susan (Zoë Wanamaker) to throw herself into her work - and the arms of the new office hunk. The result is a rare achievement in one respect at least, managing to be both utterly unlikely and all too predictable.
Gerald O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 7th July 2011