British Comedy Guide
Big School. Image shows from L to R: Miss Postern (Catherine Tate), Mr Church (David Walliams). Copyright: BBC / King Bert Productions
Big School

Big School

  • TV sitcom
  • BBC One
  • 2013 - 2014
  • 12 episodes (2 series)

Sitcom about the dysfunctional staff room, unrequited love and interactive whiteboards of an urban secondary school. Stars David Walliams, Catherine Tate, Philip Glenister, Frances de la Tour, Joanna Scanlan and more.

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Press clippings Page 2

A second term of tomfoolery for David Walliams's school sitcom, and changes are afoot. Bullet-brained games teacher Mr Gunn takes on geography with an aplomb that doesn't quite extend to learning how to pronounce the word, while music teacher Mr Martin is treating classes to a PR campaign promoting his pop career. Comfortingly, though, Walliams's Mr Church is as clueless as ever when wooing Catherine Tate's Miss Postern. As big, broad sitcoms go, this is amiable fare.

Mark Jones, The Guardian, 29th August 2014

Radio Times review

The first series of David Walliams's classroom sitcom launched to high hopes and high ratings. That might be because so many of us still have our fingers crossed that either Walliams or Matt Lucas will at some point recall, in a small way, the comic heights they reached in Little Britain.

Ratings slipped as people realised Big School wasn't the moment we could uncross our fingers, but is instead an old-fashioned, likeable enough, broadish sort of comedy full of familiar joke-teacher figures (the macho gym master, the intimidating head) and the odd good gag.

As a new term starts, Mr Church (Walliams) still holds a candle for Miss Postern (Catherine Tate) and at assembly, Frances de la Tour delivers a welcome speech: "As your headmistress, I offer you one word of friendly advice: cross me and I will destroy you."

David Butcher, Radio Times, 29th August 2014

As it returns for a second series, Big School really seems to have found its comedy feet. David Walliams' performance is still every bit as subtle as his cross-dressing "I'm a laydee" Emily was in Little Britain. That is to say, not at all.

But Big School is well enough written to survive his camp, asexual gurning and the dream cast add extra polish to an already shiny script.

In tonight's opener, music teacher Mr Martin (Daniel Rigby) is about to launch his pop career. (His single, written by David Arnold and Michael Price, sounds like an entirely credible X Factor winner's song.)

Mr Barber (Steve Speirs) has had to take a career change, PE teacher Mr Gunn (Philip Glenister) is now also teaching geography, and even the confident Miss Postern (Catherine Tate) finds herself at a crossroads in her career.

In one slightly depressing piece of casting, former EastEnder Cheryl Fergison replaces Julie T Wallace as the wordless lab assistant who has the hots for Walliams' Mr Church. Why depressing? Because making someone the butt of the joke just because they don't look like Angelina Jolie feels uncomfortably like bullying.

But the real reason for Big School's success is probably Frances de la Tour. Even when she's not actually on screen, just knowing that she's lurking somewhere in the building as vinegary headmistress Ms Baron is reassuring.

Jane Simon, The Mirror, 29th August 2014

TV review: Big School

Comedy relies upon jokes, character, timing, misunderstandings, the suspension of disbelief - even banana skins. There is a huge bag of tricks in which the skilled comedy writer can rummage. Not on BBC1, though. A BBC1 comedy requires nothing more than familiar faces: just get a bunch of famous people on board and job's a good 'un.

Julie McDowall, The Herald, 29th August 2014

David Walliams reveals his childhood heroes

The Little Britain star plays a hapless teacher now, but who influenced him when he was at school?

Claire Webb, Radio Times, 29th August 2014

Big School Series 2 review - must try harder

Big School seems to trying to be too many different things and the comedy suffers as a consequence. It was more like a set of sketches badly stitched together.

Neela Debnath, The Independent, 29th August 2014

Big School, BBC One: 'a gentle brand of juvenile wit'

David Walliams' school-based comedy has grown up.

Jake Wallis Simons, The Telegraph, 28th August 2014

TV preview: Big School

David Walliams, Catherine Tate, Frances De La Tour, Joanna Scanlan, Philip Glenister and that bloke form the BT adverts. You can't fault the cast of Big School, which returns for a second run. The challenge is making something mainstream enought for primetime BBC One but still interesting enough so that the talented performers don't sleepwalk through it.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 27th August 2014

Big School Series 2 preview

Will there be a third series? I hope so, because BBC One really need a channel-defining comedy that's widely loved, and I really do believe that Big School is that comedy.

Elliot Gonzalez, I Talk Telly, 27th August 2014

David Walliams & Co spotted filming Series 2

David Walliams swapped the Britain's Got Talent panel for the classroom as he got to work filming the second series of his sitcom Big School.

Danielle Gusmaroli, Daily Mail, 16th May 2014

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