Bob Servant
- TV sitcom
- BBC One Scotland / BBC Four
- 2013 - 2014
- 9 episodes (2 series)
TV series about a small-time Scottish businessman with a vastly inflated sense of his own importance and abilities. Stars Brian Cox, Jonathan Watson, Anita Vettesse, Daniela Nardini, Antony Strachan and more.
Press clippings Page 4
Review: Bob Servant Independent, BBC Four
Brian Cox excels as Tayside's dodgy burger king in whimsical comedy.
Adam Sweeting, The Arts Desk, 23rd January 2013First encountered on BBC Radio Scotland and then Radio 4, Neil Forsyth's creation, the deluded Bob Servant, graduates to television in a new comedy series. Servant made his name in Broughton Ferry's "cheeseburger wars", and here puts his hat into the ring as the independent candidate in the Scottish town's by-election; his poster campaign being: "You know him, he's OK". Veteran actor Brian Cox takes on the role of Servant - as he did on the radio - but despite his best efforts, the script does him few favours.
Simon Horsford, The Telegraph, 22nd January 2013The creation of writer Neil Forsyth, Bob Servant is a character who has - through his email exchanges with internet spammers in Africa and Russia (he tells them, perplexingly, about the details of his life in Broughty Ferry, a Dundee suburb) - become a kind of Scottish national treasure, albeit a fictional one. This series, starring Brian Cox, attempts to bring this Pooter/Partridge-style creation to life on screen, and follows Bob as he campaigns to become an MP. Much like support for Bob, actual jokes are very thin on the ground.
John Robinson, The Guardian, 22nd January 2013Interview: Brian Cox on what keeps him coming home
Brian Cox, son of Dundee, has got brilliant recall of the first time he represented the city on screen. "I was 20, a young actor with the Lyceum in Edinburgh, when I got asked to go back up the road to narrate a wee film about the opening of the Tay road bridge," he says.
Aidan Smith, The Scotsman, 20th January 2013From New York to Broughty Ferry, the picturesque suburb of Dundee that Bob Servant Independent calls home. The TV début of a character previously established in a BBC Radio Scotland series and a popular range of books, this likeable and amusing sitcom stars Brian Cox as a vain, deluded, self-serving businessman who decides to stand in a local by-election. The only drawbacks are his political ignorance, his egregious personality, and his exceedingly dim view of the electorate.
Having previously played Servant on radio, Cox is clearly having a whale of a time in the role, and his relish is infectious. An idiotic, roaring blow-hard, Servant is a welcome addition to our rich history of sitcom monsters. He may even do for Dundee what Alan Partridge did for Norwich. Please don't ask me if that's a good thing or not.
Paul Whitelaw, The Scotsman, 20th January 2013Brian Cox on his surprise move into television comedy
The very idea of screen legend Brian Cox's move into television comedy with a new BBC sitcom is without doubt a cause for celebration.
Brian Beacom, The Herald, 17th January 2013Bob Servant Independent: the don of Dundee
It started as an email prank: a way of out-scamming the scammers. Then it became a book, and a radio play. So when Neil Forsyth was asked to turn his alter ego Bob Servant into a TV character, he fantasised about casting his hero Brian Cox. Then came a chance meeting...
Neil Forsyth, The Guardian, 15th January 2013Brian Cox interview
Brian Cox talks about Bob Servant, Independent.
Graham Kibble-White, TV Choice, 15th January 2013The best of Bob Servant
Ahead of new his BBC TV series, we look back on The List Agony Uncle's finest moments.
Neil Forsyth, The List, 28th November 2012PG Wodehouse, Simon Amstell and joke series in BBC Four line-up
BBC Four has announced its winter comedy line-up. Shows include a drama about PG Wodehouse, stand-up from Simon Amstell, and a new sitcom.
British Comedy Guide, 21st November 2012