Boy Meets Girl
- TV sitcom
- BBC Two
- 2015 - 2016
- 12 episodes (2 series)
Romantic comedy following a young man trying to find work and his older, transgender partner, and their families. Stars Rebecca Root, Harry Hepple, Denise Welch, Nigel Betts, Jonny Dixon and more.
Press clippings Page 4
Second episode of a cute, convention-squashing sitcom, following transgender woman Judy (Rebecca Root) and new boy Leo (Harry Hepple) as they embark on romance. This week, the pair's Sunday lunch is gatecrashed by Judy's loquacious mum and sister, an old friend who hasn't seen Judy since before she transitioned and Leo's family, who are unaware of her past. "It could go seriously Jeremy Kyle!" predicts Judy's sister, Jackie, perhaps underestimating the potential for a foot-in-mouth outbreak.
Hannah J Davies, The Guardian, 10th September 2015Boy Meets Girl episode 2 review
Potential pitfalls of the relationship are explored.
Emma Jeweks, Cult Box, 10th September 2015Review: Boy Meets Girl
Rebecca Root has charisma but I doubt even she can drag this poorly thought-out affair along by sheer force of personality alone.
Alice Charles, The Huffington Post, 7th September 2015Boy Meets Girl started life as the winning script in a competition to find a comedy that portrayed transgender characters in a positive light. The majority of the press I'd read about Boy Meets Girl focused on the casting of real life transgender actress Rebecca Root and how groundbreaking the show was fore featuring her in a prominent role. So I was more than surprised to learn that Boy Meets Girl was rather a traditional romantic comedy that used Root's Judy's gender transition to explain why she's been so lonely for most of her life. Creator Elliott Kerrigan and co-writer Simon Carlyle made sure that Judy and her love interest Leo (Harry Hemple) both felt like well-rounded characters and by the end of the first episode I felt I'd got to know them sufficiently well. Crucially both Judy and Leo were likeable and relatable characters whose romance made sense despite the fact that she was significantly older than him. Any of the scenes in which these two characters were on screen together were incredibly warm with the majority of the comedy stemming for realistic situations. Both Hemple and Root were brilliant in portraying Leo and Judy as lonely characters who were looking for love and who had seemingly found it with one another. If Boy Meets Girl does have any negative qualities then its in the supporting characters most notably Leo's annoying brother James (Jonny Dixon) and his overbearing mother Pam (Denise Welch). However I feel that Kerrigan and Carlyle have time to let us get to know these characters a little more as the series progresses and I'm not going to judge his presentation of secondary characters too harshly in an opening instalment that had plenty of plot to whiz through. When it's at its best Boy Meets Girl evokes memories of Gavin and Stacey and whilst Kerrigan's comedy may not be as laugh-out-loud funny as that comedy classic its certainly as warm and genuine. I'm just hoping that Boy Meets Girl gets better as it goes on as after episode one I already think it might be one of my comedies of the year.
Matt, The Custard TV, 5th September 2015Boy Meets Girl: new comedy trapped in the wrong script
Here we explored the full-on relationship amusement park that is the new Britain. Unfortunately, the acting, on the whole, and the scripts didn't really live up to the innovative promise of the series.
Sean O'Grady, The Independent, 4th September 2015Viewers praise Boy Meets Girl
The Boy Meets Girl cast were met with overwhelming praise from viewers, as the new transgender-centric sitcom launched last night.
Ashley Percival, The Huffington Post, 4th September 2015Boy Meets Girl: a trans sitcom full of warmth and wit
BBC Two's new series, four years in the making, was worth the wait, says Carrie Lyell.
Carrie Lyell, Diva Mag, 4th September 2015Stephanie Hirst reviews Boy Meets Girl
The BBC Radio Manchester DJ, who recently returned to the airwaves after undergoing gender reassignment, reviews trans comedy Boy Meets Girl.
Stephanie Hirst, Radio Times, 4th September 2015Review: Boy Meets Girl
Superb new comedy about transgender romance.
Veronica Lee, The Arts Desk, 4th September 2015A game-changing new sitcom, mixing a sherbet-sweet, Gavin & Stacey-style plot with not-so-typical leads: transgender woman Judy (Rebecca Root) and her younger suitor Leo (Harry Hepple). In this opening episode, the first hurdle for the new pairing isn't gender-related - rather, it's that Leo's mum is fuming at their 14-year age gap. After E4's LGBT anthology Banana featured a transgender character humiliated by her ex, it's refreshing to see a more positive trans-themed story on TV, and an adorable one at that.
Hannah J Davies, The Guardian, 3rd September 2015