British Comedy Guide
Harry & Paul. Image shows from L to R: Paul Whitehouse, Harry Enfield. Copyright: Tiger Aspect Productions
Harry & Paul

Harry & Paul

  • TV sketch show
  • BBC Two / BBC One
  • 2007 - 2012
  • 23 episodes (4 series)

Comedy starring sketch show veterans Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse as a variety of characters. Also features Daniel Kaluuya, Laura Solon, Morwenna Banks, Sophie Winkleman, Simon Day and more.

F
X
R
W
E

Press clippings Page 8

Enfield and Whitehouse return with another loose collection of sketches, although be thankful that it's not as loose as their profoundly dodgy last series.

All their familiar obsessions are present: football managers (there's a very funny opening skit where an irate boss gives a half-time team talk in several different languages), class divides, stiff black-and-white films, and middle-aged men trying to have sex with gullible young women.

It has the age-old problem of sketches that don't build on their initial premise - see the 1940s Bourne Identity (Oh hell's bells, who the devil am I?), a funny idea that drifts on for about a week - and lot of the material is, in truth, a bit too familiar. But if, for instance, the elderly DJs who play nothing but hip-hop are one variation too many on an old gag, it doesn't matter when it's as well performed as this is.

The gabbling, Plasticine-faced surgeons, and the rabid northern man who lets out a pained squeak when told by his southern owner that he must be neutered, are rewind-and-play-it-again fantastic.

Jack Seale, Radio Times, 5th September 2008

So much comedy water has passed under the TV bridge since Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse first did sketch shows together that when they reunited last year it seemed a rather retrograde step. Whitehouse had done funnier, subtler shows in between and with Mitchell and Webb and Armstrong and Miller on the scene, the market for male double acts is decidedly cluttered.

But they are back for a second series with old favourites such as the judgmental Polish café assistants and Enfield's badly behaved Nelson Mandela, and new sketches, including a Dragons' Den spoof and two elderly Jewish DJs. It should be at least as popular as the first.

Paul Hoggart, The Times, 5th September 2008

Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse are comedy legends but their last outing was hit and miss.

The Sun, 5th September 2008

Bloody hell, it has been recommissioned! Amazing, really, considering how staggeringly painful Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse's first series was.

Quality control has been cranked up a notch but I should warn you, Nelson Mandela is back.

Best reason to watch is a brilliant take on Dragons' Den. Harry is Deborah Meaden but the moment when Paul's Duncan Bannatyne leans forward to sneer at Harry's Peter Jones makes this worth investing in.

The Mirror, 5th September 2008

It may not have the inspired characters of their earlier collaborations, but Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse's latest sketch show still has its inspired moments.

Metro, 5th September 2008

Comedy couple back on fast track

The world of Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse is possibly the only place you'll find a pair of elderly Jewish gentlemen presenting a rap radio show for Radio 3.

Andy Welch, Manchester Evening News, 3rd September 2008

The first series was entertaining enough, and while many of the sketches wouldn't have felt out of place had they come out in the 1980s, I guess you have to congratulate them for sticking to what they know. Maybe. At the very least, it's unlikely that the two comedy legends will have lost their touch completely, and so we can expect Harry and Paul's usual mix of parodies and character-based sketches to provide a fair few laughs.

Anna Lowman, TV Scoop, 2nd September 2008

Harry and Paul Interview

With their sketch show back on BBC1, Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse tell The Telegraph why silliness is the secret of their success.

James Rampton, The Telegraph, 28th August 2008

Harry and Paul were ruddy good

So Ruddy Hell, it's Harry and Paul has ended and we can finally reach a verdict.

Mike Anderiesz, The Guardian, 21st May 2007

Ruddy Hell! It's Harry and Paul Review

Descending from plain old boringly unfunny to actual cringing embarrassment with sketches like The Computer Billionaires and Laurel and Hardy in Brokeback Mountain made me want to desert this sinking ship along with the rats.

John Beresford, TV Scoop, 14th April 2007

Share this page