Miranda
- TV sitcom
- BBC One / BBC Two
- 2009 - 2015
- 20 episodes (3 series)
Hit sitcom starring Miranda Hart as a woman desperate to fit into society and find a man. She runs a joke shop with childhood friend Stevie. Stars Miranda Hart, Sarah Hadland, Patricia Hodge, Tom Ellis, Sally Phillips and more.
- Series 2, Episode 4 repeated at 9pm on Gold
- Streaming rank this week: 283
Press clippings Page 21
Series two of Miranda Hart's gently farcical, slapstick-happy comedy continues where the first left off, with Miranda battling the threat of eternal spinsterhood while trying to get one over on her Sloaney rival Tilly. Sally Phillips (previously best known for Smack the Pony) co-stars.
The Telegraph, 12th November 2010Miranda's Cringe of the Week
The new series of Miranda starts this Monday! To celebrate, we're kicking off with a new feature in which you can share your Miranda moments with fellow fans.
David Thair, BBC Comedy, 10th November 2010Talking Shop: Miranda Hart
Miranda Hart is among nominees for Sunday's TV Baftas, garnering nods for best female comedy performance as well as best sitcom for BBC Two show Miranda.
BBC News, 5th June 2010Miranda Hart: Whatever you do, don't call me 'sir'
Miranda Hart finds being a 6ft 1in woman has its downside, even if it does provide plenty of comic material.
Phil Hogan, The Observer, 11th April 2010Laugh lines: How Garry Shandling inspired Miranda
One of the few recent laugh-out-loud sitcoms, Miranda showed a comedic shift away from the neo-naturalism of The Office and The Thick Of It.
Bruce Dessau, The Guardian, 11th March 2010Miranda ended as it began, a critical nightmare. Devote any rational thought to it and it was rubbish. Yet watch it with your brain on dimmer switch and it had a curious way of making you laugh despite yourself. Retro but not in an ironic way, the yin of its rubbish gags was offset by the yang of Miranda Hart's eye-rolling mugging to camera. Last night's closing episode also scored major points for featuring Titan, the cutest chihuahua this side of Christmas. Watching big Hart clutch tiny Titan while small sidekick Stevie stood shoulder-to-shoulder with a great dane made me wonder if the cat had been slipping Vicodin into my egg soldiers.
Keith Watson, Metro, 15th December 2009Miranda says good bye
"It has been a pleasure and thank you so much for watching and being interested. It means a hell of a lot."
Miranda Hart, BBC Comedy, 14th December 2009The main source of the comedy in Miranda is that she is a human stegosaurus, huge and hugely unfanciable, which as others have noted is politically not very correct. And if political incorrectness isn't reason enough on its own to love Miranda, there are plenty of other reasons, not least, in our house anyway, that it is the first new primetime sitcom I can recall that unites the whole family, all laughing our socks off. The hugely engaging Miranda Hart also deserves a medal, or better still a Bafta, for reminding us that slapstick can be funny. Not an episode goes by without her tripping over something, or getting stuck in something, which in less assured hands would be justification for throwing a heavy object at the telly, but it takes real deftness to appear as galumphing as that. She might even be the reincarnation of Tommy Cooper. At any rate, she deserves to have her name in the title.
Brian Viner, The Independent, 8th December 2009I'm finding it - unusually for me - hard to find even one fault with this BBC2 comedy. It's funny; it's very funny, and I really wasn't expecting it to be, primarily because before I watched it myself, I'd heard the word 'slapstick' in relation to it, and I'm always wary of that.
That was a word used when describing Big Top and that 'show' should be lined up and shot. Thankfully, Miranda doesn't need putting out of its misery, but I think it does need moving to a more prestigious timeslot on BBC1.
And the main character, Miranda, played by Miranda Hart, is wonderfully engaging. She's not only comedically self-deprecating, she's witty too with rapid fire and genuinely funny character interplay.
Her supporting cast are great too; Patricia Hodge has lost none of her chameleon like acting abilities in the time she's been absent from our screens and the relative newbies in the show are, I'm sure, destined for good things if their performances in Miranda are anything to go by.
One of the most charming things for me about this show is that Miranda Hart has perhaps laid bare some of the things that have most probably been burdens for her to bear in her real life, and opened them up to comedic interpretation.
The jokes and running issues about her size, looks, accent and so on are of course funny, but I can't help but wonder if at times, the real Miranda has found them hugely hurtful? But if she has, she's managed to parlay those barbs into he-who-laughs-last as the cheques roll in for this show. And others that may follow - I hope.
And another pleasing fact about the show is that there's something in it to which most of us can relate. The snipes from mother, the odd friends, the unsuitable job... there really is something to appeal to pretty much everyone in Miranda, and I hope when this series ends, there's another already in the pipeline.
Lynn Rowlands-Connolly, Unreality TV, 8th December 2009Miranda Hart Writersroom Interview
Miranda Hart is interviewed by the BBC Writers Room.
BBC Writersroom, 8th December 2009