My Mad Fat Diary
- TV comedy drama
- E4
- 2013 - 2015
- 16 episodes (3 series)
Comedy drama set in the mid-1990s looking at teenage life from the eyes of a 16-year-old with weight and mental health issues. Stars Sharon Rooney, Dan Cohen, Jodie Comer, Jordan Murphy, Ciara Baxendale and more.
Press clippings Page 9
As if being 16 years old, 16-and-a-half stone and a resident of smalltown Lincolnshire wasn't bad enough, Rae (Sharon Rooney) has just spent four months in a psychiatric ward. So it's understandable that she might fancy a new start, under the watchful eyes of her clued-up doctor (Ian Hart) and erratic mother (Claire Rushbrook). But can she hide her past from her new friends and overcome her issues to make the most of teenage life in the Britpop era? Based on writer Rae Earl's real-life diaries, E4's latest series is shaping up to be a triumph to file alongside Skins and Misfits, while being entirely different to both and a tougher sell (neither as on-trend as the former nor as high concept as the latter) than either.
Key to its success is Rooney's empathetic, guileless lead performance, while the comedy and tragedy inherent in the premise is deftly handled. An appealing, confident opener.
Gabriel Tate, Time Out, 14th January 2013TV review: My Mad Fat Diary
My Mad Fat Diary is lovely drama - honest and painful, real, and very funny.
Sam Wollaston, The Guardian, 14th January 2013My Mad Fat Diary: review
There are some nice performances notably Claire Rushbrook and Ian Hart as the token adults and new comer Sharon Rooney leads the production with humour and personal charm. However, like much 'comedy drama', I feel that My Mad Fat Diary lacks that the emotional punch to be a drama or the gags or wit to be a comedy; and we will end up with little more than another soap opera for adolescents.
Alastair Newport, On The Box, 14th January 2013Sharon Rooney: nice to see normal-looking people on TV
The star of E4's My Mad Fat Diary talks role models and teenage insecurities.
Claire Webb, Radio Times, 14th January 2013My Mad Fat Diary review
I would say that this is the most accurate portrayal of British teenage life in a long while and it rung more true than both Skins and The Inbetweeners did.
Unreality TV, 14th January 2013Nicely done adaptation of Rae Earl's real 1990s teenage diaries. Earl was an unstable, overweight teenager in Lincolnshire when she was sent to an institution for four months during a nervous breakdown, while her mum told everyone she was in France. Sharon Rooney is outstanding as the girl desperate to fit in, have sex and escape her unhelpful mother. It is funny, features all the 90s indie you could want, and the direction really is exquisite. The bit when a sausage thwangs slowly into someone's cheek is worth the budget alone.
Julia Raeside, The Guardian, 13th January 2013If you've flicked onto any channel with 4 in the title in the past month or so, chances are you would have seen the advert for this brand new comedy based on the real diaries of author Rae Earl.
Set in Lancashire circa 1996, My Mad Fat Diary re-enacts 16-year-old and 16-stone Rae's quest to make up for lost time with a group of cool new friends after being released from a psychiatric hospital. Frank, occasionally bleak and just a little cringeworthy, this is a show that'll ring painfully true for everyone watching aged 20 or over.
Daniel Sperling, Digital Spy, 13th January 2013My Mad Fat Diary is both realistic and frothy. Based on the teenage diaries of writer Rae Earl - who, unlike most of us, had something genuinely dramatic to agonise over, having been taken into a psychiatric hospital - it portrays its 1990s heroine (young Scots actress Sharon Rooney) in all her gawky, unglamorous, stroppy non-glory. But this is far from a grim expose of mental health, because Rae is far less interested in that than in boys - or BOYS!!! as her diary would have it.
It's an odd tonal mixture, lurching from touching moments to overegged stereotypes, with plenty that both young and older viewers will groan to recognise. It's all played a bit safe though: I wish they'd let out more of the madness.
Andrea Mullaney, The Scotsman, 13th January 2013Based on Rae Earl's real-life book about an overweight, funny, boy-mad teenager - with mental health issues - growing up in Lincolnshire in the mid-Nineties, this comedy drama has a lot going for it. Rae is nicely played by Sharon Rooney. Claire Rushbrook plays her unreliable mum and Ian Hart her therapist. The opener sees Rae discharged from a psychiatric hospital and hooking up with childhood friend Chloe (Jodie Comer).
Simon Horsford, The Telegraph, 12th January 2013My Mad Fat Diary cast interview
Interview with various cast members from My Mad Fat Diary.
Elaine Penn, TV Choice, 8th January 2013