Nurse
- TV comedy drama / sketch show
- BBC Two
- 2015
- 4 episodes (1 series)
TV version of the Radio 4 series starring Paul Whitehouse as various characters visited by a community psychiatric nurse. Stars Esther Coles, Paul Whitehouse and Cecilia Noble.
Press clippings Page 2
Another radio comedy gets a TV transfer. This time, Paul Whitehouse parades his chameleonic character-acting skills in a more worthwhile setting than those damned insurance ads. His straight woman is Esther Coles's community mental health nurse Liz, whose daily rounds see her lending a therapeutic ear to everyone from dotty old dears to brittle ex-cons. A few of the characters veer close to stereotype but this is deftly performed, with a layer of melancholic empathy below its gentle surface.
Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 10th March 2015Radio Times review
Paul Whitehouse, David Cummings and Esther Coles's accomplished Radio 4 comedy, which engaged intelligently with mental health issues, has here been sensitively rescaled for the small screen.
Coles plays a community nurse meeting an array of characters (some new and mainly played by Whitehouse). They include Billy the agoraphobic ex-con, Herbert the ageing rake and - probably most memorably - the morbidly obese Graham who is engaged in a terrible, co-dependent relationship with his obsessive mother and her revoltingly unhealthy cooking.
There are nose-snortingly outrageous laughs aplenty as we'd expect from any Whitehouse stable. But, thanks to the judiciousness and ebullience of the writing and the tenderness and skill of the performances, they never detract from the narrative's essential humanity and warmth.
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 10th March 2015Video: Paul Whitehouse on mental health comedy Nurse
Paul Whitehouse is known for his larger than life characters, catchphrases and 25 year partnership with Harry Enfield.
This week, he returns to our screens - but his new series takes on an issue that's no laughing matter.
Nurse follows the life of an overstretched community mental health health worker, played by Esther Coles, as she does her daily rounds.
BBC News, 10th March 20155 reasons why you should tune in for Nurse
Here are 5 reasons why you should tune in when the series kicks off tonight...
Sarah Deen, Metro, 10th March 2015Nurse, BBC2 - TV review
No punchlines, no catchphrases, just Paul Whitehouse tugging at our heartstrings.
Ellen E. Jones, The Independent, 10th March 2015Is new comedy 'Nurse' too sugary sweet?
The jokes have been made already ('Goodness, this is a long Aviva car insurance advert') and the comparisons to Ricky Gervais' Derek have been posted well in advance. And it's true that Paul Whitehouse's bittersweet new sitcom for BBC Two, about a hard-pressed Community Psychiatric Nurse, does bear an unfortunate and uncanny resemblance to both. But here's the rub - the Aviva adverts are funnier. And it's so soppy that it makes Derek look like a Michael Haneke film.
Chris Bennion, The Custard TV, 10th March 2015Nurse, review: 'a beautiful bedside manner'
Paul Whitehouse's well-observed comedy came from the heart, says Michael Hogan.
Michael Hogan, The Telegraph, 10th March 2015TV review: Nurse
There's no shame in incurring a broken ankle because you fell, or having flu because someone sneezed beside you on the train, so why should there be shame if you develop anxiety following a period of stress, or depression following a bereavement?
Julie McDowall, The Herald, 10th March 2015Nurse is touching, funny and important
The new comedy from The Fast Show star tackles mental illness sensitively and authentically - but with plenty of laughs, says Ben Dowell.
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 10th March 2015Paul Whitehouse: "I've got 3 stents, 4 kids, 5 Baftas"
The Fast Show and Harry & Paul comedian refuses to reflect on his mortality as he brings his latest comedy Nurse to BBC Two.
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 9th March 2015