British Comedy Guide
Please donate to help support British comedy at all levels. Thank you. Find out more
School Of Comedy. Image shows from L to R: Max Brown, Will Poulter, Ella Ainsworth. Copyright: Left Bank Pictures
School Of Comedy

School Of Comedy

  • TV sketch show
  • Channel 4 / E4
  • 2008 - 2010
  • 14 episodes (2 series)

An adult sketch show performed by a cast of children. Stars Will Poulter, Jack Harries, Beth Rylance, Evie Henderson, Max Brown and more.

  • JustWatch Streaming rank this week: 7,277

F
X
R
W
E

Episode menu

Pilot - Comedy Lab: School Of Comedy

The range of characters include a profane receptionist, a cross-dressing plumber and a sexually repressed couple from the 1930s.

Broadcast details

Date
Thursday 21st August 2008
Time
10:45pm
Channel
Channel 4
Length
30 minutes

Cast & crew

Cast
Will Poulter Various
Jack Harries Various
Beth Rylance Various
Evie Henderson Various
Max Brown Various
Ella Ainsworth Various
Lilly Ainsworth Various
Guest cast
Africa Nile Various
Arthur Sturridge Various
Writing team
Toby Davies Writer
Barunka O'Shaughnessy Writer
Morgan Lloyd Malcolm (as Trippplicate) Writer
Katie Lyons (as Trippplicate) Writer
Verity Rose Woolnough (as Trippplicate) Writer
Barunka O'Shaughnessy Script Editor
Jon Bridle Writer
Dan Hobson Writer
Tom Worsley Writer
Ella Ainsworth Writer (Additional Material)
Lilly Ainsworth Writer (Additional Material)
Max Brown Writer (Additional Material)
Jack Harries Writer (Additional Material)
Evie Henderson Writer (Additional Material)
Africa Nile Writer (Additional Material)
Will Poulter Writer (Additional Material)
Beth Rylance Writer (Additional Material)
Arthur Sturridge Writer (Additional Material)
Production team
Alex Hardcastle Director
Laura Lawson Producer
Andy Harries Executive Producer
Steve Andrews Editor
Gordon Whistance Production Designer

Press

The children acting out adult insecurities in Comedy Lab: Kids School of Comedy looked as if they were doing it off their own bats, though that may have been an illusion created by the absence of adults on screen. This was a sketch show acted entirely by teenagers, but featuring adult themes and - maybe a little too self-consciously - adult language.

While there was a bit of the dog walking on its hind legs about this - It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all (copyright 1763, Dr S Johnson) - there wasn't as much as you might have expected. The cast were pretty darn competent, though one supposedly American accent sent me scurrying behind the sofa and, as with most school plays, they needed to be told to keep their hands still (the director needed to be told to keep the camera still, too). The standard of the gags was higher than a lot of grown-up comedians manage (I'm thinking of Titty Bang Bang and Little Miss Jocelyn), as well, though the idea of replacing punchlines with children lip-synching to songs, Bugsy Malone-style, was a bad one. But I wasn't clear what was being proved here: a general proposition about children's ability to perform comedy? Or was it a more particular theory about particular individuals, with adult careers ahead of them and a yen to get some television on their CVs?

Robert Hanks, The Independent, 22nd August 2008

With the glut of sketch shows currently clogging up the schedules, it takes something special to stand out from the crowd. School of Comedy achieves this triumphantly by handing over adult material to adolescent performers.

Yes, I know, it sounds an appalling idea. But the confidence, talent and professionalism of the cast quickly dispels all suspicions of gimmickry or fears of on-screen stage school precocity run rampant. Instead, the use of young actors brings a genuine freshness to a tired old format and introduces several new faces to watch out for. It is, of course, totally unfair on an ensemble cast to single out personal favourites, so I shall resist. Suffice to say, Will Poulter and Lily Ainsworth, you know who you are.

Harry Venning, The Stage, 22nd August 2008

More comedy pilots to test the waters with audiences before full series are commissioned. In fact, they're so fresh, no preview DVDs were available; but tonight's premiere, School Of Comedy, a sketch show featuring foul-mouthed children, sounds like it could be a winner.

Metro, 21st August 2008

Share this page