sitcom
John Mahoney: 'I wanted to be like everybody else'Tuesday, 06 February 2018In 11 seasons of Frasier, John Mahoney played Marty Crane, a cussed blue-collar ex-cop who couldn’t quite understand how his loins came to produce two prissily cultured psychiatrists. His ally in straight-talking was his physiotherapist Daphne,... Read more... |
Motherland / Detectorists review - comedy classics go at their own paceThursday, 16 November 2017As Motherland settles down into its first series proper after last year’s pilot, it still seems to be going at a fair gallop. For those of you who haven’t seen it, the sitcom, written by Graham Linehan and Sharon Horgan along with Helen Linehan and... Read more... |
W1A, Series 3 Finale, BBC Two review - the satire gets to the end of its jokeTuesday, 24 October 2017Repetition can help clarity. It emphasises significance, and shines a light more directly onto something hidden. It can guide us gently into an area we might have otherwise circumvented, and urge us to stare at something for long enough to see... Read more... |
Bad Move, ITV review - Jack Dee resettles in the middle of the roadThursday, 21 September 2017That the countryside is a dump where all good things come to a dead end is hardly a new punchline. There are plenty of novels and memoirs, and indeed newspaper columns, about trading the toxic metropolis for the green and unpleasant pastures of the... Read more... |
Henry IX, UK Gold, review - 'return of sitcom classics'Thursday, 06 April 2017It has been a long, long time since Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais wrote a new sitcom; in their heyday they created The Likely Lads and its sequel, Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, Porridge and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, all of which have become... Read more... |
Catastrophe, Series 3, review - the end of the road?Wednesday, 05 April 2017In the beginning it was about good catastrophes. A shotgun pregnancy after a hot hook-up. A dysfunctional transatlantic romance in which opposites attract. The boredom of looking after babies. The boredom of being a wage slave. Catastrophe was... Read more... |
The Great Indoors, ITV2Tuesday, 10 January 2017The main attraction of this new US sitcom for a UK audience is that two British actors - Stephen Fry and Susannah Fielding – appear in it. The basic premise is that Jack Gordon, a famed reporter, has led a thrilling outdoorsman life, writing about... Read more... |
Divorce, Sky AtlanticWednesday, 12 October 2016Divorce opened on Sarah Jessica Parker inspecting the work of time in the mirror. Goodbye Carrie, hello Frances, upstate New Yorker, mother of two and wife to a man who demands equal time in the bathroom. “I was forced to take a shit in this coffee... Read more... |
The wisdom and wit of Carla LaneWednesday, 01 June 2016Carla Lane, who has died at the age of 87, was the first from Liverpool. Before Alan Bleasdale and Willy Russell, long before Jimmy McGovern, hers was the loudest Liverpudlian voice on television portraying ordinary working people's lives. From The... Read more... |
Rovers, Sky1Wednesday, 25 May 2016Football seeps into every cranny of British culture, but it's hard to name a great comedy or drama about the game of two halves. The history of fictionalised football is mainly a catalogue of failure. The liveliest portraits of the game have come at... Read more... |
Mum, BBC TwoSaturday, 14 May 2016The comedy of widowhood is the brave territory of Mum. Lesley Manville plays Cathy, whom we meet on the day she is burying her husband Dave – although not literally doing it herself, as has to be explained to the nice but dim new girlfriend of her... Read more... |
The Windsors, Channel 4Saturday, 07 May 2016There’s little chance, I would guess, that the Windsors were gathered on the sofa to watch The Windsors last night. The show, thankfully, is not another attempt to oil up the collective fundament of the British royal family (and goodness knows... Read more... |