Andy Hamilton. Copyright: Steve Ullathorne
Andy Hamilton

Andy Hamilton (I)

  • 69 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer, director and producer

Press clippings Page 5

Interview: Andy Hamilton

Award-winning comedian and comedy writer - Outnumbered, Ballot Monkeys, Drop The Dead Donkey, to name a few - Andy Hamilton hits the road with a new show and speaks with Victoria Nangle.

Victoria Nangle, The Latest, 2nd May 2017

Andy Hamilton to launch audio show about Donald Trump

Comedy writer Andy Hamilton is seeking funding for Inside Donald Trump, a new three-part audio documentary series about the US president. Stars will include Michael Buerk, Hugh Dennis, Ronni Ancona, Claire Skinner and Jimmy Mulville.

British Comedy Guide, 20th April 2017

Outnumbered Christmas special review

Christmas is the season for catching up with old friends and so Boxing Day night seems an ideal time to entertain the Brockman family.

Ian McArdell, Cult Box, 26th December 2016

BBC announces Outnumbered Christmas special

The BBC has confirmed that hit sitcom Outnumbered is to return for a new Christmas special.

British Comedy Guide, 21st November 2016

Andy Hamilton on someone pretending to be him

When the TV writer discovered someone was pretending to be him, he consoled himself with the thought that charlatans always get found out. But today, he says, they're getting a free pass...

Andy Hamilton, The Guardian, 9th October 2016

Andy Hamilton interview

Looking a little like Britain's answer to America's Danny De Vito, this bearded, award-winning comedian and writer's last tour of Change Management proved so popular he's bringing it back on the road this autumn.

Graham Chalmers, Harrogate Advertiser, 29th September 2016

Andy Hamilton interview

The man behind Outnumbered, Andy Hamilton, tells Jasper Rees how an impostor planted the seed for his first novel.

Jasper Rees, The Telegraph, 15th September 2016

Radio 4 announces 18 new comedy shows

Radio 4 has announced a raft of new shows, including series from Matt Berry, Sara Pascoe, Richard Herring, Sam Bain, Andy Hamilton and Fred MacAulay.

British Comedy Guide, 26th August 2016

With political reality increasingly stranger than fiction, it will be interesting to see where the final episode of Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin's sporadically amusing referendum-based comedy takes us. Expect the Unity Unit to become increasingly desperate, Oleg to stop at nothing to get his way and Gerry to engage in a strange experiment with honesty. Which, in our post-truth political age, might be where the whole enterprise finally collapses into implausibility.

Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 6th July 2016

Just like with last year's Ballot Monkeys, Power Monkeys by writers Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin have worked on their script up to the day of transmission to include as many topical gags as possible. Another similarity between the two shows is that we follow four camps of people with Ballot Monkeys concentrating on the four major parties going into the 2015 General Election. But as this show focuses on the EU Referendum there is only really two campaigns to focus on namely the Vote Remain and Vote Leave groups. Although I do feel that there was probably enough material to focus on just these two groups, I think to keep up the pace that made Ballot Monkeys so enjoyable Hamilton and Jenkin added two more parties just to keep things going. Those parties are the team behind Donald Trump's presidential run as well as two members of Vladimir Putin's staff. I do feel targeting Trump and Putin is quite easy but a lot of the jokes about these two men have already been made elsewhere and I don't think that the writers really had anything new to say about them. So while these segments were funny I think the running joke about Trump not allowing any female journalists to interview him was quite cliched and was done to death. The more interesting parts of the episode involved the two sides of the referendum with the vote leave campaign headed up by the returning Gerry (Andy Nyman) who was working alongside the ultra-patriotic Spencer (Kevin McNally), the focused Preeya (Archie Panjabi) and young Labour supporter Jackie (Gwyneth Keyworth). On the other side of the fence was Oliver (Jack Dee) whose offensive jokes were getting on the nerves of his colleague and fellow remain campaigner Sara (Claire Skinner). It was the interplay between McNally and Panjabi and Skinner and Dee which provided the central highlights of this first episode of Power Monkeys primarily as both sets of performers bounced off each other perfectly. I have to say though I was a little disappointed as I expect a lot more from Hamilton and Jenkin and I feel that Power Monkeys lacked the focus that Ballot Monkeys possessed. That being said I'm going to stick with the show for now as I'm a fan of the majority of the cast and have loved the writers ever since Drop the Dead Donkey. But I'm just hoping the quality of the episodes improve as I would say that the first episode of Power Monkeys was simply a little lacking in big laughs and that's not what I expected from the follow-up to one of the funniest sitcoms of last year.

Matt, The Custard TV, 12th June 2016

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