Greg Tannahill

  • Actor

Press clippings

BBC axes King Gary and Goes Wrong Show

BBC One sitcoms King Gary and The Goes Wrong Show have both been dropped by the broadcaster.

British Comedy Guide, 6th April 2024

Mischief stars among the cast of new comedy Good Luck, Studio

The cast of a new Mischief comedy, in collaboration with Mercury Theatre and Wiltshire Creative, has been revealed.

Penned by Henry Shields and directed by Henry Lewis, Good Luck, Studio takes place during the final night of recording for a massively over-budget and underwritten kid's TV show called Wibble the Dragon.

What's On Stage, 12th August 2022

Original The Play That Goes Wrong cast to return to show for two weeks

The original cast of The Play That Goes Wrong will return to the show for two weeks this summer.

Alex Wood, What's On Stage, 6th May 2022

The Goes Wrong Show: The Nativity, BBC1, review

Cornley Dramatic Society's second Christmas special proved Mischief Theatre's chaos still has legs.

Ed Power, i Newspaper, 22nd December 2020

The Goes Wrong Show gets second series

The Goes Wrong Show, from the writers of the hit Goes Wrong series of stage comedies, will return to BBC One for another series.

British Comedy Guide, 14th February 2020

The Goes Wrong Show series coming to BBC One

The Goes Wrong Show, a series starring the team behind The Play That Goes Wrong, is coming to BBC One.

British Comedy Guide, 22nd February 2019

The set-up for A Christmas Carol Goes Wrong sees the fictional Cornley Polytechnic Drama Society attempt to get themselves back on the BBC but hijacking a live dramatisation of A Christmas Carol starring Derek Jacobi as Scrooge. Taking over the role of Scrooge is Chris (Henry Shields) who sees himself as slightly better than the rest of the group and feels himself superior to Robert (Henry Lewis) who also wanted the leading role. The feud between Chris and Robert, with the former's assertion that he'd only give up the role of Scrooge if he were incapacitated is the basis of one of the show's running gags. Another brilliant joke is that Jonathan (Greg Tannahill) has once again forgotten all his words and so his lines have to be written on various props during his portrayal of Bob Cratchitt. Alongside Jacobi, the other famous face in A Christmas Carol Goes Wrong is Diana Rigg who agrees to narrate the play as her niece Sandra (Charlie Russell) is one of the players. We also learn, via footage from a party that is accidentally played over the green screen software, that Charlie is going to dump her boyfriend Max (Dave Hearn) once the production is over and later at the same party we see her smooching Chris. Just like last year's offering, A Christmas Carol Goes Wrong is a brilliant farce where the jokes come thick and fast thanks to props malfunctioning and actors forced into playing other roles. I personally thought that the show was one of the funniest comedies of the years and I found myself laughing consistently throughout the piece. One element of the show that I didn't feel was needed was laughter from a studio audience as it took away from the authenticity of this being a live performance of A Christmas Carol that had been hijacked. Furthermore, I felt at times that the story was a little rushed and given another ten or so minutes the Mischief Theatre Company could have provided even more laughs. But these are minor quibbles for a show that I believe should have had much more of a prominent position in the festive schedules. After two strong specials I hope that we get to see the Cornley Polytechnic invade our screens every December and I'd like to see these shows become a permanent fixture of the Christmas schedules.

Matt, The Custard TV, 6th January 2018

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