Jennifer Saunders. Copyright: Comic Relief
Jennifer Saunders

Jennifer Saunders

  • 65 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer and comedian

Press clippings Page 12

Talking of permanent fixtures of the festive schedules, New Year's Day saw the fifth BBC adaptation of a David Walliams children book in the form of Grandpa's Great Escape. Set in the 1980's, the hour-long film was told from the perspective of Jack (Kit Connor) who had a strong bond with his grandfather (Tom Courtenay); a former spitfire pilot in World War II. The rather episodic tale saw Grandpa's battles with Alzheimer's Disease as he was eventually forced to move in with Jack much to the chagrin of his parents (Walliams and Samantha Spiro). After an incident at the British War Museum, Jack's parents decide to put Grandpa in the ominous Twilight Towers Retirement Home run by the totally corrupt Miss Dandy (Jennifer Saunders). As the title of the piece suggests, soon we see Grandpa leading an escape mission from the home, which Dandy runs as essentially a prison camp, before Jack realises that his hero may actually be in a worse condition than he actually thought. The final few minutes of Grandpa's Great Escape stretched credibility somewhat, but the final takedown of Miss Dandy and her cronies was well-executed. I've been a fan of these Walliams adaptations in the part, particularly Mr Stink and The Boy in the Dress, so I was disappointed to find Grandpa's Great Escape quite underwhelming. Whilst I appreciate I'm not the key audience for this type of programme, I still usually find myself getting caught up in the story but unfortunately this didn't happen here. I feel part of the reason for this is that the story took too long to get the Twilight Towers home and some of the earlier scenes felt a little stretched. There was also a repetitive nature to the plot, possibly that will appeal to younger viewers, that made Grandpa's Great Escape a frustrating watch. Furthermore, I expected more from Tom Courtenay whose performance here wasn't as great as it could have been apart from in the scenes where he portrayed Grandpa's battles with dementia. In fairness, he did have believable chemistry with Kit Connor; a young actor who did his best to anchor the entire film. Meanwhile, Jennifer Saunders put in a scenery-chewing turn as the antagonistic Miss Dandy and Walliams himself was unimpressive as Jack's father. In my opinion, it was Samantha Spiro as Jack's Avon lady mother who had the most fun with her role and I personally would've liked to have seen her on screen more often. Whilst younger viewers may have enjoyed Grandpa's Great Escape, I can't say the same which was disappointing as it was one part of the festive schedules that I was rather looking forward to.

Matt, The Custard TV, 6th January 2018

Grandpa's Great Escape review

Jennifer Saunders didn't so much steal her scenes in Grandpa's Great Escape (BBC1) as thwack them over the head with a cosh and stuff them in a bag marked 'Swag'.

Christopher Stevens, Daily Mail, 2nd January 2018

300 Years of French and Saunders, BBC1 review

What joy that Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders were persuaded by the BBC to celebrate their 30 (ish) years as a comedy duo with this programme - and that this sweet confection was shown on Christmas Day. It was a pleasing mix of old clips and new material, and a reminder that when F&S are good, they are very, very good.

Veronica Lee, The Arts Desk, 26th December 2017

French and Saunders signed off their semi-comeback with a joyous compilation of dance moves and pratfalls. It's been more than a decade since they last had a festive special, and the celebratory 300 Years of French and Saunders (BBC One[) opted to take a "ghost of Christmas past" approach, packing in plenty of archive clips while weaving in a handful of new skits with care. The fresh sketches were sharp and silly: their natural burial service was fantastically daft, the Poldark extras were deliciously awful and it was a thrill to see the white room back in use for their Handmaid's Tale send-up. It was, in short, a welcome return.

Rebecca Nicholson, The Guardian, 25th December 2017

300 Years of French and Saunders review

It wouldn't be too much to ask for a full French and Saunders Christmas special for 2018, rather than raking over old ground.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 25th December 2017

French and Saunders, review

Very silly and extremely smart.

Sarah Hughes, i Newspaper, 25th December 2017

300 Years of French and Saunders review

300 Years of French and Saunders was sophisticated comedy from a vital comic source.

Chris Harvey, The Telegraph, 25th December 2017

Can French & Saunders cut it in the social media age?

On Christmas Day, Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders will appear in their first new TV show for a decade; a reunion almost guaranteed to cause a mixture of delight and apprehension among their fans.

Ben Lawrence, The Telegraph, 24th December 2017

'Being silly is what they do best': French and Saunders

Thirty years after their first sketch series and 10 since their last TV show, the double act are back for a Christmas special.

Emine Saner, The Guardian, 23rd December 2017

Little has changed for female duos in comedy

They are undoubtedly a tough act to follow, but in the 10 years since French and Saunders were last on TV their successors have not emerged.

i Newspaper, 22nd December 2017

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