Jo Brand
Jo Brand

Jo Brand

  • 66 years old
  • English
  • Writer, stand-up comedian and actor

Press clippings Page 14

Ten big names who began at Shoreditch Comedy Café

The venue is closing because of skyrocketing rents - meaning the comedy stars of tomorrow have one less place to cut their teeth.

Jessie Thompson, Evening Standard, 8th December 2016

Sheridan Smith stars in Jo Brand film The More You Ignore Me

Sheridan Smith is to take the lead role in The More You Ignore Me, the new comedy drama film written by Jo Brand.

British Comedy Guide, 7th November 2016

Jo Brand and Morwenna Banks's beautifully bittersweet comedy of life at Elm Heath children's services department concludes with Denise intent on laying down the law. Cases must be closed and "there will be a head count" to make sure nobody skives off; bad news for Al, who needs to leave early for a mini-break in Paris. Meantime, Rose and Nitin investigate a report that a baby has been abandoned in Superbrands; bound to be a "prank baby" ... right?

Jonathan Wright, The Guardian, 1st November 2016

As if the welfare of children wasn't already demanding enough for Rose, caring for her elderly mother at home piles on further pressure as this downbeat but likable Jo Brand sitcom continues. Meanwhile, at the office, a pair of Muslim teens go missing from their foster home. The police officer tasked with tracing the pair seems determined to channel Jack Bauer, while Al remains convinced that more traditional teen behaviour is to blame.

Mark Gibbings-Jones, The Guardian, 25th October 2016

Jo Brand interview

Jo Brand on being a nihilistic teenager, her 'humiliating' stage debut - and the most important thing in life.

Adrian Lobb, The Big Issue, 17th October 2016

Jo Brand co-writes and stars in this downbeat but lovely social workers comedy. The third episode sees Al (Alan Davies) being sent to help a gay couple who are being hassled by locals, and Nitin (Himesh Patel) managing to get stuck in an air vent while trying to handle a hostage situation. The subject matter allows the scattering of some very real-world grit in among the frequent laughs, with Isy Suttie's jarring temp a particular highlight.

Grace Rahman, The Guardian, 11th October 2016

Jo Brand and Morwenna Banks's public-sector sitcom continues, with the social workers' patience evaporating as inexorably as their department's budget. Rose's former husband continues to revolt, as do the staff kitchen in an altogether different way. Al visits some new parents and finds something worth fighting for, while Nat has some bad news that even her meticulously colour-coded Post-It arrangement can't quite quell.

Mark Gibbings-Jones, The Guardian, 4th October 2016

Damned, damn it, didn't quite get going. It features Jo Brand, Alan Davies, Kevin Eldon, which should be enough for most, and is a kind of amalgam of Brand's Getting On and The Office. Set in a social work centre.

Much of the first episode had, perforce, to establish scene and characters: the arsewit idiots, the kind idiots and the thudbucket incompetents. Wincingly funny in parts, but the whole has yet to surpass the sum of its parts. Social workers don't exactly need a bad press these days, but Brand might just have pulled off a neat little trick, a la W1A, by getting us through laughter to acknowledge the flawed humanity that inhabits any specific world. There is much hope, though I fear for the moment when it gets labelled in TV Quick or somesuch as a "documentary series".

Euan Ferguson, The Observer, 2nd October 2016

Damned review - social worker comedy missed the mark

I was looking forward to Brand's take on our profession and the gallows humour that comes with it but the opening episode left me underwhelmed.

Community Care, 28th September 2016

Jo Brand pens a feature film

Jo Brand has written her first film - about a Morrissey-loving schizophrenic.

Jay Richardson, Chortle, 28th September 2016

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