Marc Wootton
Marc Wootton

Marc Wootton

  • 49 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer and producer

Press clippings Page 7

Owen Molloy (Marc Wootton) is a mild-mannered, slightly porky school janitor who spends his days painting radiators, picking up litter and gently lusting after mousy teacher Miss Violet. So he's surprised when he's approached by a shadowy figure (a local tramp, as it turns out) who anoints him 'Caretaker Of The World: Brighton Division'.

This sitcom pilot from Steve Coogan's Baby Cow productions is essentially a provincial British take on Quantum Leap, with the earnest moral sermonising replaced by absurdity and mild bathos.

It's painfully slight, but rescued from complete inconsequentiality by the quirky premise - a lab assistant attempts to vanquish rivals at a local beer festival with his homebrew - and a decent cast including Tom Basden, who recently distinguished himself in BBC4 sketch show Cowards. At the very least, it's streets ahead of most recent BBC3 comedy commissions, which may be damning it with faint praise, but should make a series a formality.

Time Out, 22nd March 2009

Marc Wootton and Tom Basden star as a pair of naive nobodies who are charged with saving the planet from mpending disasters by a tramp from the future in this sweetly humorous pilot. Their mission involves some homebrew beer and a good deal of silliness.

Mail on Sunday, 22nd March 2009

Typically idiosyncratic scheduling from Auntie. They get a more than promising pilot featuring and co-written by Cowards' Tom Basden and show it late on a Sunday night. BYM stars Basden and Marc Wootton as two dweebs entrusted with looking after the future of the planet by a ime-travelling civil servant (who might be a nutty tramp). In this first episode, saving the world involves sabotaging a real ale competition. Oh and BBC3? Give this a series, it's what you're there for.

The Guardian, 21st March 2009

TV REVIEW Marc Wootton Exposed

"...Wootton's versatility is well showcased and the quality of the material is consistently funny."

Harry Venning, The Stage, 4th February 2008

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