
Matt LeBlanc
- Actor
Press clippings Page 16
Matt LeBlanc curbs his enthusiasm, playing himself alongside Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig in this comedy about two British TV writers whose award-winning show about a charming, erudite English headmaster is picked up for a US remake by a boorish US producer who immediately inserts LeBlanc into the lead role. It lacks big laughs, but has a similar charm to another Mangan vehicle, Free Agents.
Will Dean, The Guardian, 10th January 2011LeBlanc's 'brave' move on to British TV
Friends' star Matt LeBlanc's TV comeback is a "brave choice" according to his Episodes co-star Stephen Mangan.
BBC News, 10th January 2011An Anglo-American coproduction between stalwart British comedy outlet Hat Trick and acclaimed US writers David Crane (co-creator of Friends) and Jeffrey Klarik (Mad About You), Episodes is something of a curate's egg.
The inherent problems of transposing British comedy to an American setting are directly confronted within the premise of the series itself: terribly postmodern.
Former Green Wing co-stars Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig play successful married screenwriters whose award-winning sitcom is picked up by a powerful American network.
Whisked over to LA, they're shocked to discover that their quintessentially British series starring Richard Griffiths (who cameos as a version of himself) as an "erudite, verbally dextrous headmaster of an elite boy's academy" has been recast as a vehicle for wholly unsuitable Friends/Joey star Matt LeBlanc (also playing himself, inevitably as an egotistical buffoon).
Evidently aware of the ignoble tradition of point-missing American adaptations of great British comedies (Fawlty Towers without Basil? Why not!), Crane and Klarik have devised a sporadically amusing if rather obvious satire encompassing all the usual targets and stereotypes.
The Brits-out-of-water are cute and witty, the Americans shallow and crass. TV executives are liars.
Actors are self-absorbed. And despite protestations to the contrary, Hollywood just doesn't "get" British humour: the clever irony being that Episodes is written by a pair of witty American Anglophiles cocking a snook at the culture that made them millionaires.
The hollowness of the entertainment industry has been satirised so often, the curiously muted Episodes doesn't offer anything new. It feels like a missed opportunity, despite the odd bright spot and the natural chemistry between Mangan and the underrated Greig.
Paul Whitelaw, The Scotsman, 10th January 2011Episodes Review: Brits Getting L.A.'d
Tipped as 'the most anticipated comedy of the year' (by the BBC and me personally), this new series has all the ingredients of a success - in the post-modern vein of Extras. Devised by Friends creator David Crane, along with Jeffrey Klarik, there are many wonderfully familiar faces from both sides of the pond. This pilot only offers about two minutes of Matt LeBlanc time, and the flow is a little uneven; but there are plenty of good gags to keep us watching.
Zak Kelin, On The Box, 10th January 2011If a British sitcom gets better-than-average ratings, wins a couple of awards and isn't too downright weird to get lost in translation, it's not unusual for an American TV network to approach its creators with a mind to a Stateside remake. Probably the best known example of this is the American version of The Office, now in its seventh season, but the practice has been going on since at least the 1970s, when Steptoe and Son, rather surreally, was remade in Los Angeles as Sanford and Son.
What's little discussed, though, is how a behind-the-scenes collaboration between cynical British writers and hard-nosed US executives plays out - which is where this new sitcom, written by David Crane (Friends) and Jeffrey Klarik (Mad About You), comes in.
It stars Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig as a British husband-and-wife team who produce a successful show called Lyman's Boys, which is duly scooped up by a US network. They jet out to California and start working with their new colleagues, all of whom seem intent on stamping out any hint of fusty Britishness, starting with the show's corpulent lead, Julian (Richard Griffiths), whom they decide to replace with the wonderfully unsuitable Matt LeBlanc (Joey from Friends). The first episode is high on plot development and low on gags, but the series does improve and is worth sticking with.
Pete Naughton, The Telegraph, 8th January 2011'Episodes' with Matt LeBlanc takes a slap shot at TV
Matt LeBlanc, the lovable doofus Joey of NBC's smash Friends, is playing himself - sort of - in Episodes, Showtime's send-up of the TV business, which premieres Sunday (9:30 ET/PT).
Gary Levin, USA Today, 6th January 2011Episodes: The one where Matt LeBlanc plays himself...
Matt LeBlanc became a hermit after Friends and Joey - but the chance to send himself up in a new sitcom was irresistible, he tells James Rampton.
James Rampton, The Independent, 6th January 2011Friends' Matt LeBlanc on telly comeback
Friends star Matt LeBlanc has admitted he is just as lazy as Joey - the character he played in the hit comedy.
Kate Jackson, The Sun, 5th January 2011Episodes: BBC Explores Differences between UK & USA TV
Matt LeBlanc plays himself in Episodes, a new BBC Two comedy drama due to start on Monday 10 January 2011 and also starring Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig.
Steve Rogerson, Suite 101, 4th January 2011Episodes cast interview
An interview with Matt LeBlanc, Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig.
David Collins, TV Choice, 4th January 2011