Press clippings Page 2

Mandy review: new comedy is fine in small doses

A mordant stare from Morgan can do the work of 20 pages of script, so a show of her own has been long overdue.

Fiona Sturges, The Independent, 13th August 2020

Mandy, BBC2 - 15-minute moreish nuggets of comedy

Diane Morgan's character is cunning, self-centred and as endearing as she is ridiculous.

Suzi Feay, The Financial Times, 7th August 2020

Cast revealed for Diane Morgan's sitcom Mandy

Sean Lock will be amongst the guest stars appearing in Mandy, Diane Morgan's new comedy series.

British Comedy Guide, 22nd July 2020

Inside No. 9, Thinking Out Loud, review

An unusually clumsy effort from TV's most inventive duo.

Michael Hogan, The Telegraph, 2nd March 2020

Inside No. 9 review: Thinking Out Loud

Inside No. 9 gets bolder and more slippery by the week.

Louisa Mellor, Den Of Geek, 2nd March 2020

Review: Inside No. 9, Thinking Out Loud

As we approach the end of Inside No. 9's long-awaited fifth series, Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton have given us another gripping half-hour in Thinking Out Loud.

Sophie Davies, The Custard TV, 2nd March 2020

TV preview: Inside No. 9 - Thinking Out Loud, BBC Two

It's another stylistic curveball for the fifth episode in the fifth series of Inside No. 9. I wondered if creators/stars Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton could sustain their high standard in this run, but if anything they have surpassed it.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 1st March 2020

Inside No. 9 Series 5 guest stars revealed

Maxine Peake, Ralf Little, Steve Speirs, Jenna Coleman and Kadiff Kirwan are amongst the guest stars announced for the fifth series of Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith's Inside No. 9.

British Comedy Guide, 18th February 2019

Diane Morgan and Maxine Peake interview

Since meeting at a Manchester drama school, the two Boltonians have been desperate to work with each.

The Independent, 26th January 2019

The strongest instalment of Desiree Akhavan's on-point comedy flashed back to 2005, tracing the beginnings of Leila (Akhavan) and Sadie's (Maxine Peake) relationship, while offering a note-perfect representation of mid-noughties student life, a wistful world of snakebite, black-coated floors and landfill indie. Lovely.

Gwilym Mumford, The Guardian, 19th December 2018

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