Sheryl Crow

  • Singer

Press clippings

The Caitlin and Caz Moran-written sitcom inspired by their council estate upbringing continues. A girls-only shopping trip to secure new knickers deposits young Wyatt into Grampy's unorthodox daycare regime of dodgy wheeler-dealing and Sheryl Crow singalongs. That allows mum Della (the brilliant Rebekah Staton) to steer her four daffy daughters through the capitalist temptations of the town centre with her customary brusqueness. But is there a reason she's being even more wrathful than usual?

Graeme Virtue, The Guardian, 23rd March 2015

Hollywood comes to Graham Norton's sofa as Matthew McConaughey - Golden Globe-winning star of the Oscar-nominated Dallas Buyers Club - joins Julianne Moore, whose new action thriller, Non-Stop, touches down in Britain at the end of next month. There's also a US vibe to the music with Sheryl Crow, while keeping the Union flag flying is Alan Davies, whose comedy career takes a quite interesting sporty turn this time next week when he hosts a Winter Olympics chatty guest show.

Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 31st January 2014

Radio Times review

It's not long ago that Matthew McConaughey had become a byword for lightweight romantic comedies and going shirtless at every opportunity. But the role that recently won him a Golden Globe was lightweight in the literal sense: McConaughey shed three stone to play a rodeo cowboy dying of AIDS in The Dallas Buyer's Club.

The award put the icing on a remarkable return to the Hollywood A-list and tonight he discusses his comeback with Graham Norton while Alan Davies provides comedy cover and Sheryl Crow provides music.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 31st January 2014

Last in the exquisitely funny series. Helene is confined to the attic until her pelvic explosion cometh, while Doctor Foggarty, wretched with drink, tries to make another go of it with Crippled Hester. Julia Davis and co-writer Barunka O'Shaughnessy must take several bows to deafening applause for this comic masterpiece. The hoot-per-minute rate has remained high throughout and among an exemplary cast, Alex MacQueen (as Edmund) did a full Sheryl Crow, moving from comedy backing singer to lead vocals with aplomb.

Julia Raeside, The Guardian, 8th October 2012

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