Simon Bird (II)

  • Producer

Press clippings Page 5

What The Inbetweeners did next...

Simon Bird, Joe Thomas, James Buckley and Blake Harrison have come a long way since they left Rudge Park Comprehensive behind.

Ellie Walker-Arnott, Radio Times, 17th January 2013

Simon Bird interview

Simon Bird, who plays nerdy victim Will McKenzie, says Inbetweeners fans usually throw back the show's insults and catchphrases at them.

Steve Myall, The Mirror, 26th October 2012

Back for a second series on Channel 4, Friday Night Dinner has retained the comic spark that it had in the first.

As with the previous helping, the series sees the Jewish Goodman family trying to have a dinner on a Friday night, which - as always - ends up with chaos. Brothers Adam and Jonny (Simon Bird and Tom Rosenthal) fight and play pranks, while mother Jackie (Tamsin Greig) tries keep everything in order while cooking the "squirrel" - and father Martin (Paul Ritter) continues with his odd behaviour, refusing to wear a shirt.

In the opening episode, Jackie finds Adam's old diary, which he reveals that he disposed of Jonny's favourite cuddly toy when he was 11. As a result, Jonny tries to capture Adam's beloved "Buggy". In the meantime, Martin is constantly sneezing while trying to fix his lawnmower...

This was a great opening episode, mixing some off-the-wall humour (mainly from Jim, who claims playing the bassoon gave him "reverse hiccups") with some good old fashioned slapstick, which helps to bring around a great ending to the episode itself.

Part of the reason why Friday Night Dinner seems to work is the fact that it's based on something real, namely the actual experiences of such 'Friday night dinners' of the writer Robert Popper. It gives the show an extra footing from which you can get more laughs from, and it does seems to work.

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 15th October 2012

Dotty grandma arrives for dinner with her terrible new boyfriend, or "male companion" as she prefers. He's a mean-spirited old man who arrives by crashing his car into the Goodmans' front door before berating the household. Again, it's an episode that relies heavily on farce and eye-popping outrage, so it wears thin quite quickly. But Harry Landis, as the boyfriend, is gloriously awful, whether he's engaging in excruciating displays of affection with grandma ("I'm all randy") to claiming he's been abused by the entirely innocent Adam (Simon Bird). And there's a welcome, though all too brief, visit from febrile neighbour Jim (Mark Heap).

Alison Graham, Radio Times, 14th October 2012

We sit down at the dinner table with the chaotic Goodman family as Robert Popper's genial autobiographical comedy returns for a second series. Dad, the fantastically lugubrious Paul Ritter, is once again embarrassingly shirtless ("I'm bloody boiling" is his constant lament) as warring siblings Adam and Jonny (Simon Bird and Tom Rosenthal) start brawling like toddlers the minute they set foot in their childhood home. Mum Jackie (Tamsin Greig) can do little except look pained while shouting for order above the mayhem.

Mark Heap as weirdly obtuse neighbour Jim lifts us out of broad farce when he becomes obsessed by Adam's childhood fluffy bunny.

Alison Graham, Radio Times, 7th October 2012

Simon Bird on Friday Night Dinner

Simon Bird doesn't particularly like being interviewed. If he hadn't already told me this, I'd know by his body language.

Alice Wyllie, The Scotsman, 7th October 2012

Video: Simon Bird says sequel 'depends on script'

Simon Bird says that the quality of the script will decide whether an Inbetweeners sequel gets made.

BBC News, 5th October 2012

Robert Popper's comedy hit some terrific comic highs on its debut last year, and it returns in even finer fettle for a second series. This is sitcom pared to the bare bones - two grown-up brothers return to the parental home every Friday for dinner, and promptly revert to bickering, antagonistic children. A simple formula that, with crackling scripts and perfect casting - Simon Bird and Tom Rosenthal as siblings; Tamsin Greig and Paul Ritter as Mum and Dad - works like a dream.

The Telegraph, 5th October 2012

Simon Bird interview

Actor tells Gerard Gilbert about his new sitcoms and reveals his mother's real ambition for him.

Gerard Gilbert, The Independent, 4th October 2012

Simon Bird vs. Tom Rosenthal

Some rare insight into Friday Night Dinner's sitcom siblings...

Simon Bird and Tom Rosenthal, Esquire, 4th October 2012

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