Press clippings

Jimmy Carr on Stephen Hawking getting drunk at parties

Jimmy Carr has revealed he turned Harry Styles and Professor Stephen Hawking into unlikely drinking buddies at one of his wild showbiz house parties.

Daniel Sperling, The Sun, 13th March 2021

How Stephen Hawking became the Hitchhiker's Guide

One of his final cameos in the world of entertainment was a performance in the newest addition to the comedy sci-fi epic Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which debuted on BBC Radio 4 last week.

Greg Evans, The Independent, 16th March 2018

Stephen Hawking to guest star in new Hitchhiker's Guide

Physicist Stephen Hawking is set to join the cast of Radio 4's new Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy series.

British Comedy Guide, 18th February 2018

Red Nose Day 2017 plans revealed

Comic Relief's plans for Red Nose Day 2017 include a TV show involving stars including French & Saunders and Vic & Bob, plus a series of online comedy sketches, and much more.

British Comedy Guide, 31st January 2017

Eric Idle interview

Monty Python's Eric Idle on travelling with John Cleese, improv with Stephen Hawking - and the best book never written.

Steven MacKenzie, The Big Issue, 10th December 2015

Funnier than Baker, funnier than Henry, have always been Enfield and Whitehouse, who had an hour to look back on themselves with the savage glee of hindsight in An Evening With Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse. They didn't have much to bemoan. The posho stuff (lovely skit about upmarket novelties) balanced all, I think, the prole-scum stuff. They even took the rip, and even a bit nastily at that, out of a couple of our saints, Lenny Henry and Stephen Hawking. Lenny was played as blacked-up, possessed of an impenetrable Dudley accent and stuck in a Travelodge bed. Ouch. Stevey-boy lolled with lipstick on, and swore energetically. Satire, despite the sainted Tom Lehrer's pronouncement, is not dead. It is, as long as Enfield and Whitehouse (and Punt, Dennis, Iannucci, Jupp) survive, not even smelling that bad.

Euan Ferguson, The Observer, 6th September 2015

To celebrate 25 years of Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse as a telly double act, they assemble a mock "audience with" show, featuring the pair impersonating celebrities from Ricky Gervais and a foul-mouthed Stephen Hawking to, for reasons unknown, Bill Gates. Questions from the "celebs" are then used to introduce clips of their work together. They may not want to be remembered by the number of gags that fall painfully flat over what is, at best, a very mixed hour.

Ben Arnold, The Guardian, 31st August 2015

Audio: Lee Ridely (Lost Voice Guy) interview

Lee Ridley is a comedian with a difference. He has cerebral palsy and as a result, isn't able to speak. He has to tell his jokes through a communication aid - rather like the one used by the scientist Professor Stephen Hawking. Speaking to Outlook's Joel Cox from his hometown of Newcastle, England, Lee started by telling a story from a time before his comedy took off. Despite having no singing voice, he auditioned for the popular TV talent show The X Factor.

Joel Cox, BBC, 17th March 2015

The culmination of two weeks' worth of wacky and earnest programming, this charity telethon looks set to be as jape-strewn as ever. Dermot O'Leary's dance marathon concludes, there's a new Mr Bean, and Professor Stephen Hawking performs with David Walliams. All in all, a Friday night in the pub looks more irresistible than ever, but don't forget to put your hand in your pocket first.

Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 13th March 2015

Radio Times review

The last time we saw Mr Bean he was bringing the house down at the 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremony, playing one note of Chariots of Fire. Can he (alongside Ben Miller and Rebecca Front) possibly be as funny for 2015's Comic Relief?

Anyone who's anyone from the world of comedy is on BBC One for this comedy marathon. Dawn French dusts off her dog collar to become the Bishop of Dibley (despite some famous rivals); and David Walliams gets in a right kerfuffle as patronising carer Lou, who appears to have a new charge - Professor Stephen Hawking. Miranda Hart, Stephen Fry, Russell Brand and Cardinal Burns also pop by.

There are stunts, dares and the unmissable sight of Dermot O'Leary dancing his socks off (will he survive this danceathon?).

In between all this hilarity are sobering film clips reminding us what this is really all about: donating money.

Jane Rackham, Radio Times, 13th March 2015

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