Grandma's House. Simon (Simon Amstell). Copyright: Tiger Aspect Productions
Grandma's House

Grandma's House

  • TV sitcom
  • BBC Two
  • 2010 - 2012
  • 12 episodes (2 series)

Sitcom written by, starring, and based on the life of Essex-raised Jewish comic Simon Amstell. Also features Linda Bassett, Rebecca Front, James Smith, Samantha Spiro, Jamal Hadjkura and Geoffrey Hutchings

  • JustWatch Streaming rank this week: 6,794

Press clippings Page 4

Rebecca Front: My family values

The comedy actor talks about her family.

Hannah Booth, The Guardian, 28th April 2012

Grandma's House is a prim and prickly triumph

Grandma's House offered one of its finest episodes yet, as Simon's gran tried once more to cure his crippling ennui with tea and snacks.

Christopher Hooton, Metro, 27th April 2012

Simon Amstell has cunningly managed to deflect potential criticism of his acting skills in this sitcom in which he plays a version of himself.

"I'm doing vulnerability," he explained in last week's opener to season two. "I'm stiff in real life."

In which case, his performance here is absolutely bang on the money as he surfs the lumpy seas of his family's bitter squabbles with a rictus grin that is pitched midway between polite boredom and panic.

What this sitcom does so well is capture the ­claustrophobia of ­families who are close almost to the point of throttling one another.

"Isn't it nice we can all sit in a room together without any tension," his mother Tanya (Rebecca Front) lies tonight as her sister, Liz, arrives for another visit.

And Liz's husband Barry (Vincent Franklin) joins the cast this week.

He's a tedious, self-important git with post-nasal drip who is annoyingly reluctant to help Simon escape from his grandma's house by agreeing to rent him his flat in Soho.

The humour and the language in Grandma's House isn't ­nana-friendly.

But, as Simon and his cousin Adam discover grandpa's little secret up in the loft, there's a gag tonight about Jurassic Park that is a clear contender for one-liner of the year.

Jane Simon, The Mirror, 26th April 2012

Series two goes up a gear when the superb Vincent Franklin arrives as Barry, husband of ratty aunt Liz (Samantha Spiro). Barry has mucus and a morbid obsession with rolling news, but he also has a flat in London that Simon Amstell (Simon Amstell) wants to borrow.

Barry fits right in as another source of tension that can't quite be smothered by domestic ritual. His pomposity is a good counterpoint to Clive (James Smith), who's getting more vulnerable, stuck in the loft fixing a leak. Clive emerges at the end for a tremendous comic pay-off.

Jack Seale, Radio Times, 26th April 2012

The acting in this suburban hell sitcom keeps getting better. Watch as Sam Spiro vies for the attentions of Simon Amstell (who is celebrating some good career news) by showing off a fancy-dress costume. Meanwhile, her husband, Barry, is even more uptight than she is as he comes up with excuses to get out of lending Amstell his flat - which could be good news for love-struck alpha male Clive, who looks almost like a saint next to him as he toils away in the loft.

Metro, 26th April 2012

Following on from last week's droll, awkward tension, the second episode of Simon Amstell's gentle meta-sitcom continues in the same vein. This week, the 'Simon Amstell' character begins to seek (and beg) for alternative living arrangements and is desperate for the part of Ariel in a producer friend's new production of The Tempest ("Who's playing Prospero, June Sarpong?" snaps Auntie Liz). Once again, Rebecca Front steals the show as Simon's mum, Tanya, with a horde of smutty outbursts - "Clive is a generous, kind man. Let him have a wank in the loft" - and an outburst at Liz's husband Barry in the episode's finale. So far, the second series feels like more of the same. But the witty, understated dialogue make half an hour in Grandma's House strangely entertaining.

Ben Williams, Time Out, 26th April 2012

Grandma's House review

So what of this second series? Well, it's started in good form, with some of the best handled sexual-comedy I've seen in a while.

Tom Chant, The Comedy Journal, 26th April 2012

In the second episode in this new series of Simon Amstell's queasy postmodern sitcom, Simon Amstell, played by Simon Amstell, decides that it might be time for him to move out of his titular accommodation and into something a little more detached from his bickering relatives. Fortunately he may have found a saviour in the form of his Uncle Barry. As ever, Amstell's heavily self-referential script and performance make for a uniquely awkward viewing experience.

Ben Arnold, The Guardian, 25th April 2012

Rebecca Front has fun tonight as Simon Amstell's potty-mouthed mother Tanya in this sharply observed sitcom. A reconciliation with her sister Liz (Samantha Spiro) turns sour when Liz's mucus-ridden husband wavers on whether to let Simon borrow his flat in Soho. Much of the comedy revolves around a stash of pornography uncovered in the attic but it is the brilliant characterisation of toxic family relationships that brings in most of the laughs.

Gerard O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 25th April 2012

Heads up: Simon Amstell

The tortured mophead seeks a comic cure.

Holly Williams, The Independent, 22nd April 2012

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