Love Soup. Alice Chenery (Tamsin Greig). Copyright: BBC
Love Soup

Love Soup

  • TV comedy drama
  • BBC One
  • 2005 - 2008
  • 18 episodes (2 series)

Romantic comedy drama starring Tamsin Greig as Alice Chenery, a woman trying to find her true love. Also features Sheridan Smith, Montserrat Lombard, Michael Landes, Trudie Styler, Brian Protheroe and more.

Press clippings

Love Soup box set review

Moments of comic brilliance wash away the taste of heartbreak: Alice and Gil's will-they-won't-they romance makes perfect viewing for Valentine's Day.

George Bass, The Guardian, 12th February 2015

David Renwick came close to perfection in his bittersweet bouillabaisse, by turns hilarious, poignant and bleak. This first and more satisfying series from 2005 introduced lovable anxious Alice (Tamsin Greig) and the man she is surely destined to meet... A true original, in the best possible way.

Mark Braxton, Radio Times, 13th October 2008

The Times Review

Love Soup is an odder love story than it looks.

Andrew Billen, The Times, 19th May 2008

The Independent Review

David Renwick has been attempting to farm the thin soil of romantic disillusionment in Love Soup, a series that admirably denies itself a lot of facile satisfactions but that still, nine episodes in, seems not to have found a confident rhythm.

Thomas Sutcliffe, The Independent, 28th April 2008

The first series of David Renwick's Love Soup spent six hour-long episodes following two people who were clearly perfect for each other - but who, teasingly enough, never met. Three years later, series two has now turned up with some bad news for romantics. Far from getting together with Alice (Tamsin Greig), Gil (Michael Landers) has disappeared from the scene completely.

So it is that the show has become largely a one-hander - and, with 30-minute episodes this time, more of a conventional sitcom. Renwick does his usual professional job with the script, and Greig is as good as ever at registering various shades of disappointment. Yet, Saturday's programme, while charming, never really took off.

For one thing, when the chips were down, the professionalism frequently turned into straight sitcom contrivance. For another, some of Renwick's targets felt rather old-hat - such as his satirical observation that the portions of food in nouvelle cuisine are very small.

Most importantly, though, he seems far too much in love with Alice himself. In the first series Gil's job as a TV scriptwriter meant that Renwick could always add a bit of edge by attacking modern television. Without that, and with Alice remaining so utterly lovely, the tone is often surprisingly soppy.

James Walton, The Telegraph, 3rd March 2008

I didn't like this show last time round. I still don't like anything about it. Specifics? OK. Alice, the main character, for one. She's dreary, whiney, negative, she sucks the energy out of every episode like a leech. How's that a protagonist? She's even sucked the energy out of Tamsin Greig, who plays her and who was so wonderful in Green Wing. No wonder she can't find love - Alice that is, not Tamsin (who I don't know about, but imagine has love queuing up).

I don't like the fact that so little happens. Or how implausible the few things that do happen are. I know it's meant to be comedy, not a reflection of real life; but it helps if comedy can keep a toe in plausibility (unless it's so crazy, like Green Wing, that it's funny for that very reason). But Milly falling in love with a shadow - actually more like a projection of a man on to the side of a van that miraculously happens outside her flat every night - well, that's just stupid. And I don't like its irritating jazzy soundtrack, or how small and British it all feels (and I mean both in the worst possible way). Love Soup is insipid broth and I've had enough already.

Sam Wollaston, The Guardian, 3rd March 2008

Blog Review

So how would Love Soup continue now that Michael Landes (Gil) has left? The idea that Alice had another soul-mate out there whose life mirrored hers was too ridiculous to contemplate, and so the writer has put his faith in Tamsin Grieg and essentially made this her own show. So without 'the gimmick', is Love Soup still worth watching? Actually, yes.

annawaits, TV Scoop, 3rd March 2008

Observer Review

David Renwick gets the tricky balance of light and shade, comedy and drama, potential romance and its itchy underbelly absolutely right.

Kathryn Flett, The Observer, 2nd October 2005

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