
Me And Mrs Jones
- TV sitcom
- BBC One
- 2012
- 6 episodes (1 series)
Sitcom about a modern woman balancing boyfriends, admirers, parenthood and an ex-husband. Stars Sarah Alexander, Neil Morrissey, Nathaniel Parker, Robert Sheehan, Jonathan Bailey and more.
Episode menu
Series 1, Episode 1

Broadcast details
- Date
- Friday 12th October 2012
- Time
- 9:30pm
- Channel
- BBC One
- Length
- 30 minutes
Cast & crew
Sarah Alexander | Gemma Jones |
Neil Morrissey | Jason Jones |
Nathaniel Parker | Tom Marshall |
Robert Sheehan | Billy |
Jonathan Bailey | Alfie |
Vera Filatova | Inca |
Kelle Bryan | Fran |
Danni Bennatar (as Danni Benattar) | Charlotte |
Sophie Alibert | Jess |
Madeleine Harris | Poppy |
Katherine Jakeways | Caroline |
Camilla Beeput (as Camilla Marie Beeput) | Rachel |
Emily Atack | Frosty Girl |
Racheal Joseph | Post Woman |
Oriane Messina | Writer |
Fay Rusling | Writer |
Nick Hurran | Director |
Serena Cullen | Producer |
Beryl Vertue | Executive Producer |
Gregor Sharp | Executive Producer |
David Barrett | Editor |
Harry Banks | Production Designer |
Mark Russell | Composer |
Videos
Tom Asks Gemma Out
Tom bumps into Gemma at the school gates and asks her out but she reacts nervously.
Featuring: Sarah Alexander (Gemma Jones), Nathaniel Parker (Tom Marshall) & Katherine Jakeways (Caroline).
Inca and Jason at the Football
Inca doesn't quite enjoy being at the girls' football match.
Featuring: Vera Filatova (Inca) & Neil Morrissey (Jason Jones).
Press
Me and Mrs Jones opens with a goldfish in a toilet bowl. I can only guess that the goldfish took one look at the script and attempted to escape before his television career suffered irreparable damage.
Of the many unkind epithets suggested by Roget's Thesaurus, 'excruciating' is the one that best describes this show. Until I watched it, I did not realise it was physically possible to grit one's teeth, curl one's toes and clench one's sphincter all at the same time. And stay that way for half an hour.
Purportedly a romantic comedy, it is about as light and fluffy as a breeze block. Not the most sparkling of analogies, I grant you, but better than anything the lazy and witless script of Me and Mrs Jones had to offer.
"Houdini would have trouble getting out of this dress," grumbles our scatty, sexy heroine Gemma, as she writhes around in a store changing room. Houdini? The escapologist who died 88 years ago? Watch out for further thrillingly contemporary references to the general strike, Irish home rule, speakeasies and the disappearance of Amy Johnson.
Where the show strives to charm, it succeeds in irritating. I am a fan of Sarah Alexander, who plays Gemma, but here I found her wackiness so mannered as to be unbearable.
But the worst thing about Me and Mrs Jones is that no part of it rings true - not the characters, not the relationships and definitely not the dialogue. Romantic comedy needs to appear effortless, but every minute of this contrived, constipated monstrosity screams with the strain of it all.
A solidly dependable cast, including Nathaniel Parker and sitcom stalwart Neil Morrissey, tries so desperately hard to unearth humour from the barren comic landscape that I actually began to pity them. This is particularly true of Jonathan Bailey, lumbered with the Herculean and ultimately futile task of lending sympathy to Alfie, Mrs Jones' unremittingly loathsome eldest son, just back from his gap year abroad. Apart from a big mouth, an overinflated ego and a penchant for harassing women on public transport, Alfie also has a best mate in tow, who just might hit it off with his mum over the next five episodes.
Harry Venning, The Stage, 15th October 2012