Toast Of London. Steven Toast (Matt Berry). Copyright: Objective Productions
Toast Of London

Toast Of London

  • TV sitcom
  • Channel 4
  • 2012 - 2015
  • 19 episodes (3 series)

Sitcom starring Matt Berry as Steven Toast, an occasionally successful actor who finds himself in a series of tricky situations. Also features Robert Bathurst, Doon Mackichan, Harry Peacock, Shazad Latif, Tim Downie and Tracy-Ann Oberman

Press clippings Page 12

Meet Steven Toast

Steven Toast (star of C4 sitcom Toast of London) treats us to a few hazy anecdotes from his days as a novice on the razzle.

Matt Berry, Time Out, 24th October 2013

Toast of London - TV review

An alcoholic, stalking beak-keeper? Even the puns are funny in Toast of London.

Sam Wollaston, The Guardian, 21st October 2013

Toast Of London review

As I'm sure you've already gathered, I really enjoyed Toast Of London, and can't wait to see how the rest of the series progresses.

Elliot Gonzalez, I Talk Telly, 21st October 2013

Matt Berry: I'm typecast as lady-obsessed and sleazy

The IT Crowd actor tells RadioTimes.com about his partnership with Arthur Matthews, his "f**king awful" moustache and why he's finally got closure on Reynholm Industries.

Susanna Lazarus, Radio Times, 20th October 2013

Occasionally you see a sitcom you love so much you want to hug it, slap it on the back and buy it a round of drinks. For people who warmed to last year's pilot for Toast of London, it's that kind of comedy. Now Matt Berry's brilliant creation, a conceited old-school actor called Steven Toast, has been given a series where Berry and co-writer Arthur Mathews can let their disturbing mix of theatreland spoof and surreal bedroom farce run rampant.

From the very first exchange ("I thought you said you were a bee-keeper?" Toast asks a conquest: "No," she replies sweetly, "A beak-keeper - I keep beaks"), the inventive oddities tumble out, notably in the form of Kikini Bamalaam, daughter of the Nigerian ambassador and latest partner of Toast's friend Ed. A botched cosmetic procedure has left her looking (very disturbingly) like a Generation Game Bruce Forsyth.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 20th October 2013

Toast of London, episode one, Channel 4, review

Not funny, even in the hands of Berry, who can get a laugh just by the way he pronounces "F'syth". Very disappointing.

Chris Harvey, The Telegraph, 20th October 2013

There is a contingent of comedy fans - the really knowledgable ones with the excellent taste - for whom a little-seen BBC3 show from 2006 called Snuff Box represents the peak of British television. Matt Berry, who co-starred in and co-wrote that absurdist dark comedy, set in a gentlemen's club for hangmen, also stars in and co-wrote Toast of London. So is it the second coming we've been waiting for?

Slightly less knowledgable comedy fans, with slightly less excellent taste, may remember Berry as Douglas Reynholm in The IT Crowd or Dixon Bainbridge in The Mighty Boosh, but in this he finally takes the lead, playing portly middle-aged actor Stephen Toast, a role that allows full use of his booming voice. In the opening episode it was all going well for Toast: his agent, Janet Plough (Doon Mackichan), told him he'd won an acting award from a gossip magazine after 28 years in the biz, and women seemed to find him irresistible. So what if one was on bail for attempted murder and the other throws shopping trollies in canals for fun?

Where Snuff Box blended sketch, songs and character into something brand new, this felt more familiar sitcom territory - Toast even shares a bachelor pad, Men Behaving Badly-style, with Ed (Robert Bathurst). Yet while the "sit" was traditional, the "com" definitely wasn't. When Toast's flatmate brings home a conquest, it's not Leslie Ash from next door, but the Nigerian Ambassador's daughter, who has been transformed into a Generation Game-era Bruce Forsyth by a vengeful plastic surgeon.

The Berry sensibility was also retained with melodramatic camera zooms, a musical finale and a 1970s feel (albeit now located mainly in Toast's hairdo). This doesn't entirely get the BBC off the hook - they still need to commission more Snuff Box - but with the help of co-writer, Father Ted's Arthur Mathews, Berry hasn't had to restrain his imagination. Squeezing the larger-than-life luvvie Toast into a Sunday night sitcom set-up has just become part of the joke instead.

Ellen E Jones, The Independent, 20th October 2013

TV Preview: Toast of London

Too odd to be conventional, too conventional to be out and out odd. Definitely worth sticking with just to see which direction it heads in from here.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 19th October 2013

Toast of London was picked up from Channel 4's comedy pilot season last year. It's a mildly surreal sitcom about a pretentious actor played by Matt Berry (doing that same "cinema advert voiceover" voice he did in The IT Crowd and the much-missed Garth Marenghi's Dark Place - can it be his actual voice?) Berry also co-wrote it with Arthur Mathews, who co-wrote Father Ted and the late 1990s sketch show, Big Train, which launched half of Britain's current comedy actors.

Toast shares that off-kilter sensibility within a more conventional format: its hero goes through the usual sitcom set-ups, but with a disturbed edge.

For instance, when he meets a potential love interest, she's played by Emma Fryer with a manic laugh and demented body language, as if miming a crane. And she's called Susan Random, one of many deliberately odd character names (Clem Fandango, Jemima Gina, Kikini Bamalam). There's also a sudden, brief musical number which flares up intriguingly and a really unsettling Bruce Forsyth lookalike.

But there are two big flaws: Toast himself isn't that interesting a character and there aren't enough actual laughs. This could develop into something weird and wonderful but for now it's just the former.

Andrea Mullaney, The Scotsman, 19th October 2013

Toast Of London: the five rules of thesping

The Shakespearean actor Steven Toast - a close associate of The IT Crowd's Matt Berry - shares the wisdom built up over a lifetime of luvviedom

Matt Berry, The Guardian, 19th October 2013

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