The Armstrong & Miller Show

This article is about the BBC One sketch comedy show. For the 1997-2001 Paramount Comedy and Channel 4 show, see Armstrong and Miller (TV series). For other shows, see Armstrong and Miller (disambiguation).
The Armstrong and Miller Show

Series 1-2 title card
Written by Simon Blackwell,
Mark Bussell,
David Cadji-Newby,
Ali Crockatt,
Anil Gupta,
Aidan Hawkes,
Tim Ifield,
George Jeffrie,
Richard Pinto,
Justin Sbresni,
David Scott[1]
Directed by
  • Dominic Brigstocke (series 1 & 2)
  • Ben Kellett (series 3)
Starring Alexander Armstrong,
Ben Miller,
David Armand,
Karen Hayley,
Jim Howick,
Katherine Jakeways,
Lucy Montgomery,
Tyger Drew-Honey,
Dan Skinner,
Martha Howe-Douglas,
Jessica Ransom
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 3
No. of episodes 19
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) Hat Trick Productions
Release
Original network BBC One
Original release 26 October 2007 (2007-10-26) – 11 December 2010 (2010-12-11)
Chronology
Preceded by Armstrong and Miller
External links
Website

The Armstrong and Miller Show is a British sketch comedy television show produced by Hat Trick Productions for BBC One. It features the double act Armstrong and Miller and a number of notable scriptwriters including Andy Hamilton, co-creator of Outnumbered, and Jeremy Dyson, co-creator of The League of Gentlemen. It has run for three series and won two BAFTA nominations, winning one.

The series followed on from Armstrong and Miller. on the Paramount Comedy Channel and Channel 4 between 1997 and 2001.

Production

Three series of The Armstrong & Miller Show (not to be confused with the earlier show Armstrong and Miller) were produced by Hat Trick Productions for BBC One between 2007 and 2010 (no series was produced in 2008). It marked the first return of the comedy duo to TV since their previous sketch show ended in 2001.

A fourth series was hinted at by Ben Miller in 2012, but there has been no mention of it since then.[2]

Some recurring characters and jokes

Chronology

Series Episodes First aired
1 7 26 October – 14 December 2007
2 6 16 October – 27 November 2009
3 6 30 October – 11 December 2010

A special compilation episode was aired on 26 March 2011.

Awards

Visitors to British Comedy Guide voted The Armstrong and Miller Show the "Best Sketch Show of 2007".[5]

It received a nomination in the 2007 BAFTAs for Best Comedy Series before winning the actual award for the year 2009.[6][7]

Reception

The series has received widespread acclaim, with the RAF Pilot characters being the most popular from the show.

"Recommended last week, recommended this week. It's the funniest thing on television at the moment. If you didn't laugh at the experimental doctor or fighting grandads from the first episode, you're even more callous and humourless than we thought." - tvBite[8]

"Not many comedians could get away with spinning a sketch out of the differences between English and French sentence construction, but thankfully Armstrong and Miller aren't afraid to go somewhere a bit wordy and esoteric with their comedy. Awkward collisions between high and low culture, or the old world and the new, are their speciality: this week, their haughty 18th-century Viennese vampires fail to get into a West End club and are forced to go and skulk in Subway, while the slang-spouting Second World War officers attempt to skive off cracking the Enigma code." Sam Richards, The Daily Telegraph.[8]

"The trouble with sketch shows is that, as they average perhaps 30 gags per episode, they need an almost impossibly large supply of comic energy to keep them from slipping into the doldrums. Ben Miller and Alexander Armstrong are talented, and they do just about keep this show afloat" The Daily Telegraph[8]

"Sketch shows are a notoriously tough act to pull off but Saturday night's opener found Armstrong & Miller at the top of their game, with scarcely a dud in sight. Mitchell & Webb will need to pull their finger out to match them." Keith Watson, Metro[8]

"The Armstrong & Miller Show felt more consistently funny than before. Maybe their 300 writers, including Graham Linehan and The League of Gentlemen's Jeremy Dyson, are exerting more quality control this year." Paul Whitelaw, The Scotsman[8]

"This exceptionally witty, sharp and endearing duo do manage to serve up something for everyone, even if the majority of their material is aimed at the comfortably off whose biggest worry in life is whether or not they've correctly separated their waste for recycling." Jamie Steiner. On The Box[8]

"The boys keep up the high quality level that has been typical of this series, with hapless historian Dennis Lincoln-Park becoming a firm favourite. It might be the same gag week in, week out, but that's the absolute beauty of it. Guaranteed to put a smile on your face at the end of the week." [8]

"It's gentle, it's cosy, it's very British, and above all, it's a sketch show that's funny. Hurrah for Armstrong and Miller!"[8]

DVD releases

Book

The Armstrong and Miller book was released in 2010.

References

  1. The Armstrong and Miller Show: British Comedy Guide
  2. "Ben Miller Interview". Femalefirst.co.uk. 13 September 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  3. "Armstrong and Miller YouTube Channel". BBC. 24 May 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  4. "Armstrong and Miller are sorry - Red Nose Day 2011 - BBC Comic Relief Night". BBC. 18 March 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2012.
  5. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2007". British Comedy Guide. 21 January 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  6. BAFTA Television Awards 2009
  7. "2010 BAFTA Awards: round-up". The Spy Report (Media Spy). 7 June 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "The Armstrong & Miller Show - Reviews and Press Articles - British Comedy Guide". Comedy.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-01-30.

External links

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