The Catherine Tate Show
The Catherine Tate Show | |
---|---|
Genre | Sketch comedy |
Created by | Catherine Tate |
Written by | Catherine Tate Derren Litten Aschlin Ditta |
Directed by | Gordon Anderson |
Starring | Catherine Tate Mathew Horne Niky Wardley |
Theme music composer | Howard Goodall |
Opening theme | "In These Shoes?" by Kirsty MacColl (Series 1) "The Catherine Tate Show Theme" by Howard Goodall |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 3 |
No. of episodes | 20 (+ 4 spin-off specials) (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producers | Geoffrey Perkins (2004–2006) Sophie Clarke–Jervoise (2007–2009) |
Cinematography | John Sorapure Jeremy Hewson Rob Kitzmann |
Editors | Chris Wadsworth Mykola Pawluk Mark Lawrence Billy Sneddon Richard Halladey |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 30–50 minutes |
Production company | Tiger Aspect Productions |
Original release | |
Network | BBC Two (2004–2006, 2009) BBC One (2007, 2014–2015) |
Release | 16 February 2004 25 December 2007 | –
Release | 25 December 2009 30 December 2015 | –
Related | |
Catherine Tate's Nan |
The Catherine Tate Show is a British television comedy sketch programme written by Catherine Tate and Derren Litten featuring a wide range of characters. The Catherine Tate Show aired on BBC Two and was shown worldwide through the BBC. Collectively, the show has been nominated for six BAFTA Awards, two British Comedy Awards and an Emmy Award, and it has won two Royal Television Society Awards, two British Comedy Awards and a National Television Award since its debut in 2004.
Broadcast
The first series of the show, which consisted of six episodes, aired from 16 February to 22 March 2004. A DVD of this series was released in August 2005.
A second series aired from 21 July to 25 August 2005, and a 40-minute Christmas special aired on 20 December 2005. For this series a new theme tune was introduced. A DVD of series two was released in October 2006.
The third series aired from 14 October to 25 November 2006. There had been speculation that this would be the final series; however, Tate explained in an interview on This Morning that she had never said this and would like to at least make specials in the future.
Tate filmed a Christmas special which aired on 25 December 2007. Tate had announced that there would be no further series after the special;[1] however, a Christmas special was shown on 25 December 2009. Another 30-minute episode involving the Nan character was shown in January 2014. Two new Christmas specials aired on 27 and 30 December 2015, again involving Nan. On 4 January 2016, Tate announced that she did not plan to make anymore ‘specials’ as she was busy with other projects.[2]
On 24 November 2018, during the Sydney show of her Australian tour at the State Theatre, Tate revealed that there would be another series of the show, though this has not yet materialised.
Series | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | |||
1 | 6 | 16 February 2004 | 22 March 2004 | BBC Two | |
2 | 6 | 21 July 2005 | 25 August 2005 | ||
Special | 20 December 2005 | ||||
3 | 6 | 26 October 2006 | 30 November 2006 | ||
Special | 25 December 2007 | BBC One | |||
Nan specials | 25 December 2009 | 30 December 2015 |
Characters and sketches
This is only a small sample of descriptions of the most popular or well-known characters:
- Joanie "Nan" Taylor is a foul-mouthed grandmother who constantly swears at and criticises other people, especially when they are not present. These sketches always include her grandson Jamie (Mathew Horne). She often uses phrases such as, “What a load of ol' shit!". She is typically nice to visitors in a completely over-the-top manner, then, the instant they have departed, drops the façade and says, "What a fuckin' liberty!" in a disgusted manner (usually because of a completely spurious complaint). When her grandson takes her to a pound shop she asks the price of everything that takes her interest.[citation needed]
- Paul and Sam are a Thames Estuary/Essex couple played by Tate and former EastEnders actor Lee Ross, Sam comes home from work with ‘amazing’ tales of her mundane life at work and Paul hangs on to every word, getting as excited as she does over trivial things that they blow up out of all proportion. Their catchphrases include, "What am I like, What are you like" and "I dunno". In the third series Sam and Paul only appeared in the last episode due to Lee Ross' work on EastEnders as Owen.[citation needed]
- Lauren Cooper is an argumentative and lazy teenage school-girl who gets out of awkward situations by repeating her catchphrase, "Am I bovvered?" or "Look at my face, is my face bovvered? Face? Bovvered?" In 2006, this catchphrase was named Word of the Year[3] and entered the Oxford English Dictionary. A spokesperson for the OED commented:
"Am I bovvered?" and its follow-up, "Does my face looked bovvered?" had already come to be seen as the perfect expression of a generation of teenagers and their speaking style.[3]
- In How Many, How Much two office workers, Kate and Ellen, who sit next to each other. While Ellen (played by Ella Kenion) is usually keen to get on with her work, she is frequently interrupted by Kate (Tate), who asks her to guess answers to questions, and when she answers wrongly gets mad; however, when Ellen then gives the right answer, Kate just says "...Yeah", insults her, and then gets back to work.[4]
- The Aga Saga Woman is an upper middle class English woman who goes into a state of shock in various, seemingly harmless situations when confronted with people, places, or products, which are lower than her own social class. She has two children, Thomas and Chloe. She is identified as "Mrs Montgomery" in series 2 and later "Mrs Taylor-Thomas" in series 3.[4]
- Derek Faye is a middle-aged "gentleman" who codes strongly as a gay bachelor. He lives with his elderly mother and "hasn't found the right girl yet." When well-meaning people reach out to Derek under the assumption he is gay he becomes extremely offended and defensive, dramatically exclaiming, "What on earth are you insinuating?", "How very dare you!" and "Who, dear? Me, dear? Gay, dear? No, dear."[5]
- Elaine Figgis is a 34 year old woman who lives in York and works at a bakery. She exchanges online letters and falls in love with the cannibal, murderer and criminal Jeremiah Waynwright III, who awaits execution on Death Row in Texas.[4]
- Janice and Ray are a couple from Beverley, East Riding of Yorkshire who express their disgust at the various signs of multi-culturalism in their very British circle. Sources of outrage include restaurant meals, due to their perception of over-pricing or the exotic nature of the food such as grapes in a brie cheese sandwich. They perceive global foods as adulterated British fare and view such culinary transgressions as personal affronts – finally responding with their catchphrase, “The dirty bastards!"
- Geordie Georgie is a frequent petitioner, always trying to get her co-worker, Martin, to sponsor "me and some of the girls" in her latest charitable endeavour. With facts such as "Every 38 minutes ..." she follows her statements up with "If you don't believe me then log on to the website w, w, w, dot...". When Martin offers some amount she invariably takes umbrage and berates him with further details of the people she is trying to help. After she accepts his second offer she does something – often assaults him – to "show him what it's like". Third series only.[4]
- Ally is a tactless woman with good intentions who unfortunately is a perfect example of someone with foot-in-mouth syndrome. Unwittingly she offends all those she comes into contact with at parties, and then in an attempt to dig herself out of the hole she has created, only worsens the situation.[4]
- Bernie is a vulgar Irish nurse with an infectious snort, who works at a hospital who is never shy from both saying it how it is, and from airing her personal problems or feelings with everyone and anyone, particularly the male patients and doctors.[4]
Television series
Series 1 (2004)
The first series of the show, which consisted of six episodes, aired from 16 February to 22 March 2004. The programme's theme tune for the first series was "In These Shoes?" by Kirsty MacColl, featured on her 2000 album Tropical Brainstorm.
In the months preceding the launch of the second series, BBC Two aired three "best of" episodes, featuring a variety of the funniest clips from the six episodes of series one, including Lauren Cooper the teenager and Joanie Taylor the foul-mouthed grandmother. Meanwhile, repeats of all six episodes of the first series aired on UKTV G2 (now Dave). Tate also appeared in a comedy sketch with boy band McFly (see charity sketches for details).
In 2004, Catherine Tate won a British Comedy Award for "Best Comedy Newcomer" for her work on the first series of The Catherine Tate Show.
Series 2 (2005)
The second series aired from 21 July to 25 August 2005. Following Tate's Comic Relief appearance with McFly, and speculation of her non-existent feud with David Schwimmer,[6] it received slightly more publicity than series one in the run-up to the first episode. BBC Two also promoted the series by running trailers showing Lauren arguing with a furry dog in the shape of the channel's logo.
This series was far more successful with viewing figures than the first, securing ratings of 2.89 to 3.92 million, with the final episode receiving higher viewing figures than the episode of Extras which aired beforehand.[7] Celebrities such as Peter Kay and Jill Halfpenny made guest appearances in series two. The series also had new theme music composed by Howard Goodall. For the opening, various characters are in an open field. The camera closes in on Lauren Cooper, zooms into her eye, then zooms out of Sheila Carter's eye. The camera pans to the right, where Bernie enters. The camera zooms into her eye, then zooms out of Nan's eye, where she is seen laughing. The end of the sequence shows the main title The Catherine Tate Show. The zooming is the same for both series two and three although Sheila Carter does not appear in series three (in the 2007 Christmas Special, Sheila is replaced by Geordie Georgie).
The second series began airing in Australia on 4 April 2007 on ABC TV.[8] Before this the BBC-owned Australian cable channel BBC UKTV had aired the complete series starting in 2004. The re-runs of the series were shown starting from 6 May 2007.
In November 2005, Tate appeared in the 77th Royal Variety Performance in the guise of teenager Lauren Cooper, accompanied by Lauren's friends, Ryan and Liese. After Lauren embarrassed herself in front of the audience, Ryan pointed out that the Queen was laughing at her. Looking up at the Royal Box, she asked, "Are you disrespecting me?" and mimicked the Queen's accent, asking, "Is one bovvered? Is one's face bovvered?", before adding, "Who is looking after the corgis?"[9] The Queen was seen laughing at this joke, and Prince Philip also appeared to take this in good humour. There were, however, reports that the Prince was extremely unimpressed by the performance and complained to the show's executive producer.[10] She also appeared as Lauren in a special sketch for the BBC's annual Children in Need telethon. The segment was a crossover with EastEnders (see charity sketches for details).
A Christmas show was aired on 20 December 2005. It featured appearances from celebrity guests Richard Park, Charlotte Church[10] and Chas & Dave. During the show, Paul and Sam's two children were seen for the first time: they looked and acted exactly like their parents. The characters of Margaret and the enigmatic detective, who did not appear in series two, made appearances in the Christmas special. According to BARB's official viewing figures, over 5.66 million viewers watched the show, making it the most-watched programme at the time and the most watched programme on BBC Two the week it was aired.[11] The show was also nominated for the People's Choice Award at the British Comedy Awards in 2005, but did not win after it was announced that the show had received fewer votes than Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway. In an investigation, it was revealed in May 2008 that The Catherine Tate Show was the true winner of the British Comedy Award, and that Ant and Dec were wrongly awarded; Tate had actually received more votes from the public. A report by independent law firm, Olswang, said "Robbie Williams was invited to present an award. It was understood that he would be happy [to do so] if the recipients were Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly. In order to ensure his attendance, this assurance was given"; however, it is not known if Williams' comments led to the wrong announcement.[12] It was also exposed that the second half of the ceremony was not broadcast live but with a delay of half-an-hour, yet viewers were still encouraged to vote for the People's Choice Award, even though the votes had been counted and the trophy presented half-an-hour before.[12]
The second series started airing on UKTV G2 in January 2006. Series one continued on UKTV Gold. The second series was also being screened on BBC America, and repeated on BBC Two, from June 2006. Following the success of series two, Tate launched a range of merchandise based on characters from the show in 2006. In September 2006 The Catherine Tate Show official calendar 2007 was released. Also, on 2 October 2006 a book was released of the scripts of both series one and two, called Am I Bovvered The Catherine Tate Show Scripts.
On 13 December 2006, Tate won another British Comedy Award for "Best TV Comedy Actress" for her work in the second series of The Catherine Tate Show.
Series 3 (2006)
The third series started on 26 October 2006 and ran until 25 November 2006. Before the launch of the series, it had been reported that BBC One controller Peter Fincham hoped to lure Tate to the channel; however, she decided to stay with BBC Two, where she would not be as pressured to secure higher ratings.
The series gained strong viewing figures for BBC Two, ranging from 4.00 to 4.92 million, becoming the top show on BBC Two each week.[13] There were many more guest appearances in the third series which included Paul O'Grady being featured in a sketch with Joanie "Nan" Taylor when she appeared on The Paul O'Grady Show.
Specials (2007)
On 19 February 2007, Tate appeared again on This Morning and stated that a forty-minute Comic Relief special had been made, which aired on 16 March 2007. Several sketches were interspersed throughout the Comic Relief programme, with guests such as the prime minister at the time, Tony Blair (see charity sketches for details). Kim Cattrall has also expressed an interest in appearing on an episode of the show. Cattrall commented that she is a "huge fan" and would like to be given a role.[14]
Tate has revealed that she is considering taking the characters from the show on the road for a UK stage tour.[15] Series Three was released on DVD on 12 November 2007. On 31 October 2007 The Catherine Tate Show won the National Television Award for most popular comedy as voted for by the public.[16]
A new Christmas special episode aired on 25 December 2007 on BBC One, in which pop star George Michael made a guest appearance. He was featured in several scenes with Irish nurse, Bernie, including one kissing scene.[citation needed] The character of Lauren was killed in a kayaking accident during the episode. Rumours had emerged about this story line in July 2007.[17][18] Kathy Burke, Tamzin Outhwaite and Kellie Bright also guest starred,[19] and the special averaged with 6.4 million viewers.[citation needed]
The episode was subject to criticism when some viewers complained about the amount of swearing, and accused Tate of bigotry over the depiction of a family from Northern Ireland as terrorists, whose Christmas presents included a balaclava and a pair of knuckle dusters, in reference to The Troubles.[20] A statement was issued from the BBC that read "Catherine Tate creates characters who are so over the top as to be almost cartoon-like and this is where her genius lies. Her comedy is never meant to offend any viewer and is always based on satire and grotesque exaggeration."[21]
After the complaints were made, an Ofcom report later concluded that the show was not offensive and did not violate broadcasting regulations. An extract from the Ofcom report read "Overall this episode was typical of the Catherine Tate Show and would not have gone beyond the expectations of its usual audience. For those not familiar with the show, the information given at the start was adequate."[20]
During Tate's appearance on The Paul O'Grady Show on 24 September 2007, Tate did not make a reference to the speculation of there being any more series, but she did state that she may just continue her work on The Catherine Tate Show through one-off specials. It has since been announced by Tate that she does not plan any more series after the Christmas special.[1] She commented: "It's hard to keep coming up with ideas. And I'd like to stay in people's good graces, rather than, 'Oh no, she's not doing another series of that, is she?'"[1] Tate also left to concentrate on other projects such as her role as Donna Noble, in series four of Doctor Who.[22]
Spin-offs
Nan's Christmas Carol (2009)
The BBC confirmed that a new Christmas special would be broadcast in December 2009, titled Nan's Christmas Carol, featuring Tate's Nan character as Scrooge. The special guest stars Mathew Horne (reprising his role as Nan's grandson Jamie) and Ben Miller, David Tennant and Roger Lloyd-Pack as ghosts. Niky Wardley who played many various characters mainly Lisa Jackson, also returned as Joanie Taylor's mother.[23] Despite this special, shown on 25 December 2009, Tate has reiterated that she has no plans for the show to make a full return.[24]
Catherine Tate's Nan (2014–2015)
In 2013, a new New Year's special was produced and was broadcast on 4 January 2014. The story features Nan as she is accompanied by a school girl named Alice, who has volunteered to visit Nan as part of the 'Young and Old Buddy-Up Foundation' while her grandson, Jamie is in Africa helping to build a school for orphans and keeps in contact with Nan regularly via Skype. As Nan's tap is broken, she and Alice head to the council to see if they can get someone to fix and there Nan land herself in trouble for 'disturbing the peace and simulating a heart attack' at the local community centre. Returning guest stars include Mathew Horne and Niky Wardley and with Ami Metcalf as Alice.[25]
In 2015, it was announced that two new 'Nan' specials had been produced and these were broadcast in December that year. The first special aired on 27 December 2015 and the second on 30 December 2015.[2]
The Nan Movie
In early 2019, an announcement was made that Catherine Tate's Nan would be developed into a feature film adaptation. In September 2019, it was confirmed that the film would receive a release sometime during 2020. Alongside Tate, it was also confirmed that Matthew Horne would be returning as Jamie, and that fellow co-star of the original series, Niky Wardley, would also appear.[26] It was released on 18 March 2022, to overwhelmingly negative reviews.[27] Josie Rourke, who was initially confirmed as the director of the film in 2019, was not credited.[28]
Charity sketches
Tate appeared on the BBC's Comic Relief telethon in March 2005, in the guise of Lauren Cooper. In a section of the show, which featured fans of McFly asking questions to the group, Lauren decides to ask, "Why are you so rubbish?" When told by Simon Amstell, who is hosting the segment, that only positive questions are allowed, Lauren uses a variety of her catchphrases, including "Am I bovvered?" and "Are you calling me stupid?" Lauren is then "ordered" to ask a more positive question to the group, and confuses them with Busted, asking, "Are you gutted that Charlie left?" When told to leave the set, on her way out she asks Danny Jones from McFly to sign her knee, walking away promptly saying "You can't even spell."[29]
In November 2005, Tate appeared as Lauren in a special sketch for the BBC's annual Children in Need telethon. The segment is posed as a crossover with EastEnders, featuring Barbara Windsor as Peggy Mitchell, Kacey Ainsworth as Little Mo and Lacey Turner as Stacey Slater. The sketch sees Lauren arrive in Walford in search of revenge on Stacey, who has apparently stolen her boyfriend. When she makes an appearance in the Queen Vic, Peggy finds herself getting increasingly frustrated with Lauren, who asks, "Are you a Cockney? Are you a Cockney sparrow?" (pronounced 'Cock-er-ney') and "Do you know Chas & Dave? Are you their mum?" repeatedly. Peggy also unintentionally uses some of Lauren's catchphrases, such as "Are you disrespecting my family?" and "Are you calling me a pikey?" Lauren eventually leaves the pub after mixing some famous lines from the soap, including "Hello princess" and "Rickaay!" with her usual catchphrase, "Bovvered?".[30]
In the BBC's Sport Relief, Tate created a sketch as "Nan", commenting on the 1966 World Cup win and the comments of Kenneth Wolstenholme. The sketch involves "Nan" and her grandson watching a David Beckham football game, where she expresses her disgust at the objective of football by exclaiming "What a load of old shit!".[citation needed]
On 16 March 2007, Catherine Tate appeared on Red Nose Day 2007 as many of her well-known characters from the show. The sketches were interspersed throughout the Comic Relief programme. Guests in sketches include David Tennant (who acts as Lauren Cooper's teacher and actually turns out to be the real Doctor), and Daniel Craig as another one of Elaine Figgis' boyfriends whom she has met through the internet. This sketch also spawned a popular internet meme "Do you fancy Billie Piper, sir?" Tony Blair - whilst still Prime Minister - made a cameo appearance in a sketch, which features Lauren Cooper on work experience at 10 Downing Street. Upon Lauren attempting to tell Blair who the most famous person she has met is, he asks her if he is "bovvered".[31][32] Geordie Georgie appeared with Lenny Henry when he does his own fund raising for Comic Relief, and Joanie Taylor also appeared on game show Deal or No Deal hosted by Noel Edmonds.[33] The DVD of the sketches was available exclusively to Amazon and became the most pre-ordered DVD the site has ever seen.[33]
On 13 March 2009, Nan appeared on the 2009 Comic Relief. She was receiving a cheque for her Community Centre from Fern Britton and Alan Carr. She was then disgusted that she only got £1000.
Year | Event | Character | Guest Star(s) |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Comic Relief | Lauren Cooper | McFly, Simon Amstell |
Children in Need | Lauren Cooper | Barbara Windsor, Lacey Turner, Kacey Ainsworth | |
2006 | Sport Relief | Joanie Taylor | David Beckham |
2007 | Comic Relief | Lauren Cooper | David Tennant |
Bernie | George Michael | ||
Elaine Figgis | Daniel Craig | ||
Lauren Cooper | Tony Blair | ||
Geordie Georgie | Lenny Henry | ||
Joanie Taylor | Noel Edmonds | ||
2009 | Comic Relief | Joanie Taylor | Fern Britton, Alan Carr |
2010 | Channel 4's Comedy Gala | Joanie Taylor | Introducing Noel Fielding |
2013 | Children in Need 2013 | Joanie Taylor | Cast of Holby City and Mathew Horne |
2017 | Let's Sing and Dance (Comic Relief) | Joanie Taylor | Matthew Horne, Len Goodman, Bonnie Tyler and Richard E. Grant |
Red Nose Day 2017: Make Your Laugh Matter | Lauren Cooper | Lenny Henry and Warwick Davis | |
2020 | The Big Night In | Lauren Cooper | David Tennant |
Live show
On 27 April 2016, Tate announced she would be taking her characters on tour later the same year. She performed in theatres across the UK between 31 October and 4 December 2016.[34] Tate was joined on stage by long time collaborators Niky Wardley and Mathew Horne as well as actor and comedian Brett Goldstein playing various characters. The show also featured pre-recorded cutaway cameos by Billy Connolly (as God & the Devil), Richard Sandling (as Steve) and Nick Grimshaw (as himself).
On 17 October 2018, it was announced that the show would run in London's West End at the Wyndham's Theatre for one week from 7 to 12 January 2019.[35] On 29 October 2018, tickets for shows were added due to popular demand.[36]
The Catherine Tate Show Live | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date | City | Country | Venue |
31 October 2016 | York | England | Barbican Centre |
1 November 2016 | Manchester | O2 Apollo | |
2 November 2016 | Basingstoke | The Anvil | |
3 November 2016 | Sheffield | City Hall | |
4 November 2016 | Leicester | De Montfort Hall | |
5 November 2016 | Southend | Cliffs Pavilion | |
7 November 2016 | Edinburgh | Scotland | Playhouse |
8 November 2016 | Glasgow | Clyde Auditorium | |
9 November 2016 | Newcastle | England | City Hall |
10 November 2016 | Coventry | Warwick Arts Centre | |
11 November 2016 | Leeds | First Direct Arena | |
13 November 2016 | London | Eventim Apollo | |
14 November 2016 | |||
15 November 2016 | Plymouth | Plymouth Pavilions | |
16 November 2016 | Bournemouth | Bournemouth International Centre | |
17 November 2016 | Cardiff | Wales | Cardiff International Arena |
18 November 2016 | Northampton | England | Royal & Derngate |
19 November 2016 | Portsmouth | Guildhall | |
21 November 2016 | Leicester | De Montfort Hall | |
22 November 2016 | Liverpool | Liverpool Empire Theatre | |
23 November 2016 | Oxford | New Theatre | |
24 November 2016 | Brighton | Brighton Centre | |
25 November 2016 | Nottingham | Royal Concert Hall | |
26 November 2016 | |||
28 November 2016 | Southend | Cliffs Pavilion | |
29 November 2016 | Ipswich | Regent Theatre | |
30 November 2016 | Birmingham | Barclaycard Arena | |
1 December 2016 | Llandudno | Wales | Venue Cymru |
2 December 2016 | Wolverhampton | England | Civic Hall |
3 December 2016 | Bristol | Colston Hall | |
4 December 2016 | |||
7 January 2019 | London | Wyndham's Theatre | |
8 January 2019 | |||
9 January 2019 | |||
10 January 2019 | |||
11 January 2019 | |||
12 January 2019 (matinee) | |||
12 January 2019 (evening) | |||
14 January 2019 | |||
15 January 2019 | |||
16 January 2019 | |||
17 January 2019 | |||
18 January 2019 | |||
19 January 2019 (matinee) | |||
19 January 2019 (evening) |
Reception
Ratings
Series | Timeslot | Ep | First aired | Last aired | Rank | Avg. viewers (millions) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Viewers (millions)[37] |
Date | Viewers (millions)[37] | |||||
1 | Monday 10:00 pm (1–5), 9:30 pm (6) |
6 | 16 February 2004 | <2.40 | 22 March 2004 | <2.20 | N/A | N/A |
2 | Thursday 9:30 pm | 6 | 21 July 2005 | 3.50 | 25 August 2005 | 3.92 | 4 | 3.39 |
3 | Thursday 9:00 pm | 6 | 26 October 2006 | 4.81 | 30 November 2006 | 4.15 | 1 | 4.37 |
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Banff Rockie Awards | Best Comedy | The Catherine Tate Show | Won | [38] |
British Comedy Awards | Best Comedy Newcomer | Catherine Tate | Won | [39] | |
Best TV Comedy Actress | Catherine Tate | Nominated | [40] | ||
RTS Craft & Design Awards | Make Up Design - Entertainment & Non Drama |
Vanessa White | Nominated | [41] | |
2005 | BAFTA TV Awards | Comedy - Programme or Series | Geoffrey Perkins, Gordon Anderson, Catherine Tate |
Nominated | [42] |
BAFTA TV Craft Awards | New Writer | Derren Litten | Nominated | [43] | |
British Comedy Awards | Best TV Comedy | The Catherine Tate Show | Nominated | ||
Best TV Comedy Actress | Catherine Tate | Nominated | |||
People's Choice Award | The Catherine Tate Show | Won | [44] | ||
International Emmy Awards | Best Performance by an Actress | Catherine Tate | Nominated | [45] | |
RTS Awards | Network Newcomer - On Screen | Catherine Tate | Won | [46] | |
2006 | BAFTA TV Awards | Best Comedy Programme or Series | The Catherine Tate Show | Nominated | [47] |
Best Comedy Performance | Catherine Tate | Nominated | |||
British Comedy Awards | Best TV Comedy Actress | Catherine Tate | Won | [48] | |
National Television Awards | Most Popular Comedy Programme | The Catherine Tate Show | Nominated | [49] | |
RTS Craft & Design Awards | Make Up Design - Entertainment & Non Drama |
Neill Gorton, Vanessa White |
Won | [50] | |
RTS Awards | Comedy Performance | Catherine Tate | Won | [51] | |
Entertainment | The Catherine Tate Show | Won | |||
2007 | BAFTA TV Awards | Comedy Programme | Gordon Anderson, Aschlin Ditta, Geoffrey Perkins, Catherine Tate |
Nominated | [52] |
BAFTA TV Craft Awards | Make-up And Hair Design | Vanessa White, Neill Gorton |
Nominated | [53] | |
British Comedy Awards | Best TV Comedy Actress | Catherine Tate | Nominated | ||
National Television Awards | Most Popular Comedy Programme | The Catherine Tate Show | Won | [54] | |
Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards | Funniest Person | Catherine Tate | Nominated | [55] | |
2008 | Favourite Funny Person | Catherine Tate | Nominated | [56] |
Guest stars
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Home media
Books
- Am I Bovvered The Catherine Tate Show Scripts (2005)
DVD releases
The entire series of The Catherine Tate Show has been released in the United Kingdom, from 2Entertain, and Australia, from Roadshow Entertainment. Series one, two and three are available in individual sets, while a set containing the first two series is also available, as well as a box set comprising all three series. The show's first Christmas special (2005) was released along with the second series set in both UK and Australia, whereas the second Christmas special (2007), was made available in the UK only in a stand alone DVD, while it was included with the third series DVD in Australia.
In the United States, where the series was released via SRO/Kulter, series one, two, and the 2005 Christmas special are only available in individual sets.
Title | Release date | Features | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | ||
Series One | 25 September 2007[57] | 22 August 2005[58] | 7 November 2007[59] | |
Series Two | 25 March 2008[60] | 30 October 2006[61] | 18 April 2007[62][63] | |
Series One and Two | — | 30 October 2006[64] | 5 September 2007[65] |
|
Christmas Show | 28 October 2008[66] | (On Series 2 DVD) | (On Series 2 DVD) |
|
Comic Relief Special | — | 23 April 2007[67] | — |
|
Series Three | — | 12 November 2007[68] | 1 July 2008[69][70] | |
Complete Series One, Two & Three | — | 12 November 2007[71] | 2 April 2009[72] |
|
Christmas Special | — | 26 December 2007[73] | (On Series 3 DVD) |
|
Nan Specials | ||||
Nan's Christmas Carol | — | 29 November 2010[74] | — |
|
Nan – The Specials | — | 18 January 2016[75] | — |
|
References
- ^ a b c "Cath's late Tate show Archived 11 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 26 November 2007.
- ^ a b "Catherine Tate's Nan returning in 2016". 20 May 2015. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
- ^ a b Philips, Sarah (12 October 2006). ""Bovvered" wins word of the year award". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 March 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f Knight, Ciara (16 October 2019). "Every character on The Catherine Tate Show ranked from worst to best". JOE.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
- ^ Derek at the men's health clinic - The Catherine Tate Show - BBC comedy, retrieved 14 September 2023
- ^ "Catherine Tate denies Schwimmer feud". Digital Spy. Retrieved 15 August 2007.
- ^ "Weekly Viewing Summary. Scroll from 24/07/05 – 28/08/05 Archived 12 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine". BARB. Retrieved 21 January 2007.
- ^ "The Catherine Tate Show". ABC. Retrieved 10 April 2007.
- ^ "Tate asks if Queen is 'bovvered'". BBC News. Retrieved 28 December 2006.
- ^ a b "Catherine Tate: The shy star". The Independent. Retrieved 10 August 2007.
- ^ "Weekly Viewing Summary. Scroll to 25/12/05 Archived 12 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine". BARB. Retrieved 21 January 2007.
- ^ a b "ITV admits comedy award deception". BBC News, 8 May 2008. Retrieved 8 May 2008.
- ^ "Weekly Viewing Summary. Scroll from 29/10/06 – 03/12/06 Archived 12 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine". BARB. Retrieved 21 January 2007.
- ^ "Kim Cattrall wants Catherine Tate role". Digital Spy. Retrieved 9 September 2007.
- ^ "Catherine Tate to go on tour?". ITV News. Retrieved 4 July 2007.
- ^ "National Television Awards 2007". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 November 2007.
- ^ "Bovvered Lauren 'to be killed off' Archived 25 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine". AOL. Retrieved 18 July 2007.
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External links
- 2004 British television series debuts
- 2015 British television series endings
- 2000s British television sketch shows
- 2010s British television sketch shows
- 2000s British LGBT-related comedy television series
- 2010s British LGBT-related comedy television series
- BBC television sketch shows
- British television series revived after cancellation
- English-language television shows
- Television series by Banijay
- Television series by Tiger Aspect Productions
- Television series produced at Pinewood Studios
- Television shows adapted into films