Katherine Jakeways

Katherine Jakeways is a British comedian, actor and writer. She appeared in multiple television, radio and theatrical productions.

Career

Her television appearances include Extras, Horrible Histories, Sherlock, Tracey Ullman's Show. Tracey Breaks The News, Episodes, Trying Again, all 3 series of BBC1's The Armstrong and Miller Show, Miranda and ‘’Mid Morning Matters with Alan Partridge’’. She is also notable as one of the regular cast in the radio series Deep Trouble and Look Away Now and played Mrs Pepys in Radio 4's long running Woman's Hour Drama "The Diary of Samuel Pepys". She appeared onstage as Sandy in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest at the Garrick Theatre in 2006, and was the Entire Supporting Cast in Armstrong and Miller's 2010 national tour.

2010 saw the first episode of her debut radio comedy, North by Northamptonshire, broadcast on BBC Radio 4.[1] The second series was broadcast from 2 December 2011 and the 3rd series was broadcast from December 2013. North by Northamptonshire stars Sheila Hancock, Penelope Wilton, Mackenzie Crook, Kevin Eldon, Geoffrey Palmer and Felicity Montagu. Jakeways played several parts in the show and after the first series was broadcast the Radio Times called her work "acutely observed" and suggested she may be "the new Victoria Wood". The second series of North by Northamptonshire was nominated for a Sony Radio Award. Jakeways' use of herself as a narrator in the series was praised by Matthew Parris as a "brilliant development of a dramatic form that has flickered in and out of mankind's entertainment for millennia".[2]

For BBC Radio 4 Jakeways went on to write 3 series of All Those Women, starring Lesley Manville, Marcia Warren, Sinead Matthews and Lucy Hutchinson; 1 series of Guilt Trip, starring Felicity Montagu and Olivia Nixon, and co-write 2 series of Ability with Lee Ridley.[3]

In 2016, Katherine's radio play Where This Service Will Terminate debuted on BBC Radio 4. Starring Rosie Cavaliero and Justin Edwards as strangers who sit next to each other on a train from Paddington to Penzance. The play had a positive critical and public response and led to the follow up plays Where This Service Will Continue (2017), Where This Service Will Connect (2018), Where This Service Will Separate (2019) and Where This Service Will Depart (2020). Miranda Sawyer reviewed the 2019 series as "attractive, funny and frustrating in equal measures", with "sublime" writing.[4]

gollark: Idea: wrest control of the server from palaioogosofknf via sending g too many messages
gollark: * worse
gollark: Arachnocommunism good
gollark: Anarchocommunism bad
gollark: Ergo demote lyricly establish [IDEOLOGY].

References

  1. Lawson, Mark (15 September 2016). "N for Northampton: Alan Moore celebrates his hometown with a 1,200-page fantasy". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  2. Parris, Matthew. "Is a new art form being born on Woman's Hour?". beta.spectator.co.uk. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  3. "BGT winner Lost Voice Guy's Radio 4 sitcom gets second series". Radio Times. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  4. Sawyer, Miranda (26 May 2019). "The week in radio and podcasts: 13 Minutes to the Moon; Kevin Pietersen: Beast of Man". The Observer. Retrieved 4 March 2020.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.