Tracey Ullman returns, introducing us to a slew of new comic characters and impersonations of celebrities. Nicola Sturgeon has her sights set on more than just Scotland, and Doctor Peluzzi can cure your bad knee and make you run faster than anyone else.
1980, Birmingham, West Midlands, England, UK
15 July 1946, Woking, Surrey, England, UK
20 April 1945, Brooklyn, New York, USA
24 December 1993, Islington, London, England, UK
3 August 1970, Wallasey, Cheshire, England, UK
24 January 1975, England, UK
1972, England, UK
1973, London, England, UK
1986, London, England, UK
5 October 1967, Paddington, London, England, UK
March 13, 2020
Although as mixed as you'd expect from a sketch show, Tracey Ullman's return to UK screens for her second series has been better than cynics might have expected. Her character acting makes up for some occasionally off-beam sketches.March 13, 2020
I got the impression that some sketches, especially the musical numbers, were more fun to film than they were to watch. Still, Ullman throws herself at it with gusto and it's iconoclastic enough to elicit gasps as well as giggles.March 16, 2020
The sketch show returns with our Tracey as adept as ever at playing a range of characters... The best sketch by far makes grotesques of Jerry Hall and Rupert Murdoch (Ben Miller) at a painfully strained family dinner -- more risks like this, please.March 13, 2020
Feels more celebrity-heavy second time round. The thinking is understandable. The famous folk also provided the best moments of the last series even if, once again, they tend to throw into sharp relief the slightly weaker social satire.March 16, 2020
While Ullman's portrayal of Judi Dench as a compulsive hellraiser insulated by her national treasure status is a solid, repeatable gag, it almost overshadows her impeccable impersonation of Maggie Smith