Excellent, loved the show and thought this was every bit as good. - John
22 Nov 11
We saw this last Thursday and are still smiling! Superb acting- brilliant script- not many comedies make you laugh out loud- thid one did , many many times. - Yvonne Mugford
18 Dec 10
What a miserable lot some of you are! This play was funny. As a comedy it ticked most of the boxes in that it made the audience laugh with it. The acting was first class with David Haig being absolutely brilliant. I liked Bernard being more assertive and those who thought it offensive did not listen properly. However, some of the writing (unlike the acting) was lazy and the script should have been updated to really deal with the farce of coalition. I was entertained. - Carrie
15 Nov 10
Ha ha so very funny, I have just got home to Bristol Having been to see this tonight. So very, very funny. I have seen every episode of the tv programme and listened to every radio production I this production is a wonderful nod to the original. TheWhole is greater than the sum of its parts. Yes there are weak areas but it matters not as some blatent set ups end in the entire audience roaring with laughter and cheering in agreement with the sentiments exspressed!
To sum up
first 15 minutes bemoan they are not Etherrington and Hawethorn,
Laugh for 30 Minutes
Worry it will run out of steam for 10 mins
Laugh till it hurts for 45 minutes. - mrrico
11 Nov 10
Other than the character names, this has very little to connect it to the brilliant TV series. In this production, the very modern telling of politics is combined with a more slapstick style humour than the great verbal dexterity of the TV series. The writing, at times very funny is also at times rather lazy and obvious. Also, I felt slightly uncomfortable with some of the content - is paedophilia the only thing they could come up with? Henry Goodman's Humphrey is comewhat under used with the focus very much on David Haig's Prime Minister. A good performance, yet like many other performances I've seen in other productions by the same actor. Jonathan Slinger delivered fine support as Bernard; all in all a reasonable evening out but am glad I didn't pay full whack to see it. - Paul Wallis
23 Oct 10
A prime example of the folly of attempting to transform a witty, tight-knit 30-minute TV sitcom into a 2-hour stage play. It simply does not work. David Haig gives his all as the PM, but Henry Goodman is sadly miscast as Sir Humphrey, and looks uncomfortable all the way through. Comparisons with the sublime trio of the original are inevitable, and I'm afraid none of them comes anywhere near the bliss that was Hawthorne, Eddington and Fowldes. And I thoroughly agree with David Baxter that neither racism nor paedophilia should be a topic for comedy, let alone outright farce. A huge disappointment. - sc
13 Oct 10
Great night out and though I did not watch all the episodes of the TV Series it was funny and this Coemdy is spot on. The role of the PM is tailor made for the acting of David Haig and loved the part of Jonathan Slinger as Bernard though all the cast were good. It was a sophisticated Farce----would thouroughly recommend - Joe Spiteri
12 Oct 10
It's hard to believe that the men responsible for the wittiest and cleverest TV series in memory penned this coarse and excruciatingly unfunny play. It wasn't improved by hammy over-acting from all of the cast. A huge disappointment. I really wouldn't waste your money - much better buy the DVDs of the TV series and enjoy superb writing, subtle acting and story lines thatare just as relevant today. - Bix
03 Oct 10
Yes Prime Minister was a beacon of British TV, a masterpiece of comic writing and understated satire. During the long transition from screen to stage though something has gone grievously wrong. Any attempt at subtlety has been lost, there is a repellant undercurrent of racism and, worst of all, Messrs Jay and lynn have picked up the misguided belief that paedohilia is funny. There are still some wonderful moments, the skewring of the BC Direcotr General probably the best, and the acting is exemplary, although did wonder if David Haig and Henry Goodman might be even better if they switched roles - Haig's PM is probably unelectable in today's media obsessed society. However, none of this can excuse the fact that too much of Yes Prime Minister is deeply offensive and gas sullied the memory of a truly great TV show. - David Baxter
02 Oct 10
Very funny in the early parts but unfortunately degenerated into unsavoury with a request from a foreign diplomat in exchange for signing a government contract - which was pretty cheap and grubby to say the least! Was this really necessary, surely the laughs could have continued using other material? - Terry
10 Jun 10
Terrific star turns from David Haig, Henry Goodman and Jonathan Slinger make this updated and full length version of the original TV sit-com a huge success and great fun and even though at times it is surprisingly, but not unnecessarily, dark. Like all good farce the timing is spot on. It will get a West End transfer, that's for certain. - rds
06 Jun 10
Still the same amusing sit-com. But spoilt by being over-long, and a black disjointed plot.
Oh, and at times it felt as though I was being force-fed the Daily Mail. - Gerry Lynch