Laura Benanti: Nobody Cares, Underbelly Boulevard Soho review - Tony winner makes charming, cheeky London debut

Broadway's acclaimed Cinderella, Louise, and Amalia reaches Soho for a welcome one-night stand

Laura Benanti has been enchanting Broadway audiences for several decades now, and London has this week been let in on the secret that recently charmed playgoers at this summer's Edinburgh Festival: the comedienne perhaps best known in some circles for her wicked impersonations of Melania Trump can hold her own in a solo show that mixes self-deprecation and determination in equal measure.

Blu-ray: Two Way Stretch / Heavens Above!

BLU-RAY: TWO WAY STRETCH / HEAVENS ABOVE! Two gems from Peter Sellers in his prime

'Peak Sellers': two gems from a great comic actor in his prime

The years between 1955’s The Ladykillers and 1964’s Dr Strangelove were the years of what Sanjeev Bhaskar recently described as "peak Sellers", a period when the great comic actor rarely seemed to put a foot wrong. Two Way Stretch and Heavens Above! succeed largely because both films feature Peter Sellers alongside talented supporting casts, his performances by necessity subtler and more nuanced.

The Naked Gun review - farce, slapstick and crass stupidity

★★★ THE NAKED GUN Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson put a retro spin on the Police Squad files

Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson put a retro spin on the Police Squad files

The original Naked Gun series (spun off from the Police Squad! TV show) brought reliable belly-laughs to the Eighties and Nineties and starred the incomparable Leslie Nielsen as the preposterous detective Frank Drebin, but for this regenerated version Liam Neeson has stepped up to the plate.

Blu-ray: Laurel & Hardy - The Silent Years (1928)

Ten more early shorts, handsomely restored and annotated

Eureka’s second volume of Laurel and Hardy shorts catches the pair in 1928 on the cusp of their successful transition to the sound era, two of the 10 films originally released with synchronised sound effects and music.

Hacks, Season 3, NOW review - acerbic showbiz comedy keeps up the good work

★★★★ HACKS, SEASON 3, NOW Acerbic showbiz comedy keeps up the good work

Jean Smart's portrayal of Deborah Vance is an all-time classic

Dying is easy, comedy is hard, according to the Georgian actor Edmund Kean. Luckily, everybody involved with the much-awarded Hacks understands precisely the creative anguish that top-flight comedy demands, and in its third season the show puts further expanses of clear blue water between itself and the competition.

Best of 2024: TV

BEST OF 2024: TV Stars of stage and big screen all want to be on the telly

Stars of stage and big screen all want to be on the telly

They say cinema is dying (you never know, they may be wrong), but you can’t help noticing the stampede of movie stars towards TV and streaming. Many of 2024’s most memorable shows had a big-screen name attached, even if it was impossible to be entirely certain that it really was Colin Farrell inside all those prosthetics as he romped his way through the gripping second season of The Penguin (Sky Atlantic).

The Harmony Test, Hampstead Theatre review - pregnancy and parenthood

★★★ THE HARMONY TEST, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Pregnancy and parenthood

Taboo-tickling comedy about both conceiving a baby and life as empty nesters

“Welcome to motherhood, bitch!” By the time a character delivers this reality check, there have been plenty of laughs, and some much more awkward moments, in Richard Molloy’s The Harmony Test, which premieres in the Hampstead Theatre’s Downstairs studio space.

Spencer Jones: Making Friends, Soho Theatre review - award-winning comedian mines his post-lockdown escape to the country

★★ SPENCER JONES: MAKING FRIENDS, SOHO THEATRE Quirky, personal and absurd

If big chickens scare you, this is your thing!

Lockdown feels more like a dream now: empty streets; bright, scarless skies; pan-banging at 8pm. Did it all happen? One part of our brains insists that it did; another resists such an overthrowing of what it means to be human. Try recalling events of 2019, 2020 and 2021, and you’ll find them hazy, ill-defined and you reach for a phrase I say more often than I ought, “I don’t know whether it was before or after the pandemic…”

Janey review - fitting punchline for a contentious comedian

RIP JANEY GODLEY A fitting punchline for a contentious comedian

A rounded portrait of the Scot who told Trump to go home

The Glaswegian comedian Janey Godley, the woman who put the punch in punchline, has what she would call a “mooth” on her. It delivers pith and grit and lots of short words needing asterisks. Though possibly not for much longer, as she is in the throes of ovarian cancer.