EPISODE
SEASON
Mandy - Season 1
A woman becomes obsessed with a sofa she has seen in a shop window. Unable to think of anything else, she goes to desperate lengths to possess the furniture of her dreams.
4 October 1980, Leeds, England, UK
1980, England, UK
7 August 1952, Anfield, Liverpool, England, UK
28 January 1972, Dublin, Ireland
25 February 1937, Kingston-Upon-Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, UK
17 April 1942, York, Yorkshire, England, UK
10 May 1977, Beverley, East Yorkshire, England, UK
23 August 1962, Little Hulton, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, England, UK
3 March 1968, Oldham, Lancashire, England, UK
25 January 1949, Salford, Manchester, England, UK
September 10, 1957 in Huyton, Liverpool, England, UK
1953, England, UK
August 20, 2020
It's bold and ludicrous, but economical too. It don't mean a thing. It is, however, a glorious release from all those things that do mean a thing.
August 24, 2020
Weird and wonderful.
August 20, 2020
Will likely have some people in a bit of a tizzy, but it doesn't feel as though it was slipped in thoughtlessly. If only more telly was so proudly daft.
August 20, 2020
Some lines are near the knuckle, but it's a splendid cast with plots that are gloriously demented. And it's worth it just to see Shaun Ryder.
August 20, 2020
Mandy is not quite as good -- not as tight, not as laugh-out-loud funny -- as I, a great fan of Morgan and worshipper of Cunk, was hoping for... But it is a fun way to spend 15 minutes.
August 20, 2020
The pace, even for a quarter of an hour, was slow, and the humour often cartoonish. But, crikey, when the laugh-out-loud punchline came -- in the last frame -- it really landed.
August 20, 2020
This is a show that provokes wry smiles rather than belly laughs. As ever, it's hard to take your eyes off Morgan's endlessly expressive face, but her character is deliberately one-dimensional.
August 20, 2020
This was enjoyably escapist comedy, daft for the sake of daftness, and all the more welcome for it.

