Dawson Bros. Explained

Dawson Bros. - strictly speaking two brothers, Steve Dawson and Andrew Dawson, and childhood friend Tim Inman - are a team of British comedy writers who have written on a wide range of award-winning narrative and entertainment shows including That Mitchell and Webb Look, MTV Europe Music Awards, Total Wipeout, The Jonathan Ross Show, Take Me Out, The BRIT Awards, Happy Finish,[1] Skins, The Peter Serafinowicz Show, Derren Brown's Trick or Treat, Balls of Steel, The Friday Night Project, The Royal Variety Performance, Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway and I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!.[2] [3] [4] [5] They regularly contribute centrepiece sketches to Children in Need, Sport Relief and Comic Relief – such as the Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them sketch for Children in Need 2016[6] and the Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em sketch starring Michael Crawford for Sport Relief 2016.[7] They also wrote for BBC One's The One Ronnie, notably the Blackberry Sketch.[8]

In 2012 they authored their own BBC Three sketch show Dawson Bros. Funtime[9] featuring YouTube stars Chris Kendall (aka) and Jenny Bede, alongside comedy performers Mike Wozniak and Cariad Lloyd, and featuring the voice of Peter Serafinowicz.[10]

Dawson Bros. were staff writers for Funny or Die UK and also produce an occasional series of web animations called "I'd Like To Have Been In That Meeting..." with animator Richard Whitelock and comic performers Dan Benoliel and Jonny Donahoe, friends from Abingdon School during the 1990s.[11] One of the animations features the voice of Dana Snyder.[12]

In 2013 they co-wrote the BBC One sitcom Big School, alongside David Walliams.[13] The series aired across August and September of that year and was the second-highest rating sitcom debut in a decade. It was subsequently recommissioned and the second series aired in Autumn 2014.

Working with David Walliams again, Dawson Bros. co-created and co-wrote the BBC One sketch show Walliams & Friend in 2015. A Christmas special starring Joanna Lumley aired on Christmas Eve that year to six million viewers, making it the second most-watched sketch show on British TV in the 2010s.[14] That was followed by a full series run in 2016 featuring Jack Whitehall, Harry Enfield, Sheridan Smith, Meera Syal, Miranda Richardson and Hugh Bonneville. They also created the ‘After Ever After’ franchise, Sky Max’s popular anthology of feature-length fairytale sequels.[15]

More recently they have written screenplays for Working Title Films and Archery Pictures and, in 2022, were co-producers[16] and on-set writers for Judd Apatow's movie The Bubble.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Happy Finish. IMDb.
  2. https://dawsonbros.com/shows.html List of credits from Dawsonbros.com
  3. Web site: Steve Dawson. IMDb.
  4. Web site: Andrew Dawson. IMDb.
  5. Web site: Tim Inman. IMDb.
  6. Web site: BBC Children in Need 2016 . BBC .
  7. Web site: Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em - Sport Relief Special. 18 March 2016. British Comedy Guide.
  8. Web site: My Blackberry Is Not Working! The One Ronnie, Preview . BBC One. YouTube.
  9. Web site: Dawson Bros. Funtime. YouTube.
  10. Web site: Curtis Brown press release.
  11. Web site: Whats On, Drama. Abingdon School.
  12. Web site: That Meeting... Avatar . YouTube.
  13. Web site: Big School. IMDb.
  14. Web site: David Walliams returns to BBC One with some familiar faces for new series, Walliams And Friend. BBC .
  15. Web site: Sky announces two new original After Ever After comedies from David Walliams. 28 September 2020. Sky.
  16. Web site: The Bubble - producer credits. 1 April 2022. IMDb.