list.co.uk/tv PREVIEWS | TELEVISION

DIVINE COMEDY HIGHLIGHTS

VEEP SEASON 7 Sky Atlantic, Wed 3 Apr, 10.10pm The sharpest satire on TV but sadly the last ever series of Armando Iannucci’s political sitcom set in the White House, starring Julia Louis- Dreyfus. BARRY SEASON 2 Sky Atlantic, Wed 3 Apr, 10.45pm Super- dark comedy about a hitman who wants to become an actor. Brilliant, funny, painful and sometimes moving work from star and co- creator Bill Hader.

SCOT SQUAD SERIES 5 BBC Scotland, Thu 4 Apr, 10pm Scottish cop comedy with a new chief (John-Gordon Sinclair as Chief Harry Cope) coming in to take charge of the team. THE CHILLING ADVENTURES OF SABRINA SEASON 2 Netflix, Fri 5 Apr The cool and classy reboot of Sabrina The Teenage Witch returns.

KILLING EVE SEASON 2 BBC Two, Apr (date tbc) So where next for Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh in Phoebe Waller-Bridge's explosive assassin thriller. No UK air date confirmed as yet but it starts in the States on 7 Apr so expect something similar.

GAME OF THRONES SEASON 8 Sky Atlantic, Mon 15 Apr, 2am Winter is coming in the final six episodes. George RR Martin's fantasy comes to an end; expect dragons, deaths and drama. See preview, page 112. CHERNOBYL Sky Atlantic, Tue 7 May, 10pm Five-part miniseries based on the Chernobyl nuclear disaster of 1986. Featuring Jared Harris, Stellan Skarsgård, Emily Watson and Jessie Buckley.

RIVIERA SEASON 2 Sky Atlantic, Thu 23 May Glam crime thriller, created by Neil Jordan and starring Julia Stiles. Season 1 was a load of old nonsense but we have to admit it was pretty damn entertaining nonsense, none the less.

GOOD OMENS Amazon Prime, Fri 31 May Michael Sheen, David Tennant and John Hamm star in this adaptation of Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman’s apocalyptic comedy novel. See feature, left.

1 Apr–31 May 2019 THE LIST 113

The TV adaptation of Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman’s apocalyptic fantasy-comedy Good Omens, starring Michael Sheen and David

Tennant, has been hotly anticipated. David Pollock whets our

appetites ahead of its launch

'I first read Good Omens as a teenager and it’s been one of my favourite stories ever since,’ said Michael Sheen at the official launch of the television adaptation of the fantasy novel by two of the genre’s most famed creators. ‘To be part of the team entrusted with bringing it alive on screen is a bit of a dream come true, to be honest.’ Considering Terry Gilliam tried for many years to adapt it as a film reportedly with Johnny Depp and Robin Williams in the lead roles it’s fair to call this series ‘much- anticipated’.

Sheen’s experience no doubt mirrors that of most people as they first discovered the 1990 fantasy novel; co-written by the late Terry Pratchett and his spiritual heir Neil Gaiman, Good Omens was perfect teen fantasy, conjured by two writers with one foot in the open-eyed wonder of childhood and another in the realism and black humour of encroaching adulthood. It’s a story of the birth of the son of Satan and the oncoming end of the world, but don’t worry it’s a comedy. For many, it’s enough of a selling point that this is an adaptation of a work by Pratchett (who died in 2015, and remains most well-known for both his Discworld series and his thoughtful, eloquent public persona) and Gaiman, the creator of DC / Vertigo’s graphic novel series The Sandman and now an established fantasy author himself. Of the two, Gaiman’s works are more familiar on the screen; film fantasies Stardust (2007), Coraline (2009) and the Nicole Kidman-starring How to Talk to Girls at Parties (2018) were all based on his stories.

Yet for the general public, Good Omens has to be watched simply for the breadth and quality of the cast. The leads are Sheen and David Tennant as Aziraphale and Crowley, an angel and a demon respectively, who enjoy their mortal lives on earth and don’t wish to see the destruction

of everything that the Anti-Christ will wreak, setting out instead to prevent his coming. Elsewhere, the slow drip of cast reveals has been a godsend (pun intended) for genre website clicks; Mad Men’s John Hamm is the Archangel Gabriel; Miranda Richardson is the medium Madame Tracy; Brian Cox is the voice of Death; Frances McDormand is the voice of God and Benedict Cumberbatch the voice of Satan. There are also roles for Jack Whitehall, Derek Jacobi, Parks & Recreation’s Nick Offerman, Josie Lawrence, This is Spinal Tap!’s Michael McKean and The League of Gentlemen’s Reece Shearsmith, Steve Pemberton and Mark Gatiss, while all six episodes are directed and co- executive produced by Scottish director Douglas Mackinnon, whose credits include a number of episodes of Doctor Who, as well as work on Sherlock and Outlander. ‘Ironically, given that it’s a timeless novel,’ says Mackinnon, ‘the Good Omens story stretches from the beginning . . . to quite near the end of time.’

Gaiman himself is writer and showrunner of the series. ‘If you are looking for actors to play two of the best-loved characters you and Terry Pratchett ever created, then, if you are very lucky and have been very good, you will get Michael Sheen and David Tennant to bring them to life,’ he said of the project when it was announced. ‘The best Welsh actor of his generation gets to be an angel, the best Scottish actor of his, a demon. Terry and I wrote Good Omens I like to think it’s one of the funniest novels ever written about the end of the world and how we’re all going to die almost 30 years ago. It’s strange that it feels more relevant now than it ever did before. I only wish that Terry could be here to see it come to life with such a fantastic team.’

Good Omens launches on Amazon Prime on Fri 31 May.