BBC Big Night In: All the talking points, from Little Britain’s controversial comeback to Prince William’s comedy sketch

The Big Night in raises money for Comic Relief and Children in Need: BBC
The Big Night in raises money for Comic Relief and Children in Need: BBC

As the BBC's live entertainment offering for lockdown, The Big Night In, drew to a close on Thursday night, it had already raised an incredible £27m for charity.

The event saw Comic Relief and Children in Need team up for an evening starring many famous faces, from Lenny Henry and Catherine Tate to Matt Lucas and David Walliams.

Check out the biggest talking points, below...

Prince William tried his hand at comedy

Just when you thought lockdown couldn’t get any weirder, the future King of England Zoomed Stephen Fry, cracking jokes about not wearing any trousers and why he didn’t watch Tiger King. It’s because he “tends to avoid shows about royalty”, by the way. Fry, who has more of a knack for comedy, was portraying his Blackadder character Lord Melchett – the personal advisor to Queen Elizabeth I.

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon served up a lockdown special of The Trip

This was one of the highlights of the night, and it felt pretty effortless. The pair just chatted away, whining about being roped into another Comic Relief gig: "It would be a relief if Richard Curtis stopped calling." And instead of opting for the obligatory bookshelf backdrops we so often see on Zoom, Brydon’s shelves were stacked with family photographs. Coogan's were filled with his awards, of course.

Peter Kay and Dawn French reminded us of the power of nostalgia

In an evening that still felt melancholy despite the large amount of laughs, two particular moments of comedy served as healthy respites: Peter Kay, himself a veritable man of mystery nowadays, expressing gratitude for the response to his 2005 charity rendition of Tony Christie’s “Amarillo”. Seeing such mid-Noughties joy all over again was so heartwarming that you managed to forget most of those involved in it are now dead. French’s Vicar of Dibley return was similarly moving. In the same vein, such a warm hug of a throwback almost managed to block out the fact that half the show’s cast is dead now, too.

Little Britain… didn’t

Matt Lucas and David Walliams deserve kudos for their improvised reunion (the toilet paper holders for wigs was a great shout) – but yeesh was this a reminder of how terribly Little Britain has aged. The wacky accents, racist innuendos and class stereotypes were guiltily funny back in the show’s heyday, when we were all a little bit more ignorant, but it felt beamed from an entirely different universe in 2020.

Even the most talented of pop stars can’t survive an echo-y living room

While it’s slightly mean to criticise the litany of pop stars participating in a good cause, few of the night’s live singers could escape the horror of an echo-y living room. Everyone from Nicole Scherzinger to Jess Glynne and Celeste to Sam Smith struggled valiantly to combat the limitations of their improvised surroundings, to miserable returns. For anyone hoping that house-bound concerts could replace the real thing, either during or after this pandemic, The Big Night In reminded us all that they can’t.

The live blog is now closed.

Find out everything you need to know about The Big Night In here, including how to donate to the fundraiser to support vulnerable people of all ages and backgrounds across the UK who will be significantly impacted by the crisis.

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Little Britain’s TV return stuns viewers with shock ‘bat-eating’ joke

Peter Kay has appeared on TV for the first time in two years

Prince William jokes he hasn’t seen Tiger King during Big Night In