The Daily Telegraph - Features

She’s a dandy highwaywom­an – the plot’s too daft to mention

- By Anita Singh

Renegade Nell

Disney+ ★★★★★

Renegade Nell should come with a warning. It doesn’t, so let me supply one.

You may have seen that this is a series written by Sally Wainwright, creator of Gentleman Jack (and Happy Valley, among other good things), with a feisty female lead who subverts the norms of the time. All of which may lead you to believe that this is a period drama in the same mould as Gentleman Jack. So it’s important to know that Renegade Nell is very different. Because this tale of an 18th-century highwaywom­an is doused in the supernatur­al, and our heroine has magical powers bestowed upon her by a fairy.

Yes, a fairy, named Billy Blind. He is played by comedian and Ted Lasso actor Nick Mohammed with the hair of Joan Jett, the wardrobe of Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen and the voice of Mel B on helium. Billy accompanie­s Nell (Louisa Harland) on her adventures, acting as a cross between Tinkerbell and Jiminy Cricket. Unless you are under the age of 10 – and if you are, you shouldn’t be watching this, because some scenes are too frightenin­g for young children – you will find the character hellishly annoying.

The character of Nell, though, is something else. Harland carries the whole series and is sensationa­l.

Harland has a gift for physical comedy – she’s best known as dim Orla in Derry Girls – but here she must also play the swashbuckl­ing action heroine and mistress of disguise while mastering a Cockney accent.

The plot starts off simply, as Nell returns home to her family after years away. Held up at gunpoint by a gang (this is Tottenham in 1705 – please insert your own joke here about how little things have changed), she suddenly finds herself possessed of otherworld­ly strength and skill, able to stop bullets with her bare hands and dispatch attackers with balletic ease. Before long, she is accused of a crime she didn’t commit and is forced to go on the run with her sisters and a former slave (Enyi Okoronkwo), making a living through highway robbery.

It is an appropriat­ely Disneyesqu­e blend of history, comedy and fantasy. Nell must evade both the forces of the law and evil spirits, the latter conjured by Adrian Lester as the malevolent

The more supernatur­al it gets, the more it feels like a rejected episode of Doctor Who

Earl of Poynton. Perhaps it’s aimed at a young adult audience. But as entertainm­ent it doesn’t quite work. The script isn’t afraid to lean into silliness, with Joely Richardson – the biggest name in the cast – playing an eccentric newspaper owner named Lady Eularia Moggerhang­er. The opening episode is strong, grounding the story in Nell’s family life. The further we get into the supernatur­al stuff, though, the more it feels like a rejected episode of Doctor Who. A truly memorable heroine is left battling through a script that isn’t worthy of her.

Streaming on Disney+ from Fri

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 ?? ?? Stand and deliver: Enyi Okoronkwo and Louisa Harland (as the heroine, Nell)
Stand and deliver: Enyi Okoronkwo and Louisa Harland (as the heroine, Nell)

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