It’s A Sin hailed as a ‘masterpiece’ as stars including Corrie’s Rob Mallard & Nigella Lawson pay tribute to Aids drama

CHANNEL 4’s It’s a Sin has been hailed as “incredible” and “a masterpiece” by some of Britain’s biggest stars.

The moving drama follows the lives of five 18-year-olds who move to London in 1981 and have their lives turned upside down by the Aids crisis.



Channel 4’s It’s A Sin has been hailed as a ‘masterpiece’ by many

Nigella Lawson said she was “poleaxed” by the emotional show, thanking its creator Russell T Davies for making it.

The 61-year-old TV star tweeted: “It’s a masterpiece. I’m lost for words. So many friends remembered. I need to watch it again straightaway. So beautiful and true.”

Former Bake Off host Sue Perkins hailed the drama as an “incredible piece of work”.

The 51-year-old presenter called the show “profoundly affecting and a reminder that shame leaves a toxic legacy”.



Ash with his friend and roommate Ritchie Tozer in the Channel 4 drama

The hit series, which is set in the early 1980s, has proved must-watch TV

Nigella Lawson tweeted: ‘I need to watch it again straightaway’

Coronation Street’s Rob Mallard tweeted: “Binge watched #ItsASin. Incredible storytelling, excellent cast, beautifully written.”

The 28-year-old, who plays Daniel Osbourne in soap, added: “Well done @russelldavies63 & all cast and crew! Take a bow.”

Former EastEnders star Tamzin Outhwaite added that the nostalgic drama made her think about her own life in the 1980s.

The 50-year-old Mel Owen actress tweeted: “I have woken up thinking about #itsasin …. dreamt about my college days, in Kings Cross.



 Callum Scott Howells’ Colin and Omari Douglas’ Roscoe in It’s A Sin

Olly Alexander’s Ritchie Tozer and his dad Clive, played by Shaun Dooley

Sue Perkins praised the drama as an ‘incredible piece of work’

“Sharing flats , experiencing close friends coming out, and the general feeling that people had found their tribe.

“I loved every one of those characters. It felt incredibly nostalgic.”

The critically-acclaimed drama follows the group of teens including Nathaniel Curtis’ Ash, Olly Alexander’s Ritchie and their female pal Jill, played by Lydia West as they move into a shared house.

As the series unfolds the full horror of the Aids crisis is laid bare and the characters’ lives thrown into turmoil.