Key Points
- Bonneville called returning to Ian Fletcher “the most painful and horrible” TV role because of intricate, stop-start dialogue.
- Twenty Twenty Six shifts Fletcher to Miami, skewering international tournament organisation and corporate culture clashes.
- Ensemble includes Hugh Skinner and David Tennant (narrator), tackling topical issues beyond football like politics and climate.
Why They're In The News
HUGH Bonneville is back as the endlessly frazzled Ian Fletcher in Twenty Twenty Six, the latest chapter in John Morton’s acclaimed workplace satire universe.
The new series follows Fletcher as the “Director of Integrity” at an international football organisation preparing for a major global tournament, with chaos, awkward meetings and corporate absurdity close behind.
Bonneville told The Guardian that returning to the role was both exciting and daunting, describing it as “the most painful and horrible experience” he has had on television because of the show’s famously intricate, stop-start dialogue.
Still, he was thrilled to step back into Fletcher’s world after Twenty Twelve and W1A.
This time, the action shifts to Miami, where Fletcher finds himself navigating a more direct American corporate culture.
He is also reunited with fan-favourite Will Humphries, played by Hugh Skinner, whose well-meaning incompetence adds even more comic discomfort to the mix. Bonneville affectionately compared Will to “the Paddington of the office world.”
Creator John Morton said the new show leans into culture-clash comedy, placing Fletcher among a team of blunt, energetic colleagues from different countries as they attempt to organise a huge sporting event.
While the backdrop evokes the upcoming World Cup, Morton stressed that the series is less about football and more about the universal madness of trying to organise anything at all.
The cast includes Nicole Sadie Sawyerr, Alexis Michalik, Stephen Kunken, Paulo Costanzo, Nick Blood, Chelsey Crisp and Jimena Larraguivel, with David Tennant lending his voice as narrator.
The series also touches on topical issues including Trump, climate concerns and the pressures surrounding large-scale international events.
For fans of awkward office comedy, Twenty Twenty Six looks set to deliver another painfully funny dose of Ian Fletcher trying to keep everything from falling apart.
Why This Matters
Bonneville’s return to Ian Fletcher matters because the series revives a celebrated satire that skewers corporate and international event bureaucracy, offering sharp cultural commentary and timely humour amid global tensions, casting changes and debates over large-scale sporting spectacles.