Stewart Lee - 90's Comedian
Work:: Stewart Lee (S01837109513)
Stewart Lee began stand-up at the age of 20 in 1988, winning the Hackney Empire new act of the year award in 1990. In the 90's he contributed to various BBC Radio comedy shows, including Fist of Fun and On The Hour, with Steve Coogan and Chris Morris, performed as a stand-up almost nightly on the London circuit, and co-created four series for BBC2 with Richard Herring.
Production:: 90's Comedian (T0279723854)
After sixteen years of joyless laughter, the nearly man of British comedy should have struck gold as co-writer of Richard Thomas’ acclaimed
Jerry Springer The Opera. But the show’s plaintive howl of inarticulate anguish was silenced by the The Daily Mail and Right Wing Christian Evangelicals just at the point where the royalties should have kicked in. How much will an Olivier award fetch on E-Bay anyway? Still, Lee’s financial loss is comedy’s gain. Whipped from the door of theatre like a syphilitic dog, Lee has returned to stand-up. His Summer 2004 Edinburgh show, Stand-up Comedian, drew unprecedented praise, touring packed venues earlier this year. His 2005 Edinburgh show will reap the inevitable critical backlash. These things go in cycles. Come and ride the downward curve. All new for Summer 2005! With a heavy smoking habit and an incurable stomach condition, Lee is sure to die well before his time. See him now so you can one day argue that he was quite good at comedy, at a dinner party full of squares who never heard of him.
Listing:: L0820593899
Studio
Current production:Work
90's Comedian
After sixteen years of joyless laughter, the nearly man of British comedy should have struck gold as co-writer of Richard Thomas’ acclaimed
Jerry Springer The Opera. But the show’s plaintive howl of inarticulate anguish was silenced by the The Daily Mail and Right Wing Christian Evangelicals just at the point where the royalties should have kicked in. How much will an Olivier award fetch on E-Bay anyway? Still, Lee’s financial loss is comedy’s gain. Whipped from the door of theatre like a syphilitic dog, Lee has returned to stand-up. His Summer 2004 Edinburgh show, Stand-up Comedian, drew unprecedented praise, touring packed venues earlier this year. His 2005 Edinburgh show will reap the inevitable critical backlash. These things go in cycles. Come and ride the downward curve. All new for Summer 2005! With a heavy smoking habit and an incurable stomach condition, Lee is sure to die well before his time. See him now so you can one day argue that he was quite good at comedy, at a dinner party full of squares who never heard of him. Studio