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Lenny Henry
(Born 29 August 1958) is an award winning British comedian and actor.
Career
His
earliest television appearance was on the New Faces talent show in
1975 where he repeatedly won. The following year he appeared in LWT's sitcom
The Fosters
alongside Norman Beaton, Britain's first
comedy series with predominantly black performers. His formative years were in
working men's clubs where his
unique act — a young black man impersonating white characters such as the
Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em
character Frank Spencer (whom he impersonated on New Faces) — gave him an
edge in what were racially divisive times.
He
co-hosted the children's programme Tiswas from 1978 until
1981, and subsequently performed and wrote for the show Three of a Kind, with
comedians Tracey Ullman and
David Copperfield. Around this time, he met his future wife,
Dawn French, who encouraged him
to move over to the fledgling alternative comedy scene, where
he established a career as a stand-up comedy performer and character comedian.
He introduced characters who both mocked and celebrated black British culture,
such as Theophilus P. Wildebeeste (a Barry White-a-like), Brixton
pirate radio disc jockey DJ Delbert Wilkins and Trevor MacDoughnut (a parody of
Trevor McDonald). His stand-up
material, which sold well on LP, owed much to the writing
abilities of
Kim Fuller. During
this time he also spent three years as a DJ on BBC Radio 1, playing cutting
edge soul and electro tracks and introducing some of the characters that he
would later popularise on television.
Henry
appeared in the final episode of
The Young Ones as The Postman, in 1984.
Henry's
television work started principally with his own self-titled show, which has
appeared in variant forms ever since. A principal scriptwriter for his
television and stage shows during the 1990s was Jon Canter.
In 1987, he
appeared in a TV film
Coast to Coast. It was a comedy thriller with John Shea about two DJ's with a
shared passion for Motown music being chased
across Britain. The film has a strong following, but contractual problems have
prevented it from being distributed on video or DVD.
In the
early 1990s, Henry went to Hollywood to star in the film
True Identity, in which his
character spent most of the film pretending to be a white person (using make-up,
prostheses, and a wig) in order
to avoid the mob. The film was not
commercially successful.
In 1991, he
starred in a BBC drama alongside Robbie Coltrane called
Alive and Kicking,
in which he played a heroin addict, which was based on a true
story.
Henry is
perhaps best known to modern audiences as the choleric chef Gareth Blackstock from the
1990s television comedy series Chef!, or from his 1999
straight-acting lead role in the BBC drama
Hope And Glory. He was also co-creator and producer of the 1996 BBC
drama serial Neverwhere.
Henry tried
his hand at soul singing, appearing, for example, as a back-up singer on
Kate Bush's album The Red
Shoes (1993) and, backed by David Gilmour of Pink Floyd, at Amnesty International's
Big 3-0 fund raising concert. He would later say that neither move
showed him at his best, and that he felt most comfortable with character comedy.
Henry would occasionally return to singing, performing in small local venues in the
West Midlands. Henry returned to the BBC to do Lenny Henry in Pieces, a
character-based comedy sketch show which was followed
by The Lenny Henry Show, in
which he combined stand-up, character sketches and song
parodies.
In 2003,
Henry was listed in The Observer as one of the
fifty funniest acts in British comedy.
In 2004, he
was listed in The Sunday Times as the
fifteenth funniest black performer of all time. Henry is also one of the
celebrities most associated with the British Comic Relief'charity
organisation, along with his wife, well-known comedienne Dawn French, and
Griff Rhys Jones, and has
hosted the show and also presented filmed reports from overseas on the work of
the charity. He was the voice of the British speaking clock for two weeks,
10 March– 23 March 2003, in aid of Comic
Relief.
He was the
voice of the " shrunken head" on the Knight Bus in the 2004 movie
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of
Azkaban, and read the audio book version of Neil Gaiman's Anansi Boys. He also voices
a character on the children's show Little Robots, broadcast on
CBeebies.
Henry has
also appeared in advertisements for butter products in New Zealand, which were
commissioned by the company now known as Fonterra, as well as portraying
Saint Peter in the Virgin Mobile advertising
campaign in South Africa. In the UK, he
used his character of Theophilus P. Wildebeeste to advertise Alpen muesli, and also promoted the
non- alcoholic lager, Kaliber.
In 2005, he
appeared in Birmingham, as an act for
"Jasper Carrott's Rock with Laughter". He appeared alongside performers such as
Bill Bailey, Jasper Carrott, Bonnie Tyler, Bobby Davro and the
Lord of the Dance troupe.
In 2006
Henry starred in the BBC programme
Berry's Way. He
did the voice of
Dark Nebula in
Kirby: Squeak Squad. On
March 16, 2007, Henry made a cameo appearance as himself in
a sketch with Catherine Tate, who appeared in
the guise of her character
Geordie Georgie from The Catherine Tate Show.
The sketch was made for the BBC Red Nose Day fund raising
programme of 2007.
On
16 June 2007, Lenny appeared with
Chris Tarrant and Sally James to present a 25th
Anniversary episode of Tiswas. The show lasted 90
minutes and featured celebrities discussing their enjoyment of Tiswas as
children, as well as appearances from kids and people who had appeared on the
original show.
In the
summer of 2007 he presented Lenny's Britain, a comedy documentary tour
made with the Open University on BBC1 on Tuesday nights.
In late
2007, he hosted a stand-up comedy tour of the UK.
In early
2008, his show
lennyhenry.tv was
broadcast on BBC One. The programme has an
accompanying web-site of the same name and broadcasts strange, weird and
generally amusing on-line videos and CCTV clips.
He is
currently starring in the Radio 4 show
Rudy's Rare
Records.
Personal
life
Henry met
his wife Dawn French on the alternative
comedy circuit. The couple married in 1984, and have an adopted daughter,
Billie.
Henry
graduated in English Literature, (BA Hons),
with the Open University in 2007.
Henry is
currently studying for an MA at Royal Holloway, University of
London in screenwriting for television and film.
He is a
supporter of West Bromwich Albion.
Source : Some of the information on this page came
from a Wikipedia article and is licensed under the GNU Documentation
License. ©2008 www.geneticmatrix.com.
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