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Charlie Day Stand Up Tour

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© Bang Showbiz Matthew McConaughey

Eddie Murphy Delirious is an American stand-up comedy television special directed by Bruce Gowers, written by and starring Eddie Murphy. The stand-up set became a TV Special for HBO on August 17, 1983. The 70-minute special was Murphy's first feature stand-up and the predecessor to the wide theatrical release in 1987, Eddie Murphy Raw. Delirious was also released as an album on October 24. Peter Kay has returned to the limelight for the BBC's Big Night In for Comic Relief - three years after the Bolton comedian cancelling his stand-up tour over 'unforeseen family circumstances'. The comedian said he's launching a stand-up comedy tour in 2020. 'Next year I'm gonna tour, do some standup,' he said recently on the Netflix podcast 'Present Company.' Murphy didn't provide details of the tour, but joked that he was ready to get off the couch.

Matthew McConaughey wants to try his hand at stand-up comedy.

The ‘Dallas Buyers Club' star has admitted he was planning on embarking on a stand-up tour this year before the coronavirus pandemic caused the shutdown of venues and placed restrictions on travel and large gatherings.

Matthew was inspired to try out a career as a funnyman as he loves the 'no-filter communication' provided by comedy, and although he can't hit the road just yet, his stand-up tour is still on the cards for the future.

Speaking during an appearance on ‘The Russell Howard Hour', he said: 'I haven't shared this with many people but stand up is a no-filter communication.


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'What I do as an actor, which is why I'm interested in doing stand up, is my raw expression goes through four filters before it gets to the screen.

'I'm doing someone else's script, I'm being directed by someone else, I'm being filmed by someone else, I'm being edited by someone else before it's put in a capsule and put in front of you on screen. That's four filters from my original expression. So that's the goal.

Charlie

'Where do you go where there is no filter? That's stand-up.

'So the plan before Covid was, I was planning on taking to the road and telling stories in an hour of stand-up.'

In response, show host Russell - who is also a stand-up comedian - told him comedy was addictive, but insisted he thought Matthew would make an excellent comic.

And Matthew, 51, can't wait to get started.

He added: 'It sounds like a great thing to be addicted to, the ultimate buzz. You look today at stand-up comics, they are the best truth tellers we have. If I can get away with this, then I'd love to.'

Born
Simon William Day

7 May 1962 (age 58)
NationalityBritish
OccupationComedian
Years active1990–present
Spouse(s)Ruth
Children2

Simon William Day (born 7 May 1962) is an English comedian and actor most famous for his roles in the sketch showThe Fast Show and the sitcomGrass.

Career[edit]

Day was born in Blackheath, London, and rose to fame as a stand-up comic, winning the Time Out new act of the year in 1991 with his music hall character Tommy Cockles. He then appeared on the BBC One show Paramount City as a weekly guest. He continued working live all over England before joining up with Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer for two tours and two series of Big Night Out. He continued to work with Vic Reeves throughout the Nineties.[1]

In 1994 he appeared as a cast regular in Saturday Zoo',[2]Channel 4's Saturday night extravaganza where he appeared as his groundbreaking white rapper Ice Pick. TV credits include Heartbeat, Jonathan Creek, Sensitive Skin, Love Soup, Driving School, and Skins. Film credits include Shakespeare in Love, as a ferryman on the Thames.

In 2006 he collaborated with The Transit Kings on their song 'The Last Lighthouse Keeper' which appears on their debut album Living in a Giant Candle Winking at God.

He is also known for playing Geoff, an alcoholic car salesman in the TV sitcom Swiss Toni, also starring Charlie Higson and Rhys Thomas as his colleagues.

In 2008 Day embarked on his first solo UK stand-up tour entitled 'What a Fool Believes' that saw him play 36 dates during the period 30 October - 15 December, including Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow.[1]

In 2009 Day collaborated again with Rhys Thomas and wrote and starred in a web series of six videos as the character Brian Pern for the BBC.[3]

In 2010, Day appeared in the long-running BBC TV series Hustle, playing Luke Baincross, a wannabe playboy with a huge country mansion.[4]

In May 2010, Day played a hospital porter in BBC TV Series Holby City on his last day at work following his resignation having won the National Lottery. He has an altercation with a patient's relative and receives a bang on the head, and he becomes increasingly lairy during the episode, at one point making a pass at Connie Beauchamp; some people assume he is drunk, but it transpires that he has a developed a Subdural hematoma as a result of the knock on the head. Honey brown lipstick.

Day has appeared as a pundit on the long-running BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Pundit Quiz Fighting Talk on a number of occasions, and is most notable for swearing during a live broadcast during a show in 2009. This was later edited out on the Podcast version of the show.

Day appeared in an online-only version of The Fast Show sponsored by Lager brand Fosters on 10 November 2011 along with original cast save for Mark Williams.[5]

Fast clicker sourceforge. In 2012, he published his autobiography, Comedy and Error: They Really Were Marvellous Times.[6]

Day has presented his own series, The Simon Day Show on Radio Four in May to June 2012.[7]

In 2014, he co-wrote and starred in The Life of Rock with Brian Pern, a BBC Four comedy which parodied the life and career of former Genesis singer Peter Gabriel.[8]

In 2015 Day appeared as Charlie Beckett in the BBC TV series Death in Paradise episode 4.2.[9]

In 2019 he appeared as Sid Onslow, a pub landlord, in Pennyworth.

Day starred as Big Gary King, father of Tom Davis' titular character in the BBC One sitcom King Gary, appearing in the 2018 pilot episode and the full series broadcast in 2020.[10]

Personal life[edit]

Day's teenage life was troubled: he was addicted to alcohol, drugs and gambling and spent some time in borstal for theft.[11] He continued to take illegal drugs including cocaine and crack cocaine into the 1990s at the height of his Fast Show fame.[12][6]

After failing to pass his driving test for charity during the 2003 Comic Relief Programme, Day later went on to gain an automatic driving license.[6] He is married to Ruth, a former waitress, with whom he has two children, Lloyd and Evie.[6]

The Fast Show roles[edit]

Charlie Day Stand Up Tournament

  • Alcoholic Son
  • Antonios Gubba, from Chanel 9
  • Carl Hooper
  • Competitive Dad
  • Football Host
  • Gideon Soames, architecture expert
  • Jeremy Kwee, a 'white witch doctor' who appears on the Jazz Club segment, intended as a parody of Jamiroquai lead singer Jay Kay.
  • John Actor, who plays Inspector Monkfish
  • Tommy Cockles

DVD[edit]

  • Brian Pern - My Life In Rock

References[edit]

Charlie Day Stand Up Tour 2020

  1. ^ abBevan, Siân (28 October 2008). 'Simon Day - What A Fool Believes'. theskinny.co.uk. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  2. ^'BFI | Film & TV Database | SATURDAY ZOO'. Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on 17 April 2008. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  3. ^'Comedy - Clips from 'Brian Pern''. BBC. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  4. ^'BBC One - Hustle, Series 6, Episode 3'. Bbc.co.uk. 24 January 2010. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  5. ^'Foster's - The Fast Show'. Fosters.co.uk. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  6. ^ abcdDay. Comedy and Error: They Really Were Marvellous Times. Simon & Schuster. ISBN1849830568.
  7. ^'The Simon Day Show'. bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  8. ^'The Life of Rock with Brian Pern'. Radio Times. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  9. ^Jarossi, Robin (14 January 2015). 'Death in Paradise series 4, Kris Marshall PREVIEW'. crimetimepreview.com. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  10. ^Guide, British Comedy. 'King Gary cast and crew credits'. British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  11. ^'Interview: Simon Day, comedian - News - Scotsman.com'. Thescotsman.scotsman.com. 22 June 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  12. ^'Metro'. Retrieved 31 January 2014.

External links[edit]

  • Simon Day on IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Simon_Day&oldid=990153490'




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