Al Murray

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Al Murray
Born 10 May 1968 (1968-05-10) (age 40)
Stewkley, Buckinghamshire, England

Alastair James Hay "Al" Murray (born 10 May 1968), is a British comedian best known for his stand-up persona, "The Pub Landlord," a stereotypical xenophobic public house licensee, and indeed earlier in his career he performed in pubs as though it were genuinely his 'gaff'.

In 2003, he was listed in The Observer as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy and in 2007 he was voted number sixteen on Channel 4's hundred greatest stand-ups.[1]

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Background

Born in Stewkley, Buckinghamshire, the son of Ingram Bernard Hay Murray and his wife Juliet Anne Thackeray Ritchie, through whom he is a great-great-great-great-grandson of William Makepeace Thackeray, his grandfather was diplomat Sir Ralph Murray, a pre-war BBC Overseas Correspondent and later ambassador who during WW II worked in a British propaganda unit called the Political Warfare Establishment.[2] Murray attended Bedford School and is a graduate of St Edmund Hall, Oxford, where he studied history. There he performed in the elite comedy group, the Oxford Revue.[3]

[edit] Career

Murray has toured with other comedians including Harry Hill, Jim Tavaré and Frank Skinner. He won the Perrier Award at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1999, after being nominated in 1996, 1997 and 1998.[4] He started out with an act that involved sound-effect impressions, including of guns, animals and a particularly impressive car boot; a combination that prompted an equal number of plaudits for vocal skill and complaints of tastelessness.

[edit] The Pub Landlord

The Pub Landlord is a stereotypical working class British nationalist with a dislike for anything "un-British". He has a particular dislike of Germans and the French; he will challenge the audience to name any country in the world before producing some plausible instance of Britain bettering it. Catchphrases include "All hail to the ale!", "...beautiful British name!", "Time-waster!", "You DISGUST me!", "Pint for the fella... Glass of white wine/ fruit-based drink for the lady!", "The Point is this..." "Where would we be without rules? : France! and where would we be with too many rules?: Germany!", "Is your dad proud of you, son? He's never said so, has he?" and "I was never confused".

Murray's background in the British establishment (see above) contrasts with The Pub Landlord's working class background, and despite his character's hatred of the French and the Germans he speaks both languages fluently, as is frequently demonstrated on his shows, and indeed he is partly of aristocratic Austrian descent.

The character first appeared in 1994 when Murray was the tour support act for Harry Hill[3] (Murray cut his TV teeth on Hill's TV show playing his 'big brother Alan': "If it's too hard, I can't understand it!"), and subsequently featured in a short film, Pub Fiction (1995). Murray's theatre show with the pub landlord character My Gaff, My Rules was short-listed for an Laurence Olivier Award in 2002,[5] and he has also appeared in character as the central focus of the television series Time Gentlemen Please, as well as a number of other television appearances, including the An Audience with... strand. Subsequent theatre tours, ...A Glass of White Wine for the Lady (another catchphrase) and Giving it Both Barrels also ran to critical acclaim. When asked about the sitcom during live shows, in character as the Pub Landlord, Murray claims to be unhappy with the television series, a joke some have taken literally.

A quiz show, Fact Hunt presented by Murray as the Pub Landlord and based on the fictional quiz machine of the same name from Time Gentlemen Please was shown on late-night ITV in 2005.[6]

His chat show Al Murray's Happy Hour began airing 13 January 2007 on ITV and has just done the second series. It was on this show where, on the last episode of the series, he sang a song called It Was Our Idea with Terry Venables.[7]

[edit] Other work

In 2004, Murray appeared as a contestant in the first series of Hell's Kitchen, Gordon Ramsay's cookery based reality show on ITV, and in 2005 appeared as a contestant on Comic Relief does Fame Academy on BBC One.[8] From January 2006, Murray filled in for Tim Lovejoy on Virgin Radio, and broadcast his final show on 1 February 2007.[9]

Murray presented Al Murray's Road to Berlin on the Discovery Channel. This was a series about the last phase of World War II, taking him from the beaches of Normandy, through Arnhem and up the Rhine, ending in Berlin. In the series he drove around in a restored Willys Jeep, and interviewed survivors from both sides of the war. In the episode about Operation Market Garden he parachuted, together with veterans, from a plane, to commemorate the battle.[10][11]

[edit] Release List

  • Time Gentlemen Please (2000)
  • My Gaff, My Rules (2003)
  • ...and a Glass of White Wine for the Lady! (2004)
  • Giving It Both Barrels (2006)
  • Live at the Palladium (2007)

[edit] References

  1. ^ The A-Z of laughter. Guardian Unlimited. The Guardian. Retrieved on 2006-12-27.
  2. ^ Al Murray's Biography. Chortle. Retrieved on 2006-12-27.
  3. ^ a b Al Murray. BBC Comedy. BBC. Retrieved on 2006-12-27.
  4. ^ Perrier Comedy Awards. Retrieved on 2006-12-27.
  5. ^ 2001-2002 26th Laurence Olivier Awards. LA Times. Retrieved on 2006-12-27.
  6. ^ Pints mean prizes. Chortle. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  7. ^ When Harry met Murray. The Times Online. The Times. Retrieved on 2007-01-07.
  8. ^ 60 SECONDS: Al Murray. Metro (Associated Metro Limited). Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  9. ^ Al Murray: Time Gentlemen Please. Virgin Radio. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  10. ^ Landlord pulls in stars. Manchester Evening News. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  11. ^ Putting the Al in altitude. Chortle. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.

[edit] External links