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Jack Dee
Date Of Birth: 24/09/1962
Jack Dee: ReadingTrailer for his new book |
More Jack Dee videos |
| Jack Dee: Reading |
| Hecklers |
| Lead Balloon: Library fine |
| Jack Dee Introducing Mistake |
| Jack Dee Introducing Spikey |
| Jack Dee Introducing Fax |
| Rick's Secret |
| Jack Dee Introducing Karma |
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Dee's first public act was an open-mike gig in 1988. He toiled away on the circuit with little success, while holding down menial kitchen jobs. Disillusioned with his lack of progress, he was ready to quit when he took to the stage with a grumpy, 'couldn't care less attiude' which, to his surprised, won over the audience. In that moment he found his voice – and a career. Things really took off in 1991, when he won the British Comedy Award for best stage newcomer as well as a Perrier Award nomination. In February the following year he landed his own, series on Channel 4, setting him on the road to fame. By 1995 he was starring in his own series on ITV. His list of awards to date include two at the 1995 British Comedy Awards, three British Advertising awards for his infamous 'widget' John Smith Bitter commercials in 1997, and the best stand-up gong at the 1997 British Comedy Awards. As well as his comedy work, he has appeared on TV dramas including The Grimleys in 1996; fairground romance, Tunnel of Love in 2004; and The Deputy, where he played a political fixer alongside Warren Clarke, also in 2004. He has also performed in Yasmina Reza's award-winning play Art in the West End. Probably one of his most memorable television appearances was on the first Celebrity Big Brother, in 2001, which he won. In 2004, Jack returned to stand-up on television with Jack Dee: Live At The Apollo featuring stand-up appearances from Joan Rivers, Ross Noble and Ardal O'Hanlon. |
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| TV: 2004: Jack Dee Live At The Apollo. BBC1. |
| TV: 2001: Celebrity Big Brother - which he won |
| TV: 2000: Jack Dee's Full Mountie - from the Montreal Comedy Festival. |
| TV: 2000: Jack Dee's Happy Hour. Buy the Best Of on VHS Best Of |
| TV: 1999: It's Only TV But I Like It. Team captain in this quiz show |
| TV: 1997: Doug Digby in The Grimleys |
| TV: 1997: Jack Dee's Sunday Service. ITV |
| TV: 1996: Jack and Jeremy's Real Lives, six-part Channel 4 series with Jeremy Hardy |
| TV: 1995: Named top TV personality in the British Comedy Awards British Comedy Awards |
| TV: 1995: Jack and Jeremy's Police 4. One-off spoof with Jeremy Hardy |
| TV: 1992-94: The Jack Dee Show. Two series for Channel 4 from the fictional Bohemia Club. |
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| Video: See also stand-up se |
| Video: 1998: Jack Dee Live And Uncut. Buy on video or DVD Buy on video |
| Video: 1998: Jack Dee Live And Uncut. Buy on video or DVD DVD |
| Video: 1992: Just For Laughs. Dee is one of the comics featured on this video from the Montreal Comedy Festival. Buy on VHS Buy on VHS |
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| Stand Up: 2005: Tour. Review Review |
| Stand Up: 2001-2002: Tour, and subsequent video Live At The Apollo. Buy on DVD Buy on DVD |
| Stand Up: 1997: Named top stand-up at the British Comedy Awards British Comedy Awards |
| Stand Up: 1994: Played the London Paladium. Buy on VHS or on audio cassette Buy on VHS |
| Stand Up: 1994: Played the London Paladium. Buy on VHS or on audio cassette audio cassette |
| Stand Up: 1992: Tour, including the Duke Of York's Theatre, London. Buy on VHS and appeared at the Montreal Comedy Featival Buy on VHS |
| Stand Up: 1991: Named best stage newcomer at the British Comedy Awards British Comedy Awards |
| Stand Up: 1986: Started his stand-up career - with an open spot at The Comedy Store The Comedy Store |
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Jack Dee 2012 tour |
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![]() It's fair to say Jack Dee’s reputation precedes him. He only need make sardonic reference to himself as ‘the friendly face of London’ here to keep spreading the sunshine, to get a laugh. ‘Believe it or not I went through a period when I was really quite morose...’ he tells us, to no one’s surprise. It’s a grumpy old man act that probably suits him more now he’s in his fifties than when he started stand-up all those years ago – though, of course, it’s exaggerated for comic effect. He’s more someone who doesn’t suffer fools gladly than an out-and-out grouch, though the cascade of irritants that seems to count as his life gives him plenty of reasons to be cheerless. His listlessness extends to his delivery, too. Ironically, since he was the first host of Live At The Apollo, he is a world apart from the bouncy young things who fill our TV stand-up shows today. Almost motionless in his dapper suit (in a natty Pub Landlord burgundy) and loosened tie, he rumbles though his sizable list of pet peeves summoning up only the energy to raise a sneer or a watery, thin-lipped smile. Some things are easy pickings: the new age healer doing some nonsense with an aura, the 9/11 conspiracy theories who’d truck no argument or the false cheeriness of food labelling. He doesn’t want to engage with this sort of an idiot, and has come up with a new app to avoid them online, that responds automatically to every tweet with a tired: ‘So what?’ It should be the title of the tour. The electrician he called out to fix a dodgy light switch could clearly do no right – you almost feel sorry for him, he wasn’t as feckless as some – but still the way Dee picks apart their encounter is masterful. Even a trip to the Titanic museum gets his goat, as he’s denied the same experience as the youngsters. Dee sometimes rests on his reputation and assumes that our expectation of his dour response is enough. And sometimes – when he complains sarcastically about his teenagers raiding the fridge, for example – he sounds like just like any other middle-aged dad. Yet his daughter’s attitude, so perfectly summed up in an anecdote about her trip to Glastonbury, can only be responded to with weary resignation, and longer stories such as this are more rewarding as he paints a fuller picture. He uses his family experiences as a springboard to a routine about Jesus’s teenage years, which has been done plenty of times before with the same punchlines (possibly first by the great, forgotten John Dowie, though I can’t be sure). The feckless offspring, the neighbour he can’t get on with... his stand-up has some familiar traits from Lead Balloon, the sitcom that’s kept him off the road these past six years. Though he’s been away, he hasn’t entirely rested on his laurels, and there are a couple of segment here that nudge his stand-up into new directions. His encounter with a lost Japanese tourist play with racism - or rather the fear of it – and is intriguingly ambiguous, even if it needs a stronger payoff. More surprising yet is his encore, when he brings out an undersized guitar and demonstrates a hitherto hidden talent for blues music, as sings his way though some of the dead-end jobs he had before comedy. You could almost call it jaunty. Well, at least by comparison.... if this is his midlife crisis, it’s a welcome one. |
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| Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Oct, '12 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Tuesday 5th Jun, '12- Kilkenny Langtons | |
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Sunday 9th Oct, '11- Brighton Dome | |
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Show - Misc live shows - | |
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Mediocrity. If he tried to start in comedy now he'd quickly die on his arse. At least people can go along and "See that man offa the telly". About as entertaining as Paddy McGuinness. OK, slightly better... Ni Tle, May 2013 |
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Has used writers from the off - I refer everyone to Sean Hughes opining that, if these are not your words, get off the fucking stage. Mandy Allan, January 2010 |
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So Jack Dee got a warm welcome in Birmingham but then felt the need to rubbish the whole city in his TV show. Bad strategy - I switched off. Rita, June 2009 |
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Great comedian, but Lead Ballon was a crime gt kincaid, May 2009 |
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First saw him on telly in 1991. A dour sour bloke in an open-necked shirt scowling at the floor and hating everything alive. Now he's too 'Mr Light Entertainer' for my taste. Michael Monkhouse, September 2007 |
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Always makes me laugh out loud - happier every time I see him! edwina attwood, October 2006 |
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I don't think anyone can or ever has come close to how funny this man is, the greatest of all greats Julie, March 2006 |
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Jack encapsulates the cynical, despondent, paranoid and miserable bastard that is the Englishman. I was hooked from the moment he sneered at the gift once given to the Elephant Man - a vanity set. Love you, NikkiB, January 2006 |
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Say what...? The comedy year in quotes 30/12/2002 Permanent link
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Where can I see Jack Dee next?
Recommended| Sunday 19th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Crewe Lyceum Theatre |
| Prices: | Call for prices |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 20:00 - Friday 24th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Torquay Princess Theatre |
| Prices: | £22 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 20:00 - Sunday 26th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Bristol Hippodrome |
| Prices: | £22 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 20:00 - Wednesday 29th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Guildford G Live |
| Prices: | £22 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 20:00 - Thursday 30th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Aylesbury Waterside Theatre |
| Prices: | £21 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| Friday 31st May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Jersey Fort Regent Leisure Centre |
| Prices: | Call for prices |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 20:00 - Tuesday 4th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Guildford G Live |
| Prices: | £22 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 19:30 - Wednesday 5th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Leeds Grand Theatre & Opera House |
| Prices: | £26 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |
Recommended| 19:30 - Thursday 6th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Leeds Grand Theatre & Opera House |
| Prices: | £26 |
| Comics: | Jack Dee |

Jack Dee: Live Stand-Up Collection 2012
Live at the London Palladium,Live and Uncut, Live at the Apollo, Live Again and The Best of Jack Dee's Happy Hour
DVD (2011):
Lead Balloon Series 4
DVD (2011):
Lead Balloon Series 3
DVD (2010):
Channel 4's Comedy Gala
Book (2009):
Thanks For Nothing, by Jack Dee
Memoirs
DVD (2008):
Lead Balloon Series 2
DVD (2007):
Lead Balloon Series 1




