Paddy Lennox
Paddy McGuinness
Padraig Ryan
Pam Ford
Papa CJ
Pappy's
Parrot
Pat Burtscher
Pat Cahill
Pat Condell
Patrick Kielty
Patrick Lappin
Patrick McDonnell
Patrick Monahan
Paul B Edwards
Paul Betney
Paul Byrne
Paul Chowdhry
Paul F Taylor
Paul Foot
Paul Harry Allen
Paul Kerensa
Paul Laight
Paul Langton
Paul McCaffrey
Paul Merton
Paul Pirie
Paul Provenza
Paul Revill
Paul Ricketts
Paul Savage
Paul Sinha
Paul T Eyres
Paul Thorne
Paul Tonkinson
Paul Zenon
Paul Zerdin
Pearse James
Persephone Lewin
Pete Beckley
Pete Cain
Pete Dobbing
Pete Firman
Pete Gold
Pete Johansson
Pete Jonas
Pete Otway
Pete Smith
Peter Brush
Peter Buckley Hill
Peter Cook
Peter Kay
Peter McCole
Peter Searles
Peter Serafinowicz
Peter von Natzmer
Phil Buckley
Phil Butler
Phil Cool
Phil Davey
Phil Ellis
Phil Hammond
Phil James
Phil Kay
Phil Klein
Phil Nichol
Phil Walker
Phil Wang
Phil Zimmerman
Philip Wilson
Phill Jupitus
Pierre Hollins
Pippa Evans
PJ Gallagher
Pommy Johnson
Prince Abdi
Priorite A Gauche
Peter Kay
Date Of Birth: 02/07/1973
Dad trapped his ballsFrom his Tour That Didn't Tour DVD |
More Peter Kay videos |
| Dad trapped his balls |
| Dog Show |
| On Granada Reports |
CV |
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| Books: 2003: Phoenix Nights: The Scripts Buy Buy |
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| TV: 2004: Max & Paddy's Road To Nowhere. C4 Phoenix Nights spin-off. Won him a Rose d'Or international award for best sitcom actor. Buy on DVD Buy on DVD |
| TV: 2004: Coronation Street, cameo as brewery drayman Eric Garside. Buy the episodes on DVD Buy the episodes on DVD |
| TV: 2001-2: Phoenix Nights. C4 series based on the first episode of That Peter Kay Thing, set in a northern club. Buy series one or series two on DVD series one |
| TV: 2001-2: Phoenix Nights. C4 series based on the first episode of That Peter Kay Thing, set in a northern club. Buy series one or series two on DVD series two |
| TV: 2000: That Peter Kay Thing. Six-part Channel 4 series, each telling a different character's story. Won best new TV comedy at the British Comedy Awards. Buy on DVD. British Comedy Awards |
| TV: 2000: That Peter Kay Thing. Six-part Channel 4 series, each telling a different character's story. Won best new TV comedy at the British Comedy Awards. Buy on DVD. Buy on DVD. |
| TV: 1998: The Services. One-off C4 special. |
| TV: 1996: Two Minutes. Unaired half-hour show in which Kay plays a getaway driver. Buy on DVD Buy on DVD |
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| Video: 2005: Max And Paddy's Power Of Two. Fitness video Buy on DVD. Buy on DVD. |
| Video: 2005: Live At The Manchester Arena Buy on DVD. Buy on DVD. |
| Video: 2005: Driven To Distraction: The Getaway Driver and three Coronation Street Episodes Buy on DVD. Buy on DVD. |
| Video: 2003: Live From Bolton Albert Halls. Buy on video or DVD. video |
| Video: 2003: Live From Bolton Albert Halls. Buy on video or DVD. DVD |
| Video: 2001: Live From The Top Of The Tower. Buy on video or DVD. video |
| Video: 2001: Live From The Top Of The Tower. Buy on video or DVD. DVD |
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| Stand Up: 2002: British tour Mum Wants A Bungalow. |
| Stand Up: 1998: Nominated for the Perrier award. Perrier award |
| Stand Up: 1997: Won So You Think You're Funny; finalist in the BBC New Comedy Awards So You Think You're Funny |
| Stand Up: 1997: Won So You Think You're Funny; finalist in the BBC New Comedy Awards BBC New Comedy Awards |
| Stand Up: 1996: Winner of City Life Comedian Of The Year title. City Life Comedian Of The Year |
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| Audio / CD: 2005: The Best Of... So Far. Buy on CD Buy on CD |
| Audio / CD: 2001: Live At Bolton Albert Halls. Buy on CD uy on CD |
| Audio / CD: 2001: Live From The Top Of The Tower. Buy on cassette. cassette |
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Peter Kay: The Tour That Doesn't Tour Tour |
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![]() Peter Kay is a great entertainer, but a mediocre comic. After seven years away, he’s back with the same brand of straightforward home-spun observations he’s always peddled, although they didn’t seem to make quite the same connection with the audience as they once did. Yet by pulling out all the pyrotechnics for a full-on rock and roll finale, he ensured a near-unanimous standing ovation from a sold-out arena. That’s unarguable… and why this comeback tour will gross around £26million in ticket sales alone, let alone the proceeds from the inevitable DVD and well-stocked merchandise stand. The products on offer there tell their own story. You can still get ‘garlic bread’ T-shirts should you wish, indicating this show isn’t going to generate many new catchphases of its own. Where once he talked about t’internet, now he mentions th’iPod. I’m guessing that didn’t take the full seven years to write. In fact, much of the writing is pretty lazy. In a long section about TV, he slags off Grand Designs, Supernanny, Secret Millionaire, Embarrassing Bodies, How To Look Good Naked and Come Dine With Me. Looks like he couldn’t even press the remote to change the channel off No 4. The comments he makes are pretty much what anyone would come up with if asked to describe the show. For instance, Come Dine With Me ‘isn’t a cookery show, it’s all about nosy bastards’ or Supernanny Jo Frost ‘just states the obvious’. Which is rich from someone who’s made a fortune doing just that. His cosy nostalgia is rife here, as expected, and while he’s describing things we can all relate to, there’s little spin on it. Remember how you used to have to put the immersion on hours before taking a bath? Or how you’d have Imperial Leather soap for special occasions till it was worn down to just the label. Yes, I do remember – but comedy should surely be more than a good memory, laced with trademarks. Very rarely would Kay recount something specific to him, such as witnessing his dad trap his testicles in a sun lounger, or the time he took an ill-advised swig of Coke from a friend. These were by far the best moments – nice little anecdotes skilfully told, rather than simply repeating shared experiences – and I yearned for more. The format of the evening, in which we spend a lot of time looking at an empty stage, makes it difficult for Kay to build up momentum. In three hours, he’s on stage for 80 minutes, with two long breaks, one midway through the set and one after opening act Rick Astley sets a cruise-ship lounge atmosphere with a songs including a hideous medley of Manchester acts including New Order, Oasis and – shudder – the Smiths. But Astley encompasses everything that also epitomises Kay: a ‘guilty pleasure’, combining nostalgia and music. There’s no disguising the fact Kay would rather have been a pop star – as his X-Factor spoof and countless kitsch charity covers prove – though he’d probably be almost as happy running a mobile disco in the Bolton area. His love of music manifests itself in the second half, firstly when he expresses envy for the Guitar Hero generation when he had to make do with imagining his father’s spade to be his axe; and secondly in his old trick of playing song samples from his Walkman, and describing how he misheard the lyrics. Well, I say ‘he’. These mondegreens, as they are called, are widely available on the internet. So when he suggests a Sister Sledge actually sing ‘just let me staple the vicar’ in We Are Family, and brings the house down with it, it’s a observation you can grab from Google. Maybe it doesn’t matter – his audience love them even more than they love the old pub gags with which he starts his show, as always. He’s giving the what he wanted. The encore in which he lives out his rock-star fantasy is a perfect example of this. Of course it’s a brilliant showstopper, because he’s using the music of Queen, and how can that not get an elated reaction? But still there’s still a curmudgeonly argument that wants to urge him: ‘If you want to be a musician, at least learn to play a goddamn instrument.’ However the 750,000 people due to see him on this tour can’t be wrong. Can they?
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| Date of live review: Wednesday 28th Apr, '10 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2002 - | |
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Show - Tour - | |
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Christmas is coming; Peter Kay is getting fat; he's flogging another DVD; full of material that is now old hat! Dan Damon, November 2007 |
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Very funny comedian. I hate people who go around copying his famous lines like "garlic bread" and think that makes them a comedian, and the problem is people laugh when someone says it. I wish Peter Kay would stop merchandising himself and get to some proper comedy again. Uilliame, June 2007 |
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Peter Kay is amazing and he makes me laugh more than anyone else! His comedy is so observant and is funny because its so real! Everyone has a granny or aunty like the ones he describes and everyone can relate to him! One of the greats, a truly divine stand up of our generation! Emz, April 2007 |
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Awful, tirsome, regressive, boring, unimaginative, bubble gum. Arm wrestling a sleeping two year old is more challenging Jack Ashcroft, February 2007 |
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I laughed on every page! Iwas going in fo an operation and decided to start to read the book the night before. Glad I did, it cheered me up no end. Back from the op and the hospital now (*phew} and i finished the book tonight. Classic petra, January 2007 |
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Peter Kay cracks me up, I have got all of his DVDs and no matter how many times I have watched them I still find him hilarious, I even have all of Phoenix Nights DVDs too. Laura 14yr, January 2007 |
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I broke my collarbone slipping on a dogturd on the way back from a funeral and it was the 2nd most depressing day of my life. The most depressing was the day Peter Kay decided to become a comedian as that has caused me far more pain Mark, Wirral, January 2007 |
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I was once a massive Kay fan, I've been watching him since 1997 - which made me extremely upset when I went to see him on the "my mum wants a bungalow" tour. Just like on the DVD you will see that it is the same gags from the shows he played in 97, re used to a new crowd. I wouldn't have minded if it was one or two - but the entire set was recycled. Since I have seen numerous television interviews, excerpts from televsion and the release of more merchandise, and found that they are also re-issues of old material. To be honest, Kay has the ability with his delivery to be one of the world's true greats, but he lets himself down by using old material and of course, if you didn't know, writers for his act. It upsets me to see him hit such acclaim without actually being worthy of it, when such comedians like Adam Hills are over looked. It would be a refreshing change to see another Jack dee break through but with Kay as king it might be a long time. Pea Tear Griffin, September 2006 |
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Peter Kay to host Royal Variety Show Minchin, Davies and Manford on the bill 16/11/2011 Permanent link
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The Book That’s More Than Just A Book Book by Peter Kay Book review by Steve Bennett 27/09/2011 Permanent link
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Phoenix Nights: The movie? Peter Kay says script is ready, and producers are keen 16/09/2011 Permanent link
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Barking
Channel 4 sketch series from 1998
DVD (2011):
Peter Kay Live: The Tour That Didn't Tour Tour
Book (2009):
Peter Kay: Saturday Night Peter
More memoirs
DVD (2009):
Britain’s Got the Pop Factor and Possibly a New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly o
DVD (2008):
Peter Kay's Special Kay
Collection of interviews, guest appearances adverts & early syand-up
DVD (2007):
Peter Kay: The Early Years - Unofficial
Early interview
DVD (2007):
Peter Kay: Stand Up UKay
Compilation disc
DVD (2006):
Phoenix Nights
Box set
DVD (2006):
Max And Paddy
Box set
Book (2006):
The Sound Of Laughter, by Peter Kay
Memoirs






