Comedians (R)
Show:
Retired circuit comics
Circuit comics
Stars
Legends
Actors
Writers
Producers
Comic Details

Richard Ayoade

+
Biography

Ayoade, the Cambridge-educated son of a Nigerian father and Swedish mother, was briefly a stand-up on the London circuit before attracting attention in the Perrier-winning Garth Marenghi spoof horror shows.

With fellow ex-Footlighter Matthew Holness, he co-wrote the Perrier nominated Edinburgh show Garth Marenghi's Fright Knight, the sequel of which, Garth Marenghi's Netherhed, won him the award in 2001. It transferred to Channel 4, where it became a cult hit; its DVD becoming a bestseller.

The pair landed a follow-up, a six-part chat show featuring Ayoade’s urbane publisher character at home in his glamorous bachelor pad: Man To Man With Dean Learner.

Ayoade was also part of Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding's original Mighty Boosh cast, playing villain Dixon Bainbridge. However, by this time it came to air, he was under contract by Channel 4 and was only able to act in the pilot. He since returned to play the shaman Saboo in the show's second series.

In 2005, he played the role of Ned Shanks in Chris Morris' and Charlie Brooker's sitcom about trendy media types, Nathan Barley

The following year he played the technically brilliant but socially awkward Moss in Channel 4's The IT Crowd; and also landed the role when it was remade as an American TV pilot.

Ayoade also directed, co-wrote and co-starred (with Matt Berry) in BBC Three’s AD/BC: A Rock Opera.

+
Reviews

Submarine
Live Review

Submarine

If you only know Richard Ayoade as the nutty, uber-geeky, perennial man-child Moss from the IT Crowd, his directorial debut will come as a surprise… but a most welcome one.

Submarine is a low-key coming-of-age comedy-drama set in Eighties retrospect against the grimly melancholic pallor of an anonymous industrial South Wales town. Battle: Los Angeles, it ain’t. What it is, however, is a beautifully observed, quirkily funny and touchingly sweet reminiscence about the awkwardness of first love.

Ayoade has previously cut his directorial teeth with music videos, and the self-centred sensibilities of heartfelt indie-band introspection are writ large here, bolstered by the languorous soundtrack created by Alex Turner from the Arctic Monkeys.

It captures beautifully the oxymoronic adolescent jumble of bleak know-it-all certainties and crippling insecurities rattling around the head of central character, Oliver Tate. A social outsider, he imagines himself dead, but only to fantasise about how crippled by grief his desolate schoolmates would be. In truth, he is so detached that he has few friends – a solitary submarine, cruising unnoticed beneath everyone else’s gaze is the titular metaphor – so becomes a reluctant bully in an attempt to fit in and impress the aloof Jordana Bevan.

They do, indeed, form a suitably uncomfortable relationship; Oliver seeing it unfold through the lens of the imaginary film crew recording his life – an idea used sparingly, but just enough for some wry in-jokes from Ayoade. And if you are going to have your life on film, this offbeat comedian is the man to do it. He, and cinematographer Erik Wilson, can make a chemical plant look romantic; while motifs such as Jordan’s red coat – surely a cinematic homage -  put a strong visual stamp on proceedings.

At home, things are no better for Oliver, as his drab parents, Jill and Lloyd, a former Open University lecturer, limp through a repressed, lifeless marriage until their predictable routine becomes threatened by the arrival of one of Jill’s old flames, the appallingly self-important lifestyle coach – and wannabe ninja –  Graham. Such characters – and a few set-pieces such as an attempted pet poisoning – are the stuff of sitcom, but Ayoade depicts them all with such subdued realism, it ensures this is a sweet comedy of gauche behaviour, not broad slapstick.

Paddy Considine plays the preposterous Graham with perfect comic pitch and hilarious mullet, but it is the younger stars who undoubtedly carry this impeccably observed film. As Oliver, Craig Roberts is emotionally vacant, yet somehow compelling, while as the unromantic, borderline-pyromaniac teenage femme fatale Jordana, Yasmin Paige is a revelation.

The quirks of the characters, the knowing, unsentimental direction and – most of all, the warm charm that pervades every scene means that Submarine certainly reaches hidden depths. Especially for those who remember the crippling social discomfort of adolescence – rather than those still suffering it.\r\n

Date of live review: Friday 18th Mar, '11
Review by Steve Bennett
Bunny And The Bull
Bunny And The Bull

Show - Film -
Richard Ayoade : Original Review
Richard Ayoade : Original Review

Tuesday 1st Aug, '00-
Garth Marenghi's Fright Knight
Garth Marenghi's Fright Knight

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2000 -
Garth Marenghi's Netherhead
Garth Marenghi's Netherhead

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2001 -
+
Comments

Skip to page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

Too funny. Absolutely quality. Everything about Darkplace is pure genius, especially the directing. IT Crowd isn't really my thing, but the in eps I have seen - Moss has been funniest.

Michael, April 2006


Amazing, absolutely amazing! There's no one else as funny as Richard, there really isn't.

Sara, March 2006


Delightfully literall as Moss, painfully funny as Saboo (bearded shaman) in The Mighty Boosh

Frances, March 2006


Both Nathan Barley and IT Crowd, its Marmite TV, you either love it or hate it. I thought it was class and has provided a wealth of funny lines. And this guy was very very good! Keep it Foolish...

Tim Smith, March 2006


He has got the best comedy voice in the world. Everything he does just cracks me up. especially when he moves around like a Thunderbird on acid.

Morag, March 2006


Richard is one of the funniest actors I have seen. His expressions and mannerisms are hilarious. I think he is brilliant and I hope we see much more of him in future

Aofie, February 2006


Such a funny man. Love him to bits. Very clever comedian. He is a genius.

Jemima, February 2006


Just loved him as 'Ned' in Nathan Barley. "What are you doing Ashcroft?...you're going down!"

Rob, February 2006


Skip to page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5



Have your say:
:
:
:
 
+
News
Richard Ayoade
Richard Ayoade's RSS Feeds

Represented by:
Claire Nightingale
PBJ Management
22 Rathbone Street,
London
W1T 2LA
contact by email
Office: 020 7287 1112

Products
DVD (2009):
IT Crowd Series 3
DVD (2007):
Man To Man With Dean Learner
DVD (2006):
The IT Crowd. Series 1
Complete
DVD (2006):
Garth Marenghi's Darkplace
Complete series

Richard Ayoade's Shows: