Alan Carr

Alan Carr

Date of birth: 14-07-1976
Alan Carr, the son of football manager Graham was born in Weymouth and grew up in Northampton and Blackpool.

He studied drama and theatre studies at Middlesex University, after which he took on a series of dead-end jobs, from toilet cleaner to call-centre worker, before turning his hand to stand-up.

In 2001, he won the BBC New Comedy Award and the following year made his solo Edinburgh debut, returning in 2003 and 2005, where he came to the attention of Channel 4 executives looking for new presenters for The Friday Night project.

He has co-hosted the show (which later moved to Sundays) with Justin Lee Collins since 2006, and in 2008 landed his own Channel 4 game show, Alan Carr’s Celebrity Ding Dong.

He has also appeared on BBC One's Live At The Apollo, and was in the line up for the 2005 Royal Variety Performance. Guest appearances include FAQ U, 8 Out of 10 Cats, Countdown's dictionary corner and Never Mind The Buzzcocks

In 2007, he embarked on a major UK tour, Tooth Fairy Live, the DVD of which was a Christmas bestseller; and in 2008 his autobiography Look Who It Is! was published by HarperCollins.

Described as 'the spiritual son of Frankie Howerd, Carr was named best live stand-up at the 2007 British Comedy Awards and best comedy entertainment performer the following year. He was named circuit comic of the year in the 2005 North West Comedy Awards and nominated for best theatre tour in the 2008 Chortle awards.

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Changing Ends

Review of Alan Carr's new autobiographical ITVX sitcom

Changing Ends beams with warmth despite – or more likely because of – the endemic 1980s homophobia which forms its backdrop. Dropped into this world, like a naive alien, is a camp, buck-toothed, socially awkward child, misunderstood by almost everyone and ostracised by most of them.

Fortunately, we know there’s a happy ending since that maladroit outsider grew up to be Alan Carr. Since he now identifies as a national treasure, every one of those quirks that made him so different has been converted into a career asset.

His new autobiographical comedy, which the comedian co-wrote with Two Doors Down’s Simon Carlyle, plays every idiosyncrasy for laughs, though one suspects the reality might not have been so rosy. In the series, the adult Carr frequently appears to offer perspective – and many a waspish comment – as a reassurance that everything worked out in the end, echoing the narrative device previously used by the likes of The Wonder Years, Everybody Hates Chris and Liam Williams’ Ladhood.

Carr is not the star of the show, however. Oliver Savell is. The engaging actor who plays the young Carr has captured his every odd mannerism – the way he runs, to use the word loosely, is hilarious in itself – while exuding the perfect mix of self-confidence and vulnerability that makes the hugely empathetic character work. The young Alan is happy enough in his world but also wants to fit in – even though he doesn’t know how, and frankly never will.

That’s represented in the opening scene when he calls round to call on his friend Charlie (Rourke Mooney) – only for his mother (a wonderfully spiteful Gabby Best) to send him away, clearly afraid that Alan’s probable homosexuality might somehow infect her son. 

Alan has an ally in his sympathetic mum Christine (Nancy Sullivan), while his dad Graham (Shaun Dooley) is bemused. As manager of 4th Division Northampton Town FC, as Carr’s real father was, he comes from a world where masculinity is clearly and very narrowly defined. Young Alan tries to muster some enthusiasm for football, thinking it might help him become a ‘real boy’ and find acceptance… though, of course, it is all in vain, given his abject terror of coming anywhere near the ball.

‘Keep it light’ is the watchword, and every scene is played for laughs, with young Alan living his best life, regardless of the bigotry he’s more confused than hurt by. He knows he’s not normal – however that is defined – but somehow accepts with a wisdom beyond his years that that’s everyone else’s problem, not his own.

Likewise, the adult Carr has injected a good level of self-deprecating wit that takes ownership of all his peculiarities, admitting, for example, to ‘the eyesight of a mole and the voice of an elderly lady’.

Meanwhile, director Dave Lambert and his team have perfectly evoked the atmosphere of lower-middle-class suburbia, right down to the plastic pop-up personal phone directory or the artwork of a sailing ship made from string and nails. And there’s a cracking soundtrack playing unobtrusively beneath all this. 

All of which means Changing End has made a clear success of turning 1980s bigotry into a funny, feelgood half-hour. And it will make a star of young Savell, more than likely.  

• All six episodes of Changing Ends are streaming on ITVX from today.

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Published: 1 Jun 2023

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Agent

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