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Eddie Izzard

 
Artist: Eddie Izzard
Eddie Izzard

Similar Artists:

David Cross, Baddiel & Skinner, Janeane Garofalo, Denis Leary, Henry Rollins, Richard Pryor, George Carlin
  • Born: February 07, 1962, Aden, Yemen
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Comedy
  • Instrument: Producer, Main Performer, Performer
  • Representative Albums: "Glorious," "Unrepeatable," "Dress to Kill"

Biography

The London Sunday Times has called him "the greatest British stand-up comedian of his generation" and the entity of Eddie Izzard is worthy of such praise. This comedian, actor and transvestite has bewitched the world of comedy into a kitschy, campy and cunning mix while adding a bit of British flair to American humor and it's brilliant.

Born in 1962 to an accountant father and a mother who was a nurse, Izzard spent his early childhood in Yemen. Both of his parents worked at the British Petroleum refinery in Aden, but they moved to Bangor, Ireland before Izzard turned five. Time spent in Northern Ireland were the happiest of times for him, but another household upheaval to Skewen, South Wales changed all that. Izzard's mum died of cancer when he was just six, and he and his brother were sent to boarding school quickly thereafter. Such experiences would ultimately shape Izzard's charming, but crass persona.

Izzard participated in various stage plays and skits throughout his early childhood and teenage years. At age seven, he realized that performing on stage in front of an amazing crowd was what he wanted out of life. In 1980, Izzard landed at Sheffield University for an Accounting and Financial Management with Mathematics degree, but comedy was fueling his fire. He spent the next year and half writing and acting in various university comedy shows, landing a top gig at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. By early 1984, Izzard left college, moved to London and performed street side shows with a friend in Covent Garden and figured himself out. He came out a year later. Eddie Izzard was a transvestite.

In three years time, Izzard was hot on the London Club circuit and by 1993, he was performing shows in the West End. He'd performed his first show in a dress in 1992 and was enjoying his stint in makeup. By the time his one-man shows like Unrepeatable, Definite Article, and Glorious hit the States in the mid-1990s, Izzard was already a bonafide star in his native England. His 1998 HBO comedy special and mini-American tour for Dress To Kill was a critical hit in the US and his 2000 production of Circle landed him sold out dates across the county. Three Emmy nominations followed, earning Circle two awards for "Outstanding Writing In A Variety, Music Or Comedy Program" and "Outstanding Individual Performance In A Variety or Comedy Program."

With Emmys aside, Izzard's place on stage and on screen was in full effect by the early 1990s. He had the lead spot in the David Mamet drama The Cryptogram in 1994 and starring roles in 900 Oneonta and Edward II. In 1996, Izzard landed his first movie role in The Secret Agent with Robin Williams. Appearances in Velvet Goldmine, Shadow of the Vampire, The Cat's Meow and All The Queen's Men with Friends star Matt LeBlanc earned Izzard a prime spot among the new millennium mainstream.

Dress To Kill was issued on DVD on Anti/Epitaph in October 2002, marking Izzard's first video release in the US. His previous five performances (including Dress To Kill) were already out on video in the UK, but Izzard wanted to give something back to the American fans. His Broadway performance in Peter Nichols' A Day in the Death of Joe Egg earned him a Tony nomination for "Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play" in May 2003. Stateside dates followed in the fall. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide
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Actor: Eddie Izzard
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  • Born: Feb 07, 1962
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: Shadow of the Vampire, Velvet Goldmine, The Cat's Meow
  • First Major Screen Credit: Eddie Izzard: Unrepeatable (1994)

Biography

An enormously popular British comedian known as much for his transvestitism as he is for his excoriating social observations, Eddie Izzard is one of the most gleefully unpredictable -- to say nothing of contradictory -- performers to have sabotaged the stage and screen during the late 20th century.

Born in Yemen on February 7, 1962, Izzard grew up in Wales and Northern Ireland. Following his mother's death when he was six, Izzard found some degree of solace in comedy, particularly the works of Monty Python, Steve Martin, Richard Pryor, and the early Benny Hill. He began doing stand-up at college and, after being ingloriously kicked out of school, he took his act to the streets. Izzard refined his material -- which largely revolved around personal experiences, politics, and social issues -- over the next decade, and in the early '90s, he finally began earning some measure of recognition. His stand-up work brought him British Comedy Awards in 1993 and 1996, and with popular and critical approval thus in hand, Izzard began appearing in films.

Izzard's supporting roles in The Avengers and Todd Haynes' Velvet Goldmine (both 1998) were concurrent with his first internationally acclaimed tour, Dress to Kill. The tour helped to establish him on both sides of the Atlantic, allowing the comedian to begin the new century on an exceptionally positive note. 2000 saw him co-starring in Shadow of the Vampire, a fictional depiction of the filming of the 1922 Nosferatu; the film's cast also included John Malkovich, Willem Dafoe, and Stephen Fry.

Izzard continued his highly successful stand-up appearances while maintaining a presence in movies. He played Charlie Chaplin in Peter Bogdanovich's The Cat's Meow, attempted to steal a couple of scenes from the crew in Ocean's Twelve, appeared in Ivan Reitman's My Super Ex-Girlfriend, and offered his vocal talents to the animated film The Wild. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Eddie Izzard
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Eddie Izzard
EddieIzzard.jpg
Izzard performing at the Lyric Theatre, December 2, 2008
Birth name Edward John Izzard
Born 7 February 1962 (1962-02-07) (age 47)
Aden, Yemen
Medium stand-up, television, film
Nationality British
Years active 1987 – present
Genres Improvisational comedy, Surreal humour
Subject(s) world history, pop culture, religion, language, human sexuality
Influences Monty Python, Billy Connolly, Lenny Bruce, Bill Hicks, Steve Martin, Richard Pryor, George Carlin, The Goons, Spike Milligan
Influenced Harry Hill, Dara O'Briain, Demetri Martin
Notable works and roles Live at the Ambassadors

Definite Article
Dress to Kill
Glorious
Circle
Lenny Bruce in Lenny
Wayne Malloy/Doug Rich in The Riches
Roman Nagel in Ocean's Thirteen
Mr. Kite in Across the Universe

Website http://www.eddieizzard.com/
Emmy Awards
Individual Performance In A Variety Or Music Program

2000 Dress to Kill
Writing In A Variety, Music Or Comedy Program
2000 Dress to Kill

British Comedy Awards
Top Stand-up

1993 Live at the Ambassadors
Best Stand-up
1996 Definite Article

Edward John "Eddie" Izzard (born 7 February 1962) is a two-time Emmy-winning British stand-up comedian and actor.[1] His comedy style is expressed in rambling, whimsical monologue and self-referential pantomime. Izzard's works include standup sets Definite Article, Dress to Kill and a starring role in the television series The Riches as Wayne Malloy. He is also known for his transvestism.[2]

Contents

Early life and career

Izzard was born in Aden, Yemen, the youngest son of British parents Dorothy Ella, a midwife and nurse, and Harold John Izzard, an accountant who was working in Aden with British Petroleum.[3][4] A year after his birth, Izzard's family moved to Bangor in Northern Ireland [5] and lived there until Eddie was five. The family then moved to Wales. Eddie's mother became ill and died of cancer in March 1968, when Izzard was only 6 and his brother Mark was 8. After an education at St Bede's Preparatory School and at Eastbourne College, he began to toy with stand-up at the University of Sheffield with partner and friend Rob Ballard. After being ingloriously kicked off his accountancy degree course, he took his act into the streets. Having spent a great deal of the 1980s working as a street performer in Europe and the United States, Izzard moved his act into the stand-up comedy venues of Britain, first appearing at The Comedy Store in London in 1987. He refined his material throughout the '80s, and in the early '90s he finally began earning some measure of recognition, though not in the guise in which he would later become famous.

Success as a comedian

His stand-up work brought him British Comedy Awards in 1993 (for Live at the Ambassadors), a part in "Filth" which was a stand up presentation by left-wing sympathetic comedians in aid of raising money for the Terence Higgins Trust in 1994, and 1996 (for Definite Article). After the British leg of the tour, he took Definite Article to major cities outside the UK including a successful stint in New York City. However, his U.S. breakthrough did not really come until 1999, when Dress to Kill was shown on the American television channel HBO, about a year or so after he performed the show on tour in the U.S., the U.K. and France (that same year, he played a supporting role in the movie Mystery Men). Suddenly, America was aware of Izzard, and the show went on to earn him two Emmy Awards in 2000 (for performance and writing). However, he only rarely performs his stand-up act on television, as he says it uses up material at too high a rate whereas stage material can be continually re-used in front of different audiences for several months.

In 2005, Izzard provided the voiceover (again, in his unique 'rambling' style) for the British government's series of television advertisements promoting recycling. The tagline of the ads was "Recycle. The possibilities are endless!"

In January 2006, the U.S. television network FX announced the production of a new drama series called The Riches (formerly Low Life). Izzard and British actress Minnie Driver star as a married couple, Wayne and Dahlia Malloy, who have been part of a caravan of con-artist Irish travellers swindling their way across the U.S. with their children. After finding another family killed in a car accident, the Malloys assume their identities and start a new life as law-abiding suburbanites in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The youngest son has shown a preference for wearing girls' clothing, leading to some speculation that the role was based upon Izzard's experiences. Izzard has stated in several interviews that the character of Sam had been given transvestite tendencies long before he was cast as Wayne Malloy, but he has contributed his perspective to keep the character believable.

Izzard also performed with Scottish musician Midge Ure at Live8 in Edinburgh, Scotland. He played the piano accompaniment for the song "Vienna".

Theatrical appearances

In 1994, Izzard made his West End drama debut as the lead in the world premiere of David Mamet's The Cryptogram with Lindsay Duncan, in the production at London's Comedy Theatre. The success of that role led to his second starring role in David Beaird's black comedy 900 Oneonta. In 1995, he portrayed the title character in Christopher Marlowe's Edward II.

Izzard portrayed comedian Lenny Bruce in the 1999 production of Julian Barry's 1971 play Lenny. In 2001, he replaced Clive Owen in Peter Nichols' 1967 play A Day in the Death of Joe Egg at the Comedy Theatre. Izzard and Victoria Hamilton then repeated their lead roles when the show was brought to Broadway in 2003, with The Roundabout Theatre Company production. The revival received four Tony Award nominations including Best Revival of a Play, Best Leading Actor and Actress for its stars Izzard and Hamilton in their Broadway debuts, and Best Direction for Laurence Boswell. He will also star in the 2010 film The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.

Comic style

Izzard's style is heavily influenced by Monty Python, especially in his use of a stream-of-consciousness delivery that jumps between topics as he free associates on stage. He does not generally work from a script, owing to his dyslexia. Instead, he interrupts himself with new joke ideas, the characters he portrays turn into other characters, and he nonchalantly leaps from historical analysis to musings about household appliances. This often results in brief pauses in the routine which he fills with 'so, yeah,' and other verbal tics that have become his trademarks. Thinking aloud is also part of Izzard's ongoing attempt to make the process of writing the show itself part of the humour. As he put it in a 2004 interview with The Guardian, "It's the oral tradition. Human beings have been doing it for thousands of years".[6] He frequently notes the reaction to a joke midstream by miming writing on his hand ("should be funnier" or "lost them there"), asks the audience questions, and verbally engages with hecklers.

Among Izzard's comic talents are mimicry and mime. He portrays God as a bumbling authority figure using the voice of James Mason, and John F. Kennedy and Noah as Sean Connery, impersonations of whom appear in all of his performances. Izzard also imitates activities such as sawing wood, vacuuming, and mowing the lawn, anthropomorphizing the machines with accents and personalities. Successful impressions, such as his Scottish clarinet teacher, Mrs. Badcrumble, become running gags which recur in different shows. He tackles topics both contemporary and historic, including frequent re-imaginings of historical events which result in scenes like 'Cake or Death: Church of England runs the Inquisition,' or 'Jesus Ministers to the Dinosaurs.' When asked about his comedy style by George Stroumboulopoulos, host of CBC Television's talk show, The Hour, Izzard described his use of history by saying,

"I just talk complete bullshit. The history, the politics, I noticed that no one was using history, so there's a lot of history lying about the place, and it's all free, and it's on Wikipedia! You know, I use Wikipedia like a crazy idiot, now. Then I take all this stuff, and I regurgitate it into a weird angle".[7]

In 2008, in his Stripped tour, Izzard began using Wikipedia itself as part of his stand-up act, reading from a live copy of an article (via an iPhone) and mocking Wikipedia's self-referential editorial style. To date, he has read from a variety of different articles.

Although much of his humour deals with sensitive issues, with special emphasis on religion, it has generally not been intended as mean-spirited or rude. Izzard, however, took a different tone in 2008's "Stripped" tour. Professing that he had learned he was an atheist, he explains that he doesn't like the word "worship" because he doesn't see why anyone would want to worship someone who had "fucked the whole thing up from the beginning." The show's theme was an apologetic, humorous presentation on why one may feel that there is no God.

Traditionally, Izzard has focused on the creative possibilities of thinking through absurd situations in real time. He also turns much of the attention on himself and his personality, including his cross-dressing ("it is my manifest destiny to wear a dress on all seven continents"). Contemporary pop culture (Harry Potter, Star Wars, etc.), is also a frequent subject, brought up both to critique its weaknesses and to enhance his anecdotes.

His bent towards the surreal even went so far as to produce a sitcom called Cows in 1997 for Channel 4, a live action comedy with actors dressed in cowsuits.[8]

He is known for making frequent references to jam, badgers and monkeys.

Transvestism

Eddie Izzard performing Sexie

Izzard describes himself as an "executive", "action" and "underground" transvestite, as "a male tomboy" rather than a "weirdo" transvestite (he cites J. Edgar Hoover and Hermann Göring as examples of the latter) or drag queen. He regularly cross-dresses both on and off stage and makes it clear that cross-dressing is, for him, neither a part of his performance nor a sexual thing — he simply enjoys wearing make-up and clothing that is traditionally perceived in the West as female-only. He remarks in one of his shows, "Women wear what they want and so do I." According to Izzard, "Most transvestites fancy women." He dismisses claims that he is a male homosexual, saying he is either a straight transvestite or a "male lesbian." He has also described himself as "a lesbian trapped in a man's body,"[9] transgender,[10] and "a complete boy plus half a girl."[11]

Activism

Izzard has engaged in campaigning work. He is especially well-known as a pro-European Union campaigner supporting the further integration of the UK into the EU. In May 2005 he appeared on the BBC's political debate show Question Time, describing himself as a 'British-European', comparing this with other cultural identities such as 'African-American'. As part of his integration campaigning, he was one of the first people to spend a euro in London. This pan-European approach has influenced his work: he regularly performs in French, an acquired language, and occasionally in German, in addition to English. In July 2003, Izzard received an honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England for "pro-Europe campaigning", "his contribution to promoting modern languages and tolerance of other cultures and lifestyles" and for having "transcended national barriers" with his humour.[12]

He has also campaigned unsuccessfully against the closure of the departments of Drama and Languages, Linguistics and Translation at the University of East Anglia. In 1998 Izzard was named in a list of the biggest private financial donors to the Labour Party (UK). [13] He appeared in a 2005 party political broadcast for the UK Labour Party in the run up to the 2005 general election. He donated nearly £10,000 to the party in 2008.[14] He also appeared in a Political Broadcast on the 2nd June 2009 for the Labour Party.

On 20 July 2006, he received an honorary doctorate in Letters from the Faculty of Arts at the University of Sheffield,[15] where he spent one year on an Accounting and Financial Management course in the early 80s. During his time at the University he established the now-defunct Alternative Productions Society in the Union of Students with the aim of promoting fringe-based arts.

On 7 July 2007, Izzard was one of the presenters from the London leg of Live Earth. During an interview for the 2008 Stripped tour, Izzard spoke about becoming more active in European politics as well as running for political office in Europe within the next decade. Izzard added a stop in New Orleans during his 2008 Stripped tour. All proceeds from the June 23rd, 2008 performance were donated to Neighborhood Housing Services of New Orleans.[16]

On 27 July 2009, Izzard began a seven week marathon run through the UK to raise money for Sport Relief, carrying a flag for each country in which he ran, from London to Cardiff to Belfast to Edinburgh and back to London. Eddie Iz Running is a documentation of his road running marathon. He completed the run on 15 September 2009.

Critical reception

On 18 March 2007, Izzard was listed as number 3 of the 100 Greatest British National Comedians (just behind Peter Kay at number 2 and Billy Connolly at number 1) as part of British television station Channel 4's ongoing 100 Greatest... series.[17] In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, Izzard was voted amongst the top 20 greatest comedy acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders. He was number 75 in Comedy Central's 100 Greatest Stand-ups of All Time. During the 1999 television special It's... the Monty Python Story,[18] which Izzard hosted, John Cleese said Izzard was the "Lost Python"; Izzard furthered that idea via his substitution for Graham Chapman in public performance of Python material with the rest of the original members of the troupe. In 2008, Izzard received the James Joyce Award of the Literary and Historical Society.

Discography and appearances

Stand-up

Stage

Filmography

Upcoming films

TV appearances

Videogame

Future projects

Izzard is slated to appear in the BBC science fiction miniseries The Day of the Triffids based on the 1951 novel, alongside Jason Priestley, Vanessa Redgrave, Joely Richardson, Dougray Scott and Brian Cox.[19]

At a personal appearance in Los Angeles for the biopic "Believe" Eddie Izzard was asked "what was supposed to happen at the end of The Riches?" He explained that any ending that might one day come to be written would most probably be made as a movie.

Eddie Izzard was also a candidate for the role of the Eleventh Doctor in the British science fiction series Doctor Who. The role ultimately went to Matt Smith.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Eddie Izzard: 'We need Europe to be a melting-pot. We need to melt'". News.independent.co.uk. 2006-05-16. http://news.independent.co.uk/people/profiles/article484984.ece. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  2. ^ Chris Roberts, Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind Rhyme, Thorndike Press, 2006 (ISBN 0-7862-8517-6)
  3. ^ "Eddie Izzard Biography (1962-)". Filmreference.com. http://www.filmreference.com/film/72/Eddie-Izzard.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  4. ^ James, Caryn (2008-03-16). "Eddie Izzard's Master Plan". New York Times (The New York Times Company). http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/16/arts/television/16jame.html?_r=1&pagewanted=2&ref=arts&oref=slogin. Retrieved 2008-04-18. 
  5. ^ "Biography / Eddie Izzard". Eddieizzard.com. http://www.eddieizzard.com/eddie/biography/view.php?Chapter=1. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  6. ^ "'Mentally, I'm all boy - plus extra girl' | | guardian.co.uk Arts". Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/features/story/0,11710,1318280,00.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  7. ^ The Hour. [TV-Series]. Canada: CBC Television. Event occurs at 7m. http://www.cbc.ca/thehour/video.php?id=1562. 
  8. ^ "cake or death: an eddie izzard site :: the biography". Auntiemomo.com. http://www.auntiemomo.com/cakeordeath/themannew.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  9. ^ Comic Izzard promoting life story, BBC News (May 17, 2004. Retrieved on November 22, 2008.
  10. ^ Garfield, Simon. Frock tactics, The Observer (May 27, 2001). Retrieved on November 22, 2008.
  11. ^ "Eddie Izzard: The tough transvestite who can take care of himself", The Independent, 23 May 2004, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/eddie-izzard-the-tough-transvestite-who-can-take-care-of-himself-564108.html, retrieved 2008-11-22 
  12. ^ "University of East Anglia: Events and News: Eddie Izzard". 2007. http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/llt/eventsandnews/Eddie+Izzard. Retrieved 2008-03-26. 
  13. ^ "'Luvvies' for Labour". http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/161057.stm. 
  14. ^ "Feature: Political celebrities". Politics.co.uk. http://www.politics.co.uk/features/opinion-former-index/legal-and-constitutional/feature-political-celebrities-$1238735.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  15. ^ "Latest News". Shef.ac.uk. http://www.shef.ac.uk/alumni/news/izzard.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  16. ^ "Eddie Izzard Adds New Orleans to Tour; Show to Benefit Housing Services - St. Tammany Art Association - NorthShoreNOLA - NOLA.com". Blog.nola.com. 2008-06-10. http://blog.nola.com/staa/2008/06/eddie_izzard_adds_new_orleans.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  17. ^ "100 Greatest Comedy Stand-ups vote from". channel4.com. http://www.channel4.com/entertainment/tv/microsites/C/comedy_standups/results/results.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  18. ^ "It's... the Monty Python Story (1999) (TV)". Imdb.com. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0220292/. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 
  19. ^ Last Updated: 2:56PM GMT 11 Feb 2009 (2009-02-11). "Vanessa Redgrave to star in BBC's The Day of the Triffids". Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/4592119/Vanessa-Redgrave-to-star-in-BBCs-The-Day-of-the-Triffids.html. Retrieved 2009-04-17. 

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