English comedian and actor (born 1965)
Stephen John Coogan
(
; born 14 October 1965) is a British-Irish comedian, actor and screenwriter.
[a]
He is most known for creating original characters such as
Alan Partridge
, a socially inept and
politically incorrect
media personality, which he developed while working with
Armando Iannucci
on
On the Hour
and
The Day Today
. Partridge has featured in several television series and the 2013 film
Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa
. In 1999, he co-founded the production company
Baby Cow Productions
with
Henry Normal
. For his work he has garnered numerous accolades including four
BAFTA Awards
and three
British Comedy Awards
as well as nominations for an
Academy Award
and
Golden Globe Award
.
Coogan began his career in the 1980s as a voice actor on the satirical puppet show
Spitting Image
and providing voice-overs for television advertisements. Coogan grew in prominence in the film industry in 2002, after starring in
The Parole Officer
and
24 Hour Party People
. He continued to appear in films such as
Around the World in 80 Days
(2004), the
Night at the Museum
trilogy (2006-2014),
Tropic Thunder
(2008),
Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief
(2010),
Our Idiot Brother
(2011),
Ruby Sparks
(2012),
Irreplaceable You
(2018), and
Greed
(2019). He co-starred as himself with
Rob Brydon
in
A Cock and Bull Story
(2005), and the
BBC
series
The Trip
(2010),
The Trip to Italy
(2014),
The Trip to Spain
(2017), and
The Trip to Greece
(2020), all of which were condensed into films.
In 2013, he co-wrote, produced, and starred in the film
Philomena
, which earned him nominations at the
Golden Globes
and
BAFTAs
, and at the
Academy Awards
for
Best Adapted Screenplay
and
Best Picture
. Coogan has also played dramatic roles, including
Marie Antoinette
(2006),
What Maisie Knew
(2012),
The Look of Love
(2013) and
The Dinner
(2017). For his portrayal of
Stan Laurel
in
Stan & Ollie
(2018), he earned a
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
nomination. For his portrayal of
Jimmy Savile
in the
BBC
drama
The Reckoning
(2023), he received a nomination for the
British Academy Television Award for Best Actor
.
Early life and education
[
edit
]
Stephen John Coogan
[2]
was born on 14 October 1965 in
Middleton
,
Lancashire
,
[3]
[4]
the son of housewife Kathleen (nee Coonan) and
IBM
engineer Anthony "Tony" Coogan.
[5]
[6]
He has four brothers and one sister,
[7]
and was raised
Roman Catholic
in what he described as a "
lower-middle
or upper-working class" family which emphasised the values of education.
[8]
His younger brother
Brendan
was, for a few months, a presenter of
Top Gear
, while his elder brother
Martin
became the lead singer of rock band
the Mock Turtles
.
Coogan's mother is Irish and hails from
County Mayo
, while his father is also of Irish descent, his paternal grandparents ? Margaret (from
County Kilkenny
) and Thomas Coogan (a tailor from
County Cork
) ? having settled in
Manchester
shortly before the
First World War
.
[9]
[10]
During the 1950s, his paternal grandfather established a dance hall for Irish immigrants.
[8]
Coogan attended St. Thomas More Roman Catholic Primary School and
Cardinal Langley Roman Catholic High School
.
[11]
[12]
He has stated that he had a happy childhood, and his parents fostered children on a short-term basis.
[13]
He lived on Manchester New Road in
Alkrington
. His father stood for the Lib-SDP in the May 1983 council elections in the South ward.
[14]
and in May 1984.
[15]
His father was chairman of the catholic grammar school's parents association, and protested against the proposal by the Salford Roman Catholic Diocesan Schools Commission to close the sixth form, which would not happen.
[16]
He passed two
O-levels
in 1983, which were likely re-take exams, when aged 17.
[17]
In 1984 he gained 4
A-levels
: English Literature, British Government and Politics, Art, and General Studies.
[18]
[19]
In the same year his brother Kevin acquired nine O-levels at the same school,
[20]
and took part in local and regional sports competitions, notably in basketball and cross country running.
[21]
His eldest sister trained to be a teacher at the nearby
Hopwood Hall College
.
[
citation needed
]
As a family, it was assumed that all the children would become teachers.
[8]
Coogan had a talent for impersonation and wanted to go to drama school, despite being advised by a teacher that it could lead to a precarious profession.
[13]
After five failed applications to various drama schools in London, he received a place at the New Music theatre company before gaining a place at the
Manchester Polytechnic School of Drama
,
[13]
where he met future collaborator
John Thomson
.
Career
[
edit
]
1989?2002: Breakthrough as Alan Partridge
[
edit
]
Coogan began his career as a comic and
impressionist
, performing regularly in
Ipswich
, before working as a voice artist for television advertisements and the
satirical
puppet show
Spitting Image
.
[22]
In 1988, he provided vocals for the acid house record 'Don't Believe the Hype' credited to Mista E. The record peaked at number 41 in December 1988, narrowly missing the main chart rundown. In 1989, he appeared in a series of specially shot sketches in the Observation round in the long-running ITV game show
The Krypton Factor
. In 1992, Coogan won the
Perrier Award
at the
Edinburgh Festival Fringe
for his performance with long-time collaborator
John Thomson
, and starred alongside him and
Caroline Aherne
in a one-off
Granada TV
sketch show
,
The Dead Good Show
. His most prominent characters developed at this time were Paul Calf, a stereotypical working class
Mancunian
, and his sister Pauline, played by Coogan in
drag
. While working on the
Radio 4
comedy
On the Hour
, Coogan created Alan Partridge, a
parody
of British
sports presenters
, with producer
Armando Iannucci
. Coogan described Partridge as a
Little Englander
, with
right-wing
values and poor taste.
[23]
He is socially inept, often offending his guests,
[24]
and has an inflated sense of importance and celebrity.
[25]
According to Coogan, Partridge was originally a "one-note, sketchy character"
[26]
and "freak show", but slowly became refined as a dysfunctional alter ego.
[27]
In 1992, Partridge hosted a
spin-off
Radio 4 spoof
chat show
,
Knowing Me, Knowing You with Alan Partridge
.
On the Hour
transferred to television as
The Day Today
in 1994,
[28]
followed by
Knowing Me, Knowing You
later that year.
[29]
In 1997, Coogan starred as Partridge in a BBC sitcom,
I'm Alan Partridge
, written by Coogan, Iannucci and
Peter Baynham
, following Partridge's life in a roadside hotel working for a small radio station.
[23]
It earned two
BAFTAs
[30]
and was followed by a second series in 2002.
[23]
After
I'm Alan Partridge
, Coogan tired of Partridge and limited him to smaller roles.
[31]
Coogan said he did not want to say goodbye to Partridge, and that "as long as I can do my other things, that, to me, is the perfect balance".
[31]
He later said that Partridge had once been an "
albatross
" but had become "a battered, comfortable old leather jacket".
[32]
Critics have praised Partridge's complexity, realism and
pathos
.
Vanity Fair
called him a British
national treasure
[33]
and the
Guardian
described him as "one of the greatest and most beloved comic creations of the last few decades".
[34]
Partridge is credited with influencing
cringe comedies
such as
The Inbetweeners
,
Nighty Night
and
Peep Show
.
[35]
In 2001 a poll by
Channel 4
, Partridge was voted seventh on their list of the
100 Greatest TV Characters
.
[36]
Paul Calf began as a character named 'Duncan Disorderly' in Coogan's early stand-up routines. Calf first came to wider public notice in 1993, with several appearances on
Saturday Zoo
, a late-night variety show presented by
Jonathan Ross
on Channel 4. Paul has appeared in two video diaries, an episode of
Coogan's Run
, and in various stand-up performances. He is an unemployed Mancunian wastrel with a particular hatred of students. His catchphrase, spoken to disparage something or someone, is "Bag o'
shite
". Paul lives in a
council house
in the fictional town of Ottle with his mother and his sister, Pauline Calf (also played by Coogan). His father, Pete Calf (played by Coogan in
Coogan's Run
) died some time before the first video diary was made. For a long time he was obsessed with getting back together with his ex-girlfriend, Julie. Paul's best friend is "Fat" Bob (played by John Thomson), a car mechanic who eventually married Pauline. Paul supports
Manchester City
and is very partial to
Wagon Wheels
. He wears
Burton
suits, sports a bleached
mullet
hairstyle, and drives a
Ford Cortina
.
Pauline Calf's Wedding Video
won the 1995
BAFTA Television Award
for Best Comedy.
[37]
Other Coogan creations include Tommy Saxondale, Duncan Thicket, Ernest Eckler and
Portuguese Eurovision Song Contest
winner Tony Ferrino. Duncan Thicket has appeared in a tour of live shows. Coogan, along with his writing partner
Henry Normal
, founded
Baby Cow Productions
in 1999. Together, they have served as executive producers for shows such as
The Mighty Boosh
,
Nighty Night
,
Marion and Geoff
,
Gavin & Stacey
,
Human Remains
and
Moone Boy
, as well as the
Alan Partridge
feature film
Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa
. They have also produced
Where Are the Joneses?
, an online sitcom which uses
wiki
technology to allow the audience to upload scripts and storyline ideas.
[38]
Other TV shows he has starred in include
Coogan's Run
,
Dr. Terrible's House of Horrible
,
Monkey Trousers
and
Saxondale
. Coogan has provided voices for the animated series
I Am Not an Animal
and
Bob and Margaret
, two Christmas specials featuring
Robbie the Reindeer
, and an episode of the BBC Radio Four spoof sci-fi series
Nebulous
. He played the Gnat in the 1998 TV adaptation of
Alice Through the Looking-Glass
starring
Kate Beckinsale
,
2003?2009: Film roles and standup
[
edit
]
Coogan starred in BBC2's
The Private Life of Samuel Pepys
in 2003, and
Cruise of the Gods
in 2002 and portrayed
Factory Records
boss,
Tony Wilson
in the film,
24 Hour Party People
(2002). In 2006, he had a cameo in the
Little Britain
Christmas special as a pilot taking Lou and Andy to Disneyland. Coogan has played himself several times on screen. First, in one of the vignettes of
Jim Jarmusch
's 2003 film
Coffee and Cigarettes
, alongside
Alfred Molina
. Second, in 2006 Coogan starred with
Rob Brydon
in
Michael Winterbottom
's
A Cock and Bull Story
, a self-referential film of the "unfilmable" self-referential novel
Tristram Shandy
by
Laurence Sterne
. In the film, Coogan plays a fictional, womanising version of himself. The first film that Coogan co-wrote with
Henry Normal
was
The Parole Officer
, in which he also acted alongside Ben Miller and
Lena Headey
. He has an uncredited cameo in
Hot Fuzz
, scripted by
Shaun of the Dead
writers
Simon Pegg
and
Edgar Wright
. He also starred in the
Night at the Museum
trilogy in which he played Octavius, a miniature Roman general figure, alongside
Owen Wilson
's Jedediah, a miniature cowboy figure. In 2007, Coogan played a psychiatrist on
Larry David
's
Curb Your Enthusiasm
on
HBO
, and in 2008, starred in the BBC1 drama
Sunshine
.
In March 2008, it was confirmed that Coogan would return to doing comedy as part of his first stand-up tour in ten years. The tour, named "Steve Coogan as Alan Partridge and other less successful characters", saw the return of some of his old characters including Paul Calf and Alan Partridge.
[39]
Reviews of the tour were mixed.
[40]
[41]
[42]
Much of the criticism focused on the apparent unrehearsed quality of some of the performances and on Coogan's nervous stage presence.
Chortle
comedy guide described it as "most definitely a show of two-halves: the superlative Alan Partridge plus a collection of characters that are not only less successful, but woefully less funny".
[43]
As the tour progressed and the problems were ironed out, reviews were very positive. Dominic Maxwell of
The Times
described the show as "twice as entertaining as most other comedy shows this year".
[44]
Brian Logan of
The Guardian
awarded it four stars and described it as "shamelessly funny".
[45]
Reviews such as the one from the
Trent FM Arena
exemplified how much the show had improved after dealing with the glitches on its first few dates: "When Steve Coogan first brought this show to Nottingham last month, the reviews were poor... the intervening weeks have made a big difference, and last night's audience at the Trent FM Arena went home happy. More please, and soon."
[46]
In 2008,
BBC Worldwide
bought a 25% stake in the production company. It did not offer the largest sum, but was chosen by Coogan and Normal owing to their previous work with and strong connection with the
BBC
. In 2009, Coogan was featured, alongside
Vic Reeves
,
Bob Mortimer
and
Julia Davis
, in the spoof documentary TV film
Steve Coogan ? The Inside Story
.
[47]
The same year he spoke on the influence of
Monty Python
on his comedy when he appeared in the television documentary,
Monty Python: Almost the Truth (Lawyers Cut)
.
[48]
2010?2019:
The Trip
and
Philomena
[
edit
]
In 2010, he worked again with Brydon and
Michael Winterbottom
for the partially improvised BBC2 sitcom
The Trip
, in which he and Brydon tour northern restaurants.
[49]
The movie was followed in 2014 with the film,
The Trip to Italy
, about him and Brydon taking a food-tasting trip through Italy, followed by
The Trip to Spain
(2017)
[50]
and
The Trip to Greece
(2020).
[51]
He worked again with director Winterbottom in
The Look of Love
(2013), about '50s porn-king,
Paul Raymond
.
Partridge returned in 2010 with a series of shorts,
Mid Morning Matters with Alan Partridge
, written with new writers
Rob and Neil Gibbons
.
[52]
It was followed by the spoof memoirs
I, Partridge: We Need to Talk About Alan
(2011)
[53]
and
Nomad
(2016),
[54]
the feature film
Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa
(2013),
[55]
and several TV specials.
[56]
[57]
In his memoir, Coogan wrote that
Alpha Papa
was the hardest he had ever worked and that the production was fraught; however, he was proud of the finished film.
[58]
Coogan produced, co-wrote and co-starred in the drama film
Philomena
(2013).
[59]
He portrayed the journalist
Martin Sixsmith
, who helps a former nun
Philomena Lee
, played
Judi Dench
, find her son after decades long absence. The film received acclaim and was a financial success. The
Variety
critic Justin Chang wrote, "The two leads make decent sparring partners and better allies, and Coogan is especially good whenever Martin's impatient manner tilts into genuine moral indignation."
[60]
Coogan received the
BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
and the
Venice Film Festival
Award for Best Screenplay as well as nominations for the
Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
and the
Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay
. The film earned four
Academy Award
nominations including for
Best Picture
losing to
Steve McQueen
's historical drama
12 Years a Slave
(2013).
[
citation needed
]
Coogan's autobiography,
Easily Distracted
, was published in October 2015.
[61]
In 2016, after Henry Normal stood down,
Christine Langan
(head of BBC Film at the time) was hired by Coogan (creative director of Baby Cow Productions) as the new CEO; this led to BBC Worldwide increasing its stake to 73%.
[62]
Since joining, Langan has executive-produced all of the content from Baby Cow Productions, including
Camping
,
Stan & Ollie
,
Zapped
and
The Witchfinder
.
[
citation needed
]
Coogan played the comedian
Stan Laurel
in the 2018 biographical film
Stan & Ollie
, alongside the American actor
John C. Reilly
, who played
Oliver Hardy
.
[63]
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter
wrote that Coogan "slips neatly into the role" and added, "Coogan and Reilly not only excel at creating convincing impressions of one of the most famous comic teams of the last century, but they do an uncanny job of recreating a handful of their famous routines, which today mostly play as mild yet expertly timed delights."
[64]
For his performance, he earned a nomination for the
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
. In 2019, Partridge returned to the BBC with
This Time with Alan Partridge
, a spoof of magazine shows such as
The One Show
,
[65]
followed by an
Audible
podcast,
From the Oasthouse
, in 2020.
[66]
The podcast has now run for three seasons,
[67]
including a free teaser episode where Partridge commented on the
coronation of Charles III and Camilla
.
[68]
2020?present
[
edit
]
In April 2022, Coogan began an
Alan Partridge
tour,
Stratagem
.
[69]
Reviewing the show for the
Guardian
, Brian Logan noted that though Coogan had once tired of Partridge, he now "clearly takes pleasure in the performance".
[70]
Coogan starred in the 2022 film
The Lost King
, playing the husband of the writer
Philippa Langley
, who discovered the bones of King
Richard III
.
[71]
Coogan played
Jimmy Savile
in the
BBC One
series
The Reckoning
(2023). Coogan said the decision to play Savile was "not one I took lightly", and that the script "tackled a horrific story which ? however harrowing ? needs to be told".
[72]
[73]
Despite the controversy surrounding the series,
[74]
Coogan's performance was mostly praised by critics.
[75]
He received a nomination for the
British Academy Television Award for Best Actor
.
[76]
Coogan is due to star, in multiple roles, in a London stage version of the 1964 film
Dr. Strangelove
, adapted by his Alan Partridge co-creator
Armando Iannucci
. The play will open at the
Noel Coward Theatre
on 8 October 2024.
[77]
Coogan has a role in the 2024 film
Joker: Folie a Deux
.
[78]
Filming for the next Partridge project,
And Did Those Feet.. With Alan Partridge
, began in early 2024.
[79]
In the media
[
edit
]
Public image
[
edit
]
Coogan has said that he likes to "keep [himself] private", and added: "I have never wanted to be famous, as such ? fame is a by-product."
[80]
He has been a British tabloid fixture since as early as 1996, and has stated that such outlets have subjected him to
entrapment
and
blackmail
, printed obvious lies about him,
[81]
and have targeted his family and friends in attempts to extract stories from them.
[82]
Coogan in some cases strongly denied allegations, but in others did not contest them because he wanted to shield vulnerable friends from adverse publicity.
[83]
The tabloids
[
which?
]
also published intrusive information about his relationships and the schooling of his child. Coogan has also been critical of the
broadsheet
press, saying they have colluded with the tabloids in the interests of selling newspapers. In 2005, he said "
The Guardian
tends to have its cake and eat it. It waits for the tabloids to dish the dirt and then it talks about the tabloids dishing the dirt while enjoying it themselves."
[84]
He later gave credit to the same newspaper for its investigation of the phone hacking scandal.
[85]
He has said that the press, by persistently intruding in his private life, has effectively made him "immune" to further attack as his "closet is empty of skeletons".
[86]
Phone hacking scandal
[
edit
]
Coogan favours reform and regulation of the British press.
[87]
He became a prominent figure in the
News International
phone hacking scandal as one of the celebrities who took action against the British tabloids in light of these events. He was made aware by his
phone service provider
of "possible anomalies" on his phone in 2005 and 2006.
[88]
In 2010, Coogan's legal firm obtained a partially
redacted
version of
Glenn Mulcaire
's
hacking
notebook by a
court order
which showed Coogan had been targeted and his personal information was in the possession of Mulcaire.
Mulcaire was forced by the
High Court of Justice
to disclose to Coogan's legal team who amongst the staff at the
News of the World
ordered him to hack phones. This information was obtained by Coogan's lawyers on 26 August 2011.
[89]
Interviewed on
Newsnight
on 8 July 2011, Coogan said he was "delighted" by the closure of the
News of the World
and said it was a "fantastic day for journalism". He said the idea of press freedom was used by the tabloids as a "smokescreen for selling papers with tittle-tattle" and said the argument against press regulation was "
morally bankrupt
".
[85]
Coogan provided an eight-page witness statement to the
Leveson Inquiry
, and appeared at the inquiry on 22 November 2011 to discuss the evidence.
[82]
He said he was there reluctantly representing a lot of celebrities who felt they could not speak out for fear of reprisals from the tabloid press.
[90]
In March 2021, Coogan said "the tabloid press is controlled by a handful of tax shy billionaires with an agenda. Anyone who stands up to the press is attacked by them because they're bullies." He added "the fact that
Meghan Markle
and
Harry
were attacked has nothing to do with jet-setting hypocrisy. It's because they broke the golden rule, which is to leave us alone and we'll go easy on you next time."
[91]
Personal life
[
edit
]
In 1993 he lived in
Didsbury
,
Greater Manchester
.
[92]
Until 2017, Coogan resided in
Ovingdean Grange
in
Ovingdean
, East Sussex.
[93]
Coogan married Caroline Hickman in 2002; they divorced in 2005.
[94]
He entered rehab for personal issues.
[
citation needed
]
He dated model
China Chow
for three years.
[95]
In March 2011, Coogan was guest editor for
lads mag
Loaded
, where he met and began dating
glamour model
Loretta "Elle" Basey.
[96]
They were together until 2014.
[97]
He has a daughter from a previous four-year relationship with solicitor Anna Cole.
[98]
[99]
[100]
Although raised
Catholic
, Coogan is now an atheist.
[101]
A motoring enthusiast, he has owned a number of
Ferraris
, but ceased after calculating that the overall costs exceeded those of running a private plane.
[102]
In February 2016, he was fined £670 and banned from driving for 28 days after being caught speeding in
Brighton
.
[103]
In August 2019, he escaped the usual six-month ban for a further speeding offence by saying that his next TV series depended on his ability to drive; he was given a two-month ban and a £750 fine.
[104]
He has been open about his struggle with depression and has said "I will always be a recovering addict".
[105]
In March 2023, Coogan completed the process of applying for
Irish citizenship
. Interviewed by irishcentral.com that month Coogan described himself as "half-Irish".
[106]
Political views
[
edit
]
Coogan has supported both the
Labour Party
and the
Liberal Democrats
.
[107]
He believes that the
Conservative Party
think "people are plebs" and that "they like to pat people on the head".
[108]
In 2013 he voiced his support for abolishing the
British monarchy
.
[109]
In August 2014, Coogan was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to
The Guardian
expressing their hope that Scotland would vote to remain part of the United Kingdom in the
Scottish independence referendum
.
[110]
Coogan endorsed the Labour Party leader
Jeremy Corbyn
in the
2017 general election
. He hosted a rally for Corbyn in Birmingham, saying: "The Tory tactic was to try to make this a choice between
Theresa May
and Jeremy Corbyn, but this has backfired as people ? and I readily admit to being one of them ? have started to listen to what Jeremy Corbyn says rather than what other people have been saying about him."
[111]
In November 2019, along with other public figures, Coogan signed a letter defending Corbyn, describing him as "a beacon of hope in the struggle against emergent
far-right
nationalism,
xenophobia
and racism in much of the democratic world" and endorsed him in the
2019 general election
.
[112]
In December 2019, along with 42 other cultural figures, he signed a letter endorsing the Labour Party in the election. The letter stated that "Labour's election manifesto under Jeremy Corbyn's leadership offers a transformative plan that prioritises the needs of people and the planet over private profit and the vested interests of a few".
[113]
[114]
In September 2023, Coogan addressed the
Liberal Democrat Conference
by video link, expressing that he would
tactically vote
for the
Liberal Democrats
over the Labour Party in the
2024 general election
, as "the candidate best placed to kick the Tories out is the Lib Dem candidate".
[115]
In October, Coogan,
Tilda Swinton
,
Miriam Margolyes
,
Charles Dance
,
Maxine Peake
and
Peter Mullan
were among more than 2,000 cultural figures to sign a letter calling for a
Gaza
ceasefire and accused the UK government of "not only tolerating war crimes but aiding and abetting them" in the wake of the
2023 Israel-Hamas war
.
[116]
Following criticism that the letter did not acknowledge or condemn the
7 October attack
by Hamas on Israel, Coogan said that "it goes without saying that what Hamas did is evil beyond imagination ? it was horrific and brutal".
[117]
In June 2024, Coogan was one of more than 100 cultural figures to sign a letter calling for Labour to halt sales of arms to Israel if it is elected.
[118]
Filmography
[
edit
]
Film
[
edit
]
Television
[
edit
]
Awards and nominations
[
edit
]
Coogan's show
Steve Coogan in character with John Thomson
was winner of the
Perrier Award
for best show at the 1992 Edinburgh Fringe. He has won numerous awards for his work in TV including
British Comedy Awards
,
BAFTAs
and
The South Bank Show
award for comedy. In 2003, he was listed in
The Observer
as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy. In 2005, a poll to find the
Comedians' Comedian
saw him being voted amongst the top 20 greatest comedy acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.
[121]
Stand-up tours
[
edit
]
Year
|
Title
|
1994
|
Live 'N' Lewd
|
1998
|
Live ? The Man Who Thinks He's It
|
2005
|
Alan Partridge Presents: The Cream of British Comedy
|
2009
|
As Alan Partridge And Other Less Successful Characters ? Live
|
2022
|
Alan Partridge: Stratagem
|
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Steve Coogan"
.
Desert Island Discs
. 11 October 2009.
BBC Radio 4
. Retrieved
18 January
2014
.
- ^
"Steve Coogan Facts"
.
- ^
"My Secret Life: Steve Coogan, Comedian, 44"
.
The Independent
. 28 November 2009.
Archived
from the original on 25 May 2022
. Retrieved
3 November
2016
.
- ^
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[
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]
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Middleton Guardian
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Middleton Guardian
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Middleton Guardian
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'This is not the Steve Coogan and Hugh Grant show'
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"
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Dimbleby, David
(presenter),
Harman, Harriet
(panellist),
Alexander, Danny
(panellist),
Rees-Mogg, Jacob
(panellist),
Allsopp, Kirstie
(panellist) (27 September 2012).
Episode from Brighton
.
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McTeirnan, Anthea (9 August 2013).
"
'I'd abolish the royal family' - Steve Coogan on what separates him from Alan Partridge"
.
The Irish Times
. Retrieved
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2024
.
The Irish blood really does seem to run strongly in Coogan's veins. He sees it as separating himself from the people who run the United Kingdom. "I distrust the British establishment," he says. "My background's made me not want to be part of any establishment. I don't want to be welcomed with open arms anywhere."
- ^
"Celebrities' open letter to Scotland ? full text and list of signatories"
.
The Guardian
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26 August
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Mortimer, Caroline (7 June 2017).
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"
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"
. 8 February 2023.
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"
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. Retrieved
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2024
.
Notes
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]
Awards for Steve Coogan
|
---|
|
---|
Excellence in Film
| |
---|
Excellence in Directing
| |
---|
Worldwide Contribution to
Entertainment
| |
---|
British Artist of the Year
| |
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Excellence in Comedy
| |
---|
Excellence in Television
| |
---|
Humanitarian Award
| |
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Retired Awards
| |
---|
|
---|
Best Comedy Show
- 1981:
Cambridge Footlights
(
Stephen Fry
,
Hugh Laurie
,
Tony Slattery
,
Emma Thompson
,
Penny Dwyer
and Paul Shearer)
- 1982:
Writer's Inc
(Gary Adams,
Steve Brown
,
Vicki Pile
, Trevor McCallum, Helen Murry,
Jamie Rix
, and
Nick Wilton
, with additional material by
Kim Fuller
)
- 1983:
Los Trios Ringbarkus
- 1984:
The Brass Band
- 1985:
Theatre de Complicite
- 1986:
Ben Keaton
- 1987:
Brown Blues...
(
Arnold Brown
with
Barb Jungr
and Michael Parker)
- 1988:
Jeremy Hardy
- 1989:
Simon Fanshawe
- 1990:
Sean Hughes
?
A One Night Stand
- 1991:
Frank Skinner
- 1992:
Steve Coogan
?
In Character with
John Thomson
- 1993:
Lee Evans
- 1994:
Lano and Woodley
- 1995:
Jenny Eclair
?
Prozac & Tantrums
- 1996:
Dylan Moran
?
Dylan Moran Is Indisposed
- 1997:
The League of Gentlemen
- 1998:
Tommy Tiernan
?
Undivine Comedy
- 1999:
Al Murray
as The Pub Landlord ?
And a Glass of White Wine for the Lady
- 2000:
Rich Hall
?
Otis Lee Crenshaw
- 2001:
Garth Marenghi's Netherhead
(
Matthew Holness
,
Richard Ayoade
and
Alice Lowe
)
- 2002:
Daniel Kitson
?
Something
- 2003:
Demetri Martin
?
If I...
- 2004:
Will Adamsdale
?
Jackson's Way
- 2005:
Laura Solon
?
Kopfraper's Syndrome
- 2006:
Phil Nichol
?
The Naked Racist
- 2007:
Brendon Burns
?
So I Suppose THIS Is Offensive Now
- 2008:
David O'Doherty
?
Let's Comedy
- 2009:
Tim Key
?
The Slutcracker
- 2010:
Russell Kane
?
Smokescreens and Castles
- 2011:
Adam Riches
?
Bring Me the Head of Adam Riches
- 2012:
Doctor Brown
?
Befrdfgth
- 2013:
Bridget Christie
?
A Bic for Her
- 2014:
John Kearns
?
Shtick
- 2015:
Sam Simmons
?
Spaghetti for Breakfast
- 2016:
Richard Gadd
?
Monkey See Monkey Do
- 2017:
Hannah Gadsby
?
Nanette
&
John Robins
?
The Darkness of Robins
- 2018:
Rose Matafeo
?
Horndog
- 2019:
Jordan Brookes
?
I've Got Nothing
- 2022:
Sam Campbell
?
Comedy Show
- 2023:
Ahir Shah
?
Ends
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Events
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Companies and
organisations
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People
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Investigations
and legal cases
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In popular culture
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Related topics
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International
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National
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Artists
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People
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Other
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