Ricky Gervais is an English comic
writer and performer. Gervais has recently achieved
mainstream fame, enjoying success with his award-winning
BBC2 television programme The Office, which he co-wrote
and co-directed with long-term friend and collaborator
Stephen Merchant. As well as writing and directing
the show, Gervais also played the lead role of David
Brent, an office manager who firmly believes he is
popular and funny, but is in fact neither.
Gervais's father is of French Canadian descent and
grew up in French Canada, and came to the UK on duty
during the Second World War, where he met his wife.
Raised as the youngest of four brothers, Ricky Gervais
has described his childhood as "nice" and "normal".
During the early 1980s Gervais was the lead singer
of the New Romantic group Seona Dancing. The group
released two singles that failed to break the top 40
in the UK. One of the tracks, "Bitter Heart",
completely sank, but the 1985 tune "More To Lose" became
a massive hit in the Philippines. This came as a great
surprise to the band, who had actually broken up the
previous year.
Following various odd jobs, including working in
an office, a stint as events manager at the University
of London Union followed in the early 1990s. Through
this, Gervais went on to briefly manage the British
rock group Suede in their pre-record contract days
before taking a job at London radio station XFM, though
he was sacked when the station was taken over by the
Capital Radio group. He was also music advisor for
the popular BBC drama This Life at this time, thanks
to his long-term partner, and This Life producer, Jane
Fallon.
Gervais returned to XFM for a Saturday afternoon
radio show that first went on the air in November 2001
and ran intermittently until January 2004 with breaks
ranging between 1-3 months between new shows. After
that, Gevais took 18 months off to work on his new
television show Extras, write Flanimals, and perform
his live show Politics.
Gervais then came to much wider national attention
with an obnoxious, cutting persona featuring in a topical
slot which replaced Ali G's segments on the satirical
Channel 4 comedy programme The 11 O'Clock Show in 1999.
He later went on to present his own comedy chat show
for Channel 4 called Meet Ricky Gervais two years later
which was poorly received and has since been mocked
by Gervais himself.
Throughout all this, in the late 1990s, Gervais had
quietly tried his hand at sitcom and sketches, working
with Stephen Merchant on a one-off for Channel 4 called "Golden
Years" and writing for the BBC sketch show Bruiser
for example. He also appeared in Simon Pegg's Spaced.
A home-made pilot for The Office surfaced in 1999/2000,
and was bought up by the BBC.
The first, six-episode season of The Office aired
in the UK in July/August 2001 to little fanfare or
attention, but word-of-mouth, re-runs and DVDs helped
spread the word, building up huge momentum and anticipation
for the second season, also made up of six episodes,
in September 2002. The second season topped the BBC2
ratings, and the show then switched to the larger BBC1
network in December 2003 for its final two special
episodes.
Gervais also toured the UK in 2003 with his stand-up
show Animals, with one show recorded for DVD release
and television broadcast. The Politics tour then followed
a year later, and the third part of the themed live
trilogy, Science, will hit the road in late 2005.
In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, he
was voted amongst the top 50 comedy acts ever by fellow
comedians and comedy insiders.
Gervais has received a plethora of awards for his
work on The Office, most notably two Golden Globes
(one for acting, one for the show itself), as well
as numerous BAFTAs and British Comedy Awards, amongst
others. |