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===Personal life===
===Personal life===
As a child, Gervais watching wildlife programs affected his understanding of cruelty towards animals. He is supportive of a declaration for [[animal rights]], as well as the [[World Society for the Protection of Animals|WSPA]] (an [[animal welfare]] organisation), and is against [[fox-hunting]] and [[bull fighting]].<ref>[http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/interviews/article.html?in_article_id=35340&in_page_id=11 60 SECONDS: Ricky Gervais | Metro.co.uk<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
Watching wildlife programs as a child affected Gervais's understanding of cruelty towards animals. He is supportive of a declaration for [[animal rights]], as well as the [[World Society for the Protection of Animals|WSPA]] (an [[animal welfare]] organisation), and is against [[fox-hunting]] and [[bull fighting]].<ref>[http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/interviews/article.html?in_article_id=35340&in_page_id=11 60 SECONDS: Ricky Gervais | Metro.co.uk<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


In 2007 he told [[Kirsty Young]] on [[Desert Island Discs]], "I'm an [[atheist]]".<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/factual/desertislanddiscs_20070624.shtml BBC Radio 4 - Factual - Desert Island Discs -Ricky Gervais<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
In 2007 he told [[Kirsty Young]] on [[Desert Island Discs]], "I'm an [[atheist]]".<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/factual/desertislanddiscs_20070624.shtml BBC Radio 4 - Factual - Desert Island Discs -Ricky Gervais<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Revision as of 13:49, 27 April 2008

Ricky Gervais
Gervais at the 2007 BAFTAs.
PartnerJane Fallon (1982-)
Websitehttp://www.rickygervais.com/

Ricky Dene Gervais (born 25 June 1961) is a triple Golden Globe-, double Emmy- and seven-time BAFTA award-winning English comedian, writer, actor and former New Romantic musician from Reading, Berkshire. Gervais burst into mainstream fame with his ground-breaking BBC Two television programme The Office (for which he won 6 BAFTAs and 2 Golden Globes) and the series Extras, both of which he co-wrote and co-directed with friend and collaborator, Stephen Merchant. Besides writing and directing the shows, Gervais also played the lead roles of David Brent in The Office and Andy Millman in Extras. As well as these, he has had three sell-out stand-up tours, Animals, Politics and Fame, is a best-selling author of his series of Flanimals books and works also with Merchant and Karl Pilkington in his world record-breaking podcast The Ricky Gervais Show. In addition to his work in films such as Night at the Museum and Stardust, he is the only British comic to write and star in an episode of The Simpsons. Prior to finding mainstream success with The Office, Ricky was the lead singer and principal songwriter for New Romantic duo Seona Dancing.

Biography

Early life

Gervais, along with siblings Larry, Marsha, and Bob, were raised in the suburb of Whitley in Reading, Berkshire. Gervais's father Jerry, a Franco-Ontarian, emigrated whilst on foreign duty during the Second World War from London, Ontario, Canada. Jerry met Gervais's mother, Eva, during a blackout,[1] and both settled in Whitley.

During XFM London's The Ricky Gervais Show and in further newspaper interviews with The Independent, Gervais noted that he believes his birth was unplanned due to the amount of time that had passed between his and his youngest sibling. During one interview with the Independent, Gervais tells the author that even his mother admitted his birth was unplanned.[2]

Gervais has stated that his upbringing and childhood were stable and trauma-free, with a high level of honesty and openness between his family members. He described it as "much like [how] The Waltons" made fun of each-other.[3]

Gervais began his secondary education at Ashmead School, before moving on to University College London in 1979. While there, he studied Biology, and later changed to Philosophy, in which he received a lower second class honours. It was during his time at UCL that at he met his long-time girlfriend, Jane Fallon.

In his final year in 1983 as a student at UCL,[4] Gervais alongside his friend Bill Macrae formed a New Romantic duo, Seona Dancing, (named after a friend and fellow student Seona Myerscough), and they were signed by record label London Records. London Records released two of their singles - "More to Lose" and "Bitter Heart". The singles failed to break the top 40, charting at positions 117 and 70 of the UK singles charts respectively.[5]

A year later, the single "More to Lose" was re-released in Manila as "Medium" by "Fade". The single gained a following by Filipino teenagers after being played by a local DJ on station DWRT-FM (99.5).

He was briefly the manager of the band Suede and a Queen tribute band.

Gervais subsequently worked as an events manager for the University of London Union (ULU),[6] where he continued working until he was offered, and accepted, a similar job as "head of speech" at XFM London.[7]

Gervais, needing an assistant, interviewed the first person whose curriculum vitae he saw. The CV belonged to Stephen Merchant. During the interview at a local pub, Gervais asked Merchant to do "all the boring stuff" due to his experience in media studies whilst Gervais "mess[ed] around". Merchant agreed.[8] In 1996 he was made redundant when the station was taken over by the Capital Radio group.

Gervais was music adviser for the popular BBC drama This Life, which was being produced by his girlfriend Jane Fallon. He and Merchant also contributed sketches to BBC Radio 1's The Breezeblock in 1999 and 2000.

Gervais and Merchant returned to XFM in November 2001, for a Saturday radio show. The show ran intermittently until January 2004 with breaks of 1-3 months between new shows. This was the first time both worked with Karl Pilkington. Pilkington produced the shows and later collaborated with them on their series of podcasts.

After that, Gervais took 18 months off to work on his new television show Extras, write Flanimals, and perform his live show Politics.

He returned to the airwaves on 28 May 2005 to host the show once again with Pilkington and Merchant. He was also heard on BBC Radio 2 during Christmas 2005, sitting in for Jonathan Ross for two weeks.

Podcast

In November 2006, Gervais announced three more free podcasts, together called "The Podfather Trilogy" to be aired at Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas, which he also said would be the last for a while. Recently, a free full length podcast was posted through the Ricky Gervais Podcast channel on iTunes. This podcast was originally given out for free during a performance of Gervais' Fame tour in London. On 25th November 2007, Gervais, Merchant, and Pilkington compiled another free full length podcast which lasted just over an hour.

Television and film career

Gervais performing in 2007

Gervais contributed to the BAFTA winning The Sketch Show (ITV) penning several sketches. His mainstream TV debut came in September 1998 as part of Channel 4's "Comedy Lab" series of pilots. His one-off show, Golden Years, focused on a David Bowie-obsessed character called Clive Meadows. He then came to much wider national attention with an obnoxious, cutting persona featured in a topical slot which replaced Ali G's segments on the satirical Channel 4 comedy programme The 11 O'Clock Show in early 1999 where his character used as many expletives as was possible and produced an inordinate amount of politically incorrect statements. Among the other regular featured comedians on the show was Mackenzie Crook, later a future co-star of The Office. Two years later Gervais went on to present his own comedy chat show for Channel 4 called Meet Ricky Gervais which was poorly received and has since been mocked by Gervais himself.

Throughout this time Gervais also wrote for BBC sketch show Bruiser and The Jim Tavare Show, and had cameo roles in Channel 4's sitcom Spaced; and it is speculated that the cameo is indeed The Office character David Brent. However both series of Spaced finished airing before The Office reached the screens. Gervais also appeared in a few of Channel 4's 'Top 100...' list programmes, and voiced the character of Penguin in Robbie the Reindeer's Legend of the Lost Tribe. His voice was redubbed for the US market.

In August 1999, while on a BBC production course, Stephen Merchant had to make his own short subject. He chose to make a docu-soap parody, set in an office. This sketch later formed the basis of the interview episode.[9] With help from Ash Atalla, Merchant passed this tape onto to the BBC's Head of Entertainment Paul Jackson at the Edinburgh Fringe, who then passed it onto Head of Comedy Jon Plowman who eventually commissioned a full pilot script from Merchant and Gervais.

Extras first aired from 21 July 2005 with an appearance by Ben Stiller. It features cameos from Patrick Stewart, Kate Winslet (who is also from Reading), Ross Kemp, Vinnie Jones, Les Dennis and Samuel L. Jackson. Gervais's main character, Andy Millman, is more self-aware and intentionally humorous than David Brent.

In 2006 Gervais became the first guest star on The Simpsons to also receive a writing credit for the episode on which he guest-starred, "Homer Simpson, This Is Your Wife", which aired on March 26, 2006 (April 23, 2006 in the UK). Asked about how his idea for the episode (in which Homer swaps Marge on a game show) came about, Gervais replied: "I’ve always been fascinated with reality game shows but I think it was my girlfriend’s idea. We watch Celebrity Big Brother at the moment, we watch I’m a Celebrity, Get Me out of Here… we watch all those reality TV shows – The Office came out of those docu-soaps".[10] Gervais is a long-standing Simpsons fan and presented a segment to mark the show's 20th anniversary on BBC Two's The Culture Show on 16 June 2007.

In September 2007, it was announced that Gervais will star in the comedy film This Side of the Truth, co-writing and co-directing with Matt Robinson.[11]

The Office

The first, six-episode series of The Office aired in the UK in July and August 2001 to little fanfare or attention.[12] Word-of-mouth, repeats and DVDs helped spread the word, building up huge momentum and anticipation for the second series, also comprising six episodes, in September 2002.[13] The second series topped the BBC Two ratings, and the show then switched to BBC One in December 2003 for its final two special episodes. In November 2003, bbc.co.uk reported that two 100-page scripts for the forthcoming Christmas specials of The Office had been "sent to the wrong address".[14] They fell into the hands of one Joanne Hiley, who announced her intention to sell them to "the paper which can bid the most". The scripts never appeared in the papers, and there were no follow-up reports explaining the situation's resolution.[citation needed] The Office has since been remade for audiences in France, Germany, Quebec, and the United States. Gervais and Merchant are producers and sometime writers for "The Office" United States. They wrote the episode "The Convict" for the third season of the show.

Extras

A twelve-episode sitcom about background artists working on movies. Written and directed by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, it aired in the UK in July 2005 on BBC and in the U.S. in September 2005 on HBO. It guest starred Ross Kemp, Les Dennis, Patrick Stewart, Vinnie Jones, Samuel L Jackson, Ben Stiller, Kate Winslet and Francesca Martinez. A second series began on 14 September 2006 in the UK, featuring Daniel Radcliffe, Orlando Bloom, Sir Ian McKellen, Chris Martin, Keith Chegwin, Robert Lindsay, Warwick Davis, Ronnie Corbett, Stephen Fry, Richard Briers, Patricia Potter, Sophia Myles, Moira Stuart, David Bowie, Robert De Niro and Jonathan Ross.

On 10 June 2006, Gervais and Merchant were seen in a specially-filmed promotional sketch for Extras 2 in the middle of BBC1's World Cup football coverage. This time, Gervais did not perform his famous dance. Instead, Merchant did - a take-off of the Crouch Dance, recently popularised by England striker Peter Crouch.

Gervais has acknowledged being influenced by Curb Your Enthusiasm and The Larry Sanders Show in making Extras, particularly in the format of celebrities making fools of themselves or subverting their public personas,[15] and the Gervais joke of someone making inappropriate remarks in front of a member of a minority. He has interviewed both Larry David and Garry Shandling, creators of these shows, on Ricky Gervais Meets...

A Christmas special of Extras was aired on December 27, 2007 in the UK and December 16 in the US, featuring guest appearances by George Michael, Clive Owen, Gordon Ramsay, Jonathan Ross and David Tennant.

Extras was awarded the Golden Globe award on January 14, 2008.

Stand-up

Gervais made a few attempts at stand-up in the late 1990s, but his first successful show took place at the Cafe Royal, as part of 2001's Edinburgh Fringe. Titled Rubbernecker, the show also featured Jimmy Carr, Robin Ince and Stephen Merchant.

Gervais later toured the UK in 2003 with his stand-up show Animals. The Politics tour followed a year later. Both of these shows were recorded for release on DVD and television broadcast. The third part of the themed live trilogy, Fame, took place in 2007. It started in Glasgow in January and ended in Sheffield in April. Blackpool reported selling out of tickets within 45 minutes of them going on sale.[16] More dates were added.

Newsnight Review's panel saw Animals during its Bloomsbury run and covered it in January 2003. They were not favourable, with Private Eye editor Ian Hislop being the most explicit in his criticism.[17] After this, Gervais closed each show by calling Hislop "a little ugly pug-faced cunt." Further coverage on Newsnight Review has been overwhelmingly favourable, with the panelists playing 'themselves' in promos for the second series of Extras. Panel regulars Germaine Greer, Mark Kermode and Mark Lawson also appeared as 'themselves' reviewing When The Whistle Blows in a series episode. Critic Lawson is a great admirer of Gervais and Merchant, having interviewed them extensively for television, print Front Row and the Edinburgh International Television Festival.

Fame was the subject of some controversy in January 2007 when Gervais told a story, ostensibly about how people will do anything to become famous, to a Scottish audience.[18] The story referred to a question asked of Gervais five years earlier by a reporter: what can you do to become famous? To which he replied, "Go out and kill a prostitute." He followed up with the punchline, "I won't do that bit in Ipswich," referring to the recent murders of five prostitutes in Ipswich, in December 2006. The joke even drew criticism from the father of one of the victims, Tania Nicol: “These days they want to make a joke out of anything. I feel he’s just being uncaring, quite honestly.” Gervais did not apologise, but did attempt to defend himself: "I do want people to know that that happened five years ago and is not related to anything now. That is the problem with comedy, a joke that is funny today can be a terrible faux pas tomorrow”.

He has performed stand-up in the U.S. three times. He performed two warm up shows at the TriBeCa Performing Arts Center and headlined David Bowie's High Line Festival in May 2007.[19]

Books

The Office scripts were released in book form, with Series 1 issued in 2002, and the remaining episodes following in 2003. Gervais released a children's book in 2004, Flanimals - illustrated by his friend Rob Steen - which used nonsense animals. After the success of this book he released its sequel More Flanimals in 2005, with Flanimals of the Deep coming the next year. A new Flanimals book Day of the Bletching, came out in October 2007. There is a wide range of Flanimals merchandise available, including dolls and gift cards. A six-part Flanimals TV series has been commissioned by ITV,[20] although Gervais had previously claimed signing a Hollywood movie deal[21] so that a franchise could be developed. "That way it stands a chance of being the next Dr. Seuss or Mr Men".[22] In late 2006 the Extras scriptbook was released, as well as The World of Karl Pilkington presented by Gervais and Merchant. These were essentially transcripts of XFM/podcast routines performed by the three .

Boxing

In 2002, Gervais took part in a charity boxing match against entrepreneur Grant Bovey - known largely by the public due to his relationship with TV personality Anthea Turner. On his Saturday afternoon Radio show on XFM London Gervais and partners Stephen Merchant and Karl Pilkington had discussions on both Ricky's attitude towards boxing and training in general, as well as his likelihood of victory against Bovey. Initially, Merchant had questions as to why Gervais was participating in the event, due to his dislike of slight pain and his inexperience with fitness in general.

In the weeks before the event was scheduled to take place both Merchant and Pilkington voiced their doubts as to his fitness due to illness which he had sustained weeks before the event, humorously, by stating that both they and Gervais' family had written up a petition to the BBC stating "Please do not allow this man to box."[citation needed]

Gervais was trained for the three-round contest by famous boxing trainer brothers Frank and Eugene Maloney, at their Fight Factory gymnasium. It was the second televised charity boxing match, the first being Bob Mortimer against Les Dennis, for Comic Relief. The fight was televised by the BBC, and Gervais came out on top by a split decision verdict. Turner later claimed the only reason Gervais was awarded victory was because of his relationship with the BBC[citation needed]. Gervais later said that the experience was the 'most difficult thing' he had ever done. He donated his £5,000 prize money to the training of a Macmillan nurse.

Accolades

Awarding Body/Event Awarded
Writers Guild of America
  • 2007 Best Comedy Series "The Office" (U.S.)
Rose d'Or
  • 2006 Honorary Rose for Exceptional Contribution to the Global Entertainment Business
Emmy Awards
  • 2007 Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series "Extras"
  • 2006 Best Writing for a Comedy "Extras"
  • 2006 Emmy Outstanding Comedy Series "The Office" (U.S.)
  • 2005 Best Writing for a Miniseries, Movie or Dramatic Special “Office Special” (UK)
Golden Globe
  • 2008 Best Television Comedy or Musical (TV) Extras
  • 2004 Best Actor - Musical or Comedy (TV) The Office (UK)
  • 2004 Best Television Comedy The Office (UK)
Peabody Awards
  • 2004 Peabody Award “The Office” (UK)
BAFTA Awards
  • 2007 Best Comedy Performance
  • 2004 Best Comedy Performance
  • 2004 Best Situation Comedy “The Office” (UK)
  • 2003 Best Comedy Performance
  • 2003 Situation Comedy Award “The Office” (UK)
  • 2002 Best Comedy Performance
  • 2002 Situation Comedy Award “The Office” (UK)
Royal Television Society
  • 2003 Best Comedy Performance for: "The Office" (UK)
British Comedy Award
  • 2004 Writer of the Year Ricky Gervais & Stephen Merchant
  • 2002 Best Comedy Actor
  • 2002 Best Television Comedy “The Office” (UK)
  • 2001 Best New Television Comedy “The Office” (UK)
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards
  • 2003 Writer's Award for: "The Office" (UK)
  • 2002 Writer's Award for: "The Office" (UK)

Gervais has received many awards for his work on The Office, most notably two Golden Globes (one for acting, one for the show itself), as well as numerous British Academy Television Awards and British Comedy Awards, amongst others. The show missed out on what was considered to be a definite Emmy Award nomination because there were not enough episodes broadcast in the U.S. before the deadline for consideration.[23]

Gervais received an honorary award at the annual Rose d'Or ceremony in Switzerland on April 29, 2006. The award is given to "an individual who has made an exceptional contribution to the global entertainment business".[24]

Gervais has been nominated for best stand-up award at this year's Loaded LAFTAS with NIVEA for Men. The winners will be announced on October 4.

On September 16, 2007, Gervais won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for his role of Andy Millman on Extras.[25]

Other work

Gervais guest-starred in an episode of The Simpsons entitled "Homer Simpson, This Is Your Wife", which aired on March 26, 2006 in the United States, on April 23, 2006 in the United Kingdom, and on July 18, 2006 in Australia. The episode was the highest rated in Sky One's history, arguably due to its extensive promotion. This revolved around the angle that Gervais was the episode's sole writer, but he clarified the extent of his input in a joint interview (with Christopher Guest) for Dazed and Confused magazine (January 2006): "No, all I did was put a down a load of observations on an email and they made it look like a Simpsons script. I'm going to get the credit, but I think everyone in the industry knows it was a joint effort." Criticisms of the episode include its promotion of high definition television [citation needed] (Sky has just launched an HD service) as well as the quality of the script[citation needed]. This was not his first appearance in an animation, as he had provided the voice of "Bugsy" in the 2005 animated feature film, Valiant.

He also guest-starred in Alias (the season three episode "Façade") as Daniel Ryan, an English former Royal Navy bomb disposal specialist turned rogue Irish Republican Army bomb-maker. He has also appeared several times on The Late Show With David Letterman.

At one point, Gervais was considered for a role in the Tom Cruise movie Mission: Impossible III, but it never came to fruition - Gervais cited reasons for this, on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross: "It was a bigger part than I first thought." He added: "I did an episode of Alias, and I can't watch it. Me being serious. I can't watch it."

Gervais's film career has continued with small roles as a studio executive, as the voice of a pigeon in Valiant, his appearance in Night at the Museum, playing museum director Dr. McPhee, and as "Ferdy the Fence" in Stardust. His role in Night at the Museum has proven to be one of Gervais's most popular roles, with the movie grossing $570 million worldwide.[26][27]

On 2 July 2005, Gervais appeared at the Live 8 event held in Hyde Park, where he performed his famous dance. He produced a series of short films for the cause, linked acts from the studio with Jonathan Ross and also introduced the group R.E.M.. On 5 January 2006, he interviewed Larry David, in a one off special, Ricky Gervais Meets... Larry David. On 25 December and 26 December of the same year, Channel 4 aired similar specials where he interviewed the actor/comedian Christopher Guest and infamously Garry Shandling. There are no plans for further episodes of "Meets...", although editions with John Cleese and Matt Groening were recorded in 2006, for broadcast in 2007. A source claimed "The Shandling experience put him off for good."[28][29]

On February 6, 2006, it was announced that Gervais and Merchant were to write an episode for the third season of the U.S. version of The Office.[30] The episode, entitled "The Convict", aired on November 30, 2006 in the United States.

On 20 February 2006, after performing twelve free podcasts with Stephen Merchant and Karl Pilkington, it was announced that all future episodes would be available from Audible.com at a "nominal fee". The reasons given for the commercialisation of the podcast were the significant cost of producing and online hosting for a weekly half hour show. The other reason was that Pilkington was out of a job after leaving his post as a production manager at UK station Xfm, although the Sony Award-winning producer has since worked for the BBC (including a run of Russell Brand shows on 6Music) as well as making and appearing in a couple of shorts for Channel 4. He is currently working on A Day in the Life of an Idiot for BBC 2.

On 1 July 2007, Gervais performed at the Concert for Diana in Wembley Stadium, a music event celebrating the life of the late Princess of Wales. Towards the end of the event - after a pre-recorded introduction from Ben Stiller - Gervais appeared along with fellow Office star Mackenzie Crook. They performed Freelove Freeway, a song previously heard in the fourth episode of series one of The Office. Due to a technical problem, Gervais then had to fill time until he was able to re-introduce Elton John to close the show, so he did the David Brent dance again, as well as singing the "Little Fat Man" song as performed by David Bowie in episode two of the second series of Extras.

On 7 July 2007 Gervais appeared at the UK leg of Live Earth at Wembley Stadium, London. Gervais introduced Rob Reiner appearing in the guise of spoof film director Marty Di Bergi, who in turn introduced Spinal Tap. At the start of the concert, Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles, who was acting as compère for part of the event, announced that Gervais would be appearing and performing an 'extended 25-minute set', which ultimately failed to happen. It is unclear whether this was meant as a joke, perhaps referring to the time Gervais had to fill at the Concert for Diana the previous Sunday, or if it was simply cut because of time constraints, but in an off-stage segment later Moyles actually expressed disappointment that it didn't occur. Gervais himself however did reference his appearance at the Diana concert the previous week, saying, 'Now listen, we're running late, so I'm gonna be off this stage in 30 seconds, whether Elton John is fucking ready or not,' making him one of a number of people to swear on live TV at the event.

In late 2007, Gervais expressed interest in performing in the worldwide hit TV series Heroes. The character is said to be an 'extended' temporary character, to appear in a number of episodes, as verified by Gervais himself on the Heroes-related documentary "Heroes Unmasked".[citation needed]

Gervais is currently in Lowell, MA through May filming his next actor/director project This Side of the Truth, starring himself, Jennifer Garner, Rob Lowe, and Jason Bateman, with appearances by Tina Fey and Jeffrey Tambor.

It was recently confirmed that he will have a role in the upcoming video game Grand Theft Auto IV, as himself, appearing in both his role as a comedian in a comedy club, and in a yet unrevealed setting. For this, a special 3-minute act was written, recorded and fully motion-captured. [31]

Criticism

The Independent newspaper has described Gervais as "obsessed by his own celebrity," but adds, "Who wouldn't want to be Peter Lawford in a comedy Rat Pack?" in reference to Ricky Gervais Meets...; the article, however, also describes him as "a very funny man" who "created one of the great sitcoms".[32] The Guardian's Chris Tryhorn explained the "few gripes" he had with Extras, "particularly in the second series". "You can forgive Gervais a certain arrogance after the success of The Office, but..." He remarks on the confused tone of the series, taking in the clash between the broad comedy of characters Barry (Shaun Williamson) and Darren (Stephen Merchant), and the apparent parody of this style with When The Whistle Blows, and "given their total indulgence of Gervais, the BBC is portrayed as interfering, its comedy department run by a rather crudely stereotyped gay couple".[33]

In September 2005 he caused mild controversy by recording a radio advert for a prostate cancer charity which was only allowed to be broadcast from 9pm to 6am because of its content.[34] However, on October 3, 2005, the Radio Advertising Clearance Centre announced that the advert could be broadcast before 9pm, but stipulated that a "squish" noise should be removed.[35]

In August 2007 he was the subject of a Telegraph feature titled, Has Ricky Gervais stopped being funny? The conclusion was that he had not.[36]

Concert for Diana

In July 2007, following Gervais' appearance at the memorial concert for Diana, Princess of Wales, the Guardian ran a column by Daily Mirror television critic Jim Shelley entitled "Call Me Crazy... But Has Ricky Gervais Lost It?"[37] This related to his performance at the concert for Diana in which he had to fill time after a technical fault in the sound system for Elton John's performance. He was not allowed to use material from his current stand-up show 'Fame' for legal reasons, so instead performed his famous Brent Dance that the audience willed him to do and sang the song "Little Fat Man" from Extras series two (originally performed by David Bowie in the series) before being told he could hand back to the BBC. Gervais was allegedly booed off stage.[38] He tells British radio station Heart FM, "After the Diana concert there was one guy - who works for a tabloid - and he wrote that the crowd booed… they didn't boo, they loved it." "People love it when something goes wrong and I was standing there and they demanded I do 'the robot dance' and it was funny."

The following week, the Guardian noted that Gervais had responded with "an exhilaratingly foul-mouthed tirade" on his website, concluding with the words, "Yes I am resting on my laurels you cunt!", in this video Gervais mocked Jim Shelley typing the words "Resting on his laurels" as Ricky jokingly lashed out by stating he was resting on his laurels and that he was not going to make another show for television and saying "What's the point? What is there to beat?". [39]

Personal life

Watching wildlife programs as a child affected Gervais's understanding of cruelty towards animals. He is supportive of a declaration for animal rights, as well as the WSPA (an animal welfare organisation), and is against fox-hunting and bull fighting.[40]

In 2007 he told Kirsty Young on Desert Island Discs, "I'm an atheist".[41]

He cannot drive, as stated in his radio show and his Politics DVD commentary. He has a second-floor office in Tottenham Court Road, London, where he records his podcasts with Stephen Merchant and Karl Pilkington.[42] Gervais has a pet cat, named Ollie (given to him by Jonathan Ross), and a salamander named Tel.[43]

A gang stole £200,000 from his bank account by pasting a picture of him from his Office DVD onto a dead man's passport and using an insider from the bank to transfer the funds. When they tried to use the money to buy gold, they were arrested. They were sentenced to between two and two and a half years in prison.[44]

In 2006 he bought a £2.5 million mansion in the Hampstead neighbourhood of north London, near good friend Jonathan Ross, on his Fame tour he claims it cost £3.5 million.[45] Gervais is also friends with Jon Stewart[46] and is a frequent and popular guest on their various radio and TV shows.

Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
2005 Valiant Bugsy (voice)
2006 For Your Consideration Martin Gibb
Night at the Museum Dr. McPhee
2007 Stardust Ferdy the Fence
2008 Ghost Town Betram Pincus post-production
2009 Night at the Museum 2: Escape from the Smithsonian Dr. McPhee filming
This Side of the Truth Mark filming; Also co-writer and co-director[11]

References

  1. ^ The Independent (2005) -- "His father, Jerry, was a French-Canadian ... soldier stationed here during the war. He met Eva, the comedian's mother, during a blackout and they settled in Reading."
  2. ^ The Independent (2005) -- "Ricky Gervais was born 44 years ago, a mistake. "My mum told me that," he says. "She went 'You was an accident'. I went 'Cheers!' Ha ha! A lot of honesty in my family"
  3. ^ Independent (2005). -- "The youngest, by some way, of four brothers, his childhood was trauma-free. Like The Waltons, he says, "If the Waltons took the piss out of each other. You had to be able to answer back." The first time he did, he got a laugh and, his family reasoned, "He'll be alright.""
  4. ^ Thomas, S., et al. (1983).
  5. ^ The Independent (2005). -- "Aged 21, he was in a band himself, new romantics Seona Dancing. Their singles reached 117 and 70. The video for one, "Bitter Heart", was set in a blacksmith's."
  6. ^ The Observer (2005) -- "'Not at all,' he says. 'When I was working at ULU I never thought, "This is shit" or "The money is bad." I thought: "This is quite a good job." I suppose if all this had not come along I might now have been a 43-year-old entertainments manager. But that never worried me at the time."
  7. ^ The Observer (2005) -- "Instead of a stand-up career, Gervais moved from ULU to a job as head of speech at the alternative radio station XFM."
  8. ^ The Observer (2005). -- "Merchant was his deputy. Instead of worrying too much about being heads of speech, they mostly worked on little routines. Merchant was sometimes obliged to wheel his boss around the office in his executive chair. 'I remember going out for a drink with Steve early on,' Gervais says. 'I said to him, "You've done media studies, you can do all the boring stuff, all the filing, I'll mess around." He said: "OK." And that was that."
  9. ^ Edinburgh Festival 2001: More than The Office comedian | Independent, The (London) | Find Articles at BNET.com
  10. ^ "Interview at UKULA".
  11. ^ a b Michael Fleming (2007-09-12). "Ricky Gervais to star in 'Truth'". Variety. Retrieved 2007-09-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ^ - The big cheese, The Telegraph, 18/09/2002
  13. ^ FUNNY BUSINESS
  14. ^ BBC NEWS | Entertainment | TV and Radio | Blunder 'reveals Office secrets'
  15. ^ Extras work needed, Ricky? | Organgrinder | Guardian Unlimited
  16. ^ What a sell-out, Huge demand for Gervais tour
  17. ^ BBC News, January 13, 2003
  18. ^ Entertainment Wise
  19. ^ E! News - Bowie Takes the High Line - David Bowie | Ricky Gervais
  20. ^ Flanimals
  21. ^ News: Gervais signs Hollywood deal
  22. ^ Ricky Gervais: My life as a superstar - People, News - Independent.co.uk
  23. ^ Ricky Gervais - News
  24. ^ BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Rose d'Or honour for TV's Gervais
  25. ^ "2007 Emmy Winners". BBC News Online. 2007-09-17. Retrieved 2007-09-17. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  26. ^ Green, Graeme. (2007). "60 SECONDS: Ricky Gervais" Retrieved on 22 July 2007 from http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/interviews/article.html?in_article_id=35340&in_page_id=11 METRO Newspaper
  27. ^ Green, Graeme. (2007)., -- "[Green:] After having your own Simpsons episode and working with Robert De Niro, are there any other big ambitions left to fulfil? [...] [Gervais:] I get offered 50 diversions a day. I could be the guest on every panel show or the butler in loads of films. But when The Simpsons calls or Robert De Niro calls, you say ‘yes’ to them and ‘no’ to the other 49."
  28. ^ Deedes, Henry. (2007). "PANDORA: By George, we salute you for your indefatigability" Independent News and Media Limited Retrieved on 22 July 2007 from http://news.independent.co.uk/people/pandora/article2125389.ece Independent News and Media Limited
  29. ^ Deedes, Henry. (2007)., -- "While critics condemned the Guest interview as fawning, they were even less kind about the encounter with Shandling, who proved a more than awkward subject. At one point, Shandling told Gervais he didn't think the Extras star "was happy casting Jews" in his shows."
  30. ^ http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=190702006
  31. ^ British Office Star Ricky Gervais Appears In GTA IV http://kotaku.com/380990/british-office-star-ricky-gervais-appears-in-gta-iv
  32. ^ Ricky Gervais: Step into my office - People, News - Independent.co.uk
  33. ^ Extras work needed, Ricky? | Organgrinder | Guardian Unlimited
  34. ^ BBC NEWS | Health | Anger over cancer ad censorship
  35. ^ BBC NEWS | Health | U-turn on Gervais prostate advert
  36. ^ Has Ricky Gervais stopped being funny? - Telegraph
  37. ^ Guardian Unlimited: Arts blog - TV & radio: Call me crazy ... but has Ricky Gervais lost it?
  38. ^ http://www.allgervais.com/index.php?subaction=showfull&id=1186920387&archive=&start_from=&ucat=&
  39. ^ Guardian Unlimited: Arts blog - TV & radio: Ricky Gervais: 'Resting on my laurels? Yes!'
  40. ^ 60 SECONDS: Ricky Gervais | Metro.co.uk
  41. ^ BBC Radio 4 - Factual - Desert Island Discs -Ricky Gervais
  42. ^ Ricky Gervais... Obviously
  43. ^ Ricky Gervais... Obviously
  44. ^ BBC NEWS | England | London | Gervais account fraudsters jailed
  45. ^ http://www.rickygervaisnow.com/news_0001.html
  46. ^ Honda - Comedy Central - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart - Ricky Gervais Pt. 1 - SPIKE Powered By IFILM

Interviews

  • The Independent, et al. (2005). Ricky Gervais: My life as a superstar [Electronic Version] Independent News Media: United Kingdom
  • The Guardian Newspaper, et al. (2005). "Second Coming" Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007: United Kingdom
  • Thomas, S., et al. (1983). More to lose - everything to gain [Electronic Version] Retrieved on 8 July 2007 from [1] New Music Express : London
Preceded by Golden Globe - Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy
for The Office

2003
Succeeded by

Template:Simpsons writers