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Henry Paker

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Henry Paker
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Comedian, writer, actor, artist, illustrator
Years active1990s–present
Notable workThree Bean Salad

Henry Paker is a British comedian and artist.

Paker has been described as “the man behind many of your favourite tv shows” with writing, performing and acting credits that include 8 Out of 10 Cats, Mock the Week, Comic Relief, Top Gear, Josh, Russell Howard’s Good News, Sean Walsh World and Michael Macintyre’s Big Show, as well as the BBC radio 4 sitcom ReincarNathan,[1] Never Mind the Buzzcocks, Stand Up for the Week, Big Fat Quiz of the Year,[2] and the Beef And Dairy Network Podcast,[3] as well as the Josh Widdicombe and James Acaster presented show Hypothetical[4] and BBC 1’s Would I Lie To You.[5]

The comedian Ivo Graham declared Paker’s 2010 Edinburgh Festival Fringe show, which he described as a “surrealist maverick unreading the Bible”, as the funniest stand up he had ever seen.[6] The Independent in 2010 saw “flashes of bonkers brilliance.. the real joy lies in the duo’s surreal flights of fancy” before it “descends into irredeemable silliness by the end” when reviewing The Golden Lizard which Paker wrote and performed with Mike Wozniak.[7] The Golden Lizard, won Paker and Mike Wozniak the Best New Show at the Leicester Comedy Festival in 2011.[8]

Paker’s one liner “Are headphones getting bigger or are idiots getting smaller?” made The Guardian best 10 joke list from the 2016 Edinburgh Festival,[9] as well as a selection in The Daily Telegraph.[10] Paker had also previously made The Guardian’s list in 2014.[11] In 2014 fellow comedian Romesh Ranganathan described Paker as “a genius.. funny falls out of him.”[12]

Paker’s 2018 Edinburgh show Man Alive was described as a “introverts manifesto” that “exceeds expectations in a wonderfully imaginative way” in The Times with Paker proving to be “a grandmaster at the pull-back-and-reveal”.[13] The show was directed by his wife Amy Beth Hayes.[14]

Three Bean Salad

Paker is a member of the Three Bean Salad podcast with fellow comics Benjamin Partridge and Mike Wozniak. The podcast was described as having an “RP-accented vibe” by The Times,[15] with the comics “meandering off the point of a different topic each week”.[16] The podcast has had occasional live shows such as at the London Podcast Festival in 2021.[17]

Illustrations

As an illustrator, Paker was said by The Guardian to have “charmingly” provided the illustrations for Adam Kay’s book Anatomy[18] as well as Kay’s follow up Kay's Marvellous Medicine: A Gross and Gruesome History of the Human Body,[19] which was nominated for the Children's Non-fiction Book of the Year Award at the British Book Awards.[20] Paker co-wrote and illustrated the book ‘Why Steve Was Late: 101 Exceptional Excuses for Terrible Timekeeping’ with Dave Skinner with whom he also wrote Don't Arm Wrestle a Pirate, which was made into animations voiced by Steve Coogan.[21] Paker’s illustrations have appeared in The Spectator, The Observer and Prospect (magazine).[22]

References

  1. ^ Guide, British Comedy (20 March 2019). "Henry Paker interview". British Comedy Guide.
  2. ^ "Henry Paker's Comedy Profile |Hot Water Comedy Club". www.hotwatercomedy.co.uk.
  3. ^ Guide, British Comedy (13 April 2017). "Beef And Dairy Network Podcast to be broadcast on Radio 4". British Comedy Guide.
  4. ^ Guide, British Comedy (9 May 2022). "Josh Widdicombe on Hypothetical's return interview - Hypothetical". British Comedy Guide.
  5. ^ Guide, British Comedy. "Would I Lie To You? Christmas Special - Would I Lie To You? At Christmas". British Comedy Guide.
  6. ^ "Ivo Graham: 'Shaving my head was meant to give me an air of mystery and menace. It did not'". the Guardian. 18 August 2017.
  7. ^ "The Golden Lizard, Pleasance Courtyard". The Independent. 23 August 2010.
  8. ^ Ashe, by Isaac (26 February 2022). "Every Leicester Mercury Comedian of the Year winner listed". LeicestershireLive.
  9. ^ "Sex, pandas and Boris Johnson's hair – the best jokes from Edinburgh festival". the Guardian. 15 August 2016.
  10. ^ "Edinburgh Festival Fringe: the 37 funniest jokes". The Telegraph.
  11. ^ "Edinburgh fringe 2014: the 10 best jokes so far". the Guardian. 12 August 2014.
  12. ^ "10 questions for Romesh Ranganathan". the Guardian. 8 August 2014.
  13. ^ Maxwell, Dominic. "Edinburgh comedy review: Henry Paker at Banshee Labyrinth" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  14. ^ Rosenberg, Elizabeth (6 November 2019). "BN1 talks to Henry Paker".
  15. ^ Nicol, Patricia. "10 podcasts to bring cheer in January, from Bob Mortimer to Bill Nighy" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  16. ^ Bennett, Steve. "Mike Wozniak launches a new podcast : News 2021 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". www.chortle.co.uk.
  17. ^ Nicol, Patricia. "London Podcast Festival review — are live recordings as good as listening alone?" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  18. ^ "Adam Kay: 'We should talk to kids about sex and alcohol. Everything goes wrong when people close up'". the Guardian. 19 December 2020.
  19. ^ Bennett, Steve. "Adam Kay signs up for more children's books : News 2021 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". www.chortle.co.uk.
  20. ^ "Sally Rooney and Julia Donaldson among nominees for British Book Awards 2022". The National Wales.
  21. ^ "Unpacked". Machynlleth Comedy Festival.
  22. ^ "Why Steve Was Late: 101 Exceptional Excuses for Terrible Timekeeping (Hardcover) | University Press Books/ Berkeley". www.universitypressbooks.com.