Mr. Methane
Mr Methane | |
---|---|
Pseudonym | Mr Methane |
Birth name | Paul Oldfield |
Born | 1966 Macclesfield, Cheshire, England |
Medium | Performance art |
Nationality | British |
Years active | 1991-present |
Genres | Speciality act |
Website | www.mrmethane.com |
Paul Oldfield, born in Macclesfield, Cheshire, North West England, is better known by his stage name Mr. Methane. He is a British flatulist or "professional farter" who started performing in 1991;[1] he briefly retired in 2006 but re-started in mid-2007; he claims to be the only performing professional flatulist in the world.[2]
Background
According to When Will I Be Famous? (2003),[3] a BBC book on British variety acts, Oldfield discovered his ability at the age of fifteen when practising yoga. The next day he performed twenty rapid fire rasping farts in under a minute for a group of his friends. It became so popular he made it into a regular event.
In the late 1980s, Oldfield turned professional, performing as an opening act for the Macclesfield-based bands The Screaming Beavers and The Macc Lads. The latter wrote a song about him on their album The Beer Necessities. Oldfield subsequently traveled to New York, USA, where he appeared as a guest on the Howard Stern Show as the "British Blaster". While in New York, Mr. Methane also performed a series of farts on Broadway.
In 2009 Oldfield auditioned for Britain's Got Talent, where he announced his intention to "put the art into fart",[4] but failed to make it through to the live finals, after being "buzzed" out by all three judges in less than two minutes during his flatulist performance of the Blue Danube waltz, with Simon Cowell calling him "a disgusting creature". That same year, Mr. Methane also auditioned for Das Supertalent in Germany, but was eliminated in the semi-finals.
DVDs
- Methane, Mr (2000), Mr Methane Lets Rip! ASIN B00004D03A
See also
Books
- Featured in Jennings, Charles (7 Dec 1995). "Up North - Travels Beyond The Watford Gap". Abacus. ISBN-10: 0349106851 / ISBN-13: 978-0349106854. Page 51.
- Chapter on Mr Methane in Kelner, Martin (12 June 2003). When Will I Be Famous. BBC Books. ISBN 0563487771 / ISBN 978-0563487777
- Featured in Foster, Tim (1 November 2007). Superman's Pockets. FiveFootSix. ISBN 0955704006 / ISBN 978-0955704000
- There is a lengthy chapter on Mr. Methane called "The Man With the Singing Sphincter" in Jim Dawson's 2006 book Blame It on the Dog: A Modern History of the Fart. Ten Speed Press ISBN 978-1-58008-751-3
Music
- Local Macclesfield band, The Macc Lads, wrote a song about Mr Methane in 1990. All sounds in the song were preformed by Mr Methane[5]
Footnotes
- ^ Pile, Stephen, "Ride The Wild Wind". Sunday Telegraph' (London), Review Section p. 7 (June 27, 1993)}
- ^ "Independent, 31 January 2004]". [dead link]
- ^ "amazon.co.uk page for "When Will I Be Famous"".
- ^ "Auditions 5: Mr Methane". itv.com. Retrieved 2010-08-21.
- ^ "MR METHANE]".
Guardian G2 Page 14 http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2008/jul/23/edinburghfestival.comedy
References
- The Independent ( London ), 1 January 1994 - front page article.
- Daily Telegraph (London), 17th March, 2001
- Interview/feature in The Age (Australia), 20th March, 2005
Guardian G2 Page 14 http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2008/jul/23/edinburghfestival.comedy