Mark Curry (British TV presenter)
Mark Curry | |
---|---|
Born | Mark Preston Curry 27 August 1961 Stafford, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Television presenter and actor |
Years active | 1970–present |
Spouse |
Jeremy Sandle (m. 2008) |
Mark Preston Curry (born 27 August 1961) is an English actor and television and radio presenter.
Career
Early years
Born in Stafford, Curry grew up in the mining village of Allerton Bywater near Castleford in the West Riding of Yorkshire. His father, Arthur, a physical training instructor and prison officer, died when Curry was five. His mother, Lily, was a maternity nurse. His television career began when he was seven, after he auditioned for Jess Yates, the executive producer of Yorkshire Television's Junior Showtime. He was a regular performer on the show from 1969 to 1974. He attended the Jean Pearce School of Dancing in Leeds throughout the early 1970s.[1]
Curry has appeared in many pantomimes throughout the UK. His first was a television pantomime in 1972, Babes in the Wood, starring Little and Large and Susan Maughan, where Curry and Bonnie Langford were the two babes. Alan Parker cast Curry as Oscar, the producer, in the film Bugsy Malone (1976).
In the late 1970s, Curry co-presented a Saturday morning TV show called Calendar Kids, with Kathryn Apanowicz, which was only shown in the Yorkshire Television region. He was also a main character in a six episode comedy/drama series about brass bands, Sounding Brass, for ATV.
Curry joined the Harrogate Theatre Company and appeared in several plays over three years in the early 1980s. In 1981, he co-hosted the series Get Set For Summer on BBC1 with main host Peter Powell and Lucie Skeaping. The series returned the following year as Get Set but eventually became The Saturday Picture Show with Curry as main host, running until 1986. Curry's co-hosts over the years included Deborah Appleby, Maggie Philbin and Cheryl Baker.
In 1984, Curry was the question master on the final series of Screen Test, the BBC's cinematic quiz show for children.[2]
Blue Peter: 1986–1989
On 23 June 1986, Curry joined the children's television programme Blue Peter. During his time on the show, he did such things as being strapped to the sails of Outwood Windmill in Surrey and accidentally knocking the head off a man made of Lego.
Curry spent three weeks in Malawi witnessing distressing scenes of people from surrounding villages suffering with blindness and chronic eye problems. He had an eye operation when he was two years old and has to wear spectacles due to only seeing clearly through one eye, so was very enthusiastic about raising money for the charity, SightSavers, which was the Blue Peter appeal for 1986.
He travelled all over the Soviet Union for the 1987 summer expedition and was known for his history features on the show, his cooking disasters and his performing. Due to Curry's successful children's history programme Treasure Houses, created by Dorothy Smith and the head of children's programmes, Edward Barnes, he was invited to replace Simon Groom without auditioning for the show.[citation needed]
Curry's co-hosts during his time with the programme were Janet Ellis, Peter Duncan, Caron Keating, Yvette Fielding and John Leslie. Curry was very emotional in 2004 after the death of fellow presenter and close friend, Caron Keating.
The team of Curry, Keating and Fielding during the 1980s was very popular at the time[citation needed] and they worked together on the programme's Christmas song and dance specials. Curry's trip with Yvette Fielding to the Pleasure Beach in Blackpool on Blue Peter was very well regarded by viewers. After leaving Blue Peter in June 1989, Curry was offered another BBC 1 Saturday morning show but turned it down, feeling that he had done everything he wanted to do in children's television.[citation needed]
1990–present
Curry played the role of a TV host in a 1990 episode of the ITV drama London's Burning. He appeared in an episode of the BBC comedy series, Bread, and when Roy Castle became ill during the mid-1990s, Curry was asked to co present Record Breakers for the BBC.[citation needed] Curry played one of the two leading roles in the London West End production of The Woman in Black, in 1994 and starred in the centenary production of Charley's Aunt. Curry has appeared in a UK tour of Noises Off and in the stage musical version of Singin' in the Rain. Victoria Wood cast Curry as 'The Compere' in a 2009 revival of her play Talent, which she also directed at the Menier Chocolate Factory, London. He played the role of Larry in Sondheim's Company and Andre Cassell in Victor/Victoria, at the London fringe venue Southwark Playhouse in 2011 and 2012. He has also appeared at the Theatre Royal, Windsor in several Alan Ayckbourn plays.
In 1998, Curry presented a DIY BBC 1 daytime series Change That and also hosted the ITV daytime series of the quiz show, Catchphrase in 2002. He co-presented a daily, live food series on the Carlton Food Network with Ruth Langsford and later, Anthea Turner. This series saw Curry travel to Italy, Cyprus, India and Singapore, covering food topics.[citation needed]
Curry made a guest appearance in an episode of Last of the Summer Wine, entitled "Will The Nearest Alien Please Come In", broadcast 19 August 2007, playing a character trying to get in touch with extra terrestrials.[3] He was also cast in an episode of the BBC daytime drama Doctors.
From 9 January, until the late summer of 2012, he presented the breakfast radio show, Curry For Breakfast on Talk Radio Europe, the English language talk/variety network in southern Spain, where he has a home.[citation needed] He played a leading role in Wife Begins At Forty, for Ray Cooney at the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford and the Mill, at Sonning in 2011 and 2012 and returned to Sonning in 2013 in the comedy, Who's Under Where?. Curry is the regular Master of Ceremonies for the Aegon Classic, a pre-Wimbledon women's tennis tournament at the Priory Club, Edgbaston.
He has presented and performed in several BBC Children in Need television shows, once playing Cliff Richard in a Eurovision Song Contest tribute singing "Congratulations" and "Power To All Our Friends".
Curry is a keen tennis player and a qualified tennis coach.[1] He has commentated at Wimbledon for BBC Radio 5, Radio Wimbledon and for Talk Radio Europe.
He featured on the BBC One quiz show Pointless in December 2012 alongside Peter Duncan. In January 2014, Curry received a diploma in Life Coaching and contributed to ITV's Piers Morgan's Life Stories, discussing his friendship with actress Beverley Callard known for her role in Coronation Street. From May to August 2014, he played, "Siegfried Farnon", in the stage adaptation and UK tour of, "All Creatures Great and Small".
In January 2015, Curry appears as a guest panelist in the Channel 5's daytime show The Wright Stuff.
From 25 March 2016 he is playing the role of Wizard in the popular West End musical Wicked.[4]
Personal life
In September 2008, Curry formed a civil partnership with his long-term partner, Jeremy Sandle.[5]
References
- ^ a b "I Love Blue Peter - Mark Curry presenter biography". BBC. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
- ^ Screen Test on IMDb
- ^ BBC: Will the Nearest Alien Please Come In
- ^ Porteous, Jacob. "First Look: Mark Curry As The Wizard In Wicked". London Theatre Direct.
- ^ Thornton, Michael (21 September 2008). "Mark Curry marries in civil ceremony". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 September 2008.
External links
- Mark Curry at IMDb
Template:Blue Peter presenters