Glynn Nicholas

Glynn Nicholas
Born (1952-10-16) October 16, 1952
Bristol, England
Nationality Australian
Occupation Actor, comedy performer, director, writer and producer

Glynn Nicholas (born 16 October 1952 in Bristol, England) is an Australian actor, comedy performer, director, writer and producer.

Busking

Glynn Nicholas began as a busker while travelling through Europe on his Norton in 1977. His act consisted of singing and playing up to three instruments at the same time. Over time his focus shifted to include physical comedy, magic, mime and audience participation. During the late 1970s and early '80s he busked in USA, Australia, and Europe. He often played in Adelaide, and became renowned locally for the large crowds of many hundreds as he entertained in the central shopping precinct, Rundle Mall, which had recently been closed to traffic.[1] In 1982, he studied mime in Adelaide with Zora Semberova, to whom he attributes his success, and circus skills at San Francisco's Hayward College and performed regularly at Pier 39. In 1986 he was crowned National Champion at the Australian Busking Championships.

Television career

Nicholas first appeared on Australian television as a presenter on Channel 9's children's show Here's Humphrey, performing songs, dances, stories and games with a large pant-less mute bear. In 1991 he was nominated for an ARIA award for best children's album.

Off air he developed a character called Paté Biscuit, a parody of another presenter on Fat Cat, Patsy Biscoe. He mimicked her distinctive bob haircut, sing-song voice and 'school-prefect' manner but added cruelty, blood and a naughty hand puppet called Bongo to the juvenile story-telling.

In 1989 Patẻ Biscuit found a ready audience on the ABC's new comedy show The Big Gig, where Nicholas had a regular spot. In one episode, the real Patsy Biscoe was seen presenting The Big Gig show with Bongo, having tied Patẻ Biscuit up.[2] In 1990 he took over the role as host from Wendy Harmer for two seasons.

In 1991 Angus and Robertson published his book Bedtime Stories with Pate Biscuit, which sold 18,000 copies.

In 1996 Nicholas co-produced a surreal ten-part comedy series with the ABC, The Glynn Nicholas Show. It was written by Nicholas and fellow Australian comedian Shaun Micallef.

Theatre career

Since 1992 Nicholas has focussed on writing, producing and performing live comedy. These include several live shows ranging from the solo Glynn with a why? and Crossing the Line, to ensemble pieces like Scat and all that "Wrung Out," "Pumping Irony" and the often reprised Certified Male written with his regular artistic collaborator Scott Rankin.

Other writing credits include Kissing Frogs (1991-3) and Leaves Falling at Midnight and co-writer of the book for "Eurobeat - almost Eurovision" (2006-2009).[3]

He also turned his hand to Shakespeare for the Melbourne Theatre Company's production of The Comedy of Errors, played Major-General Stanley in opera in Essgee Entertainment's 1994 production of The Pirates of Penzance, and in the variety productions The Vaudeville Extravaganza (1994) and Oh Come All Ye Stressful (2005).

In the 2000s his Glynn Nicholas Group entertainment company was producing and touring several shows internationally including Certified Male, and the musical Eurobeat: Almost Eurovision directed by Nicholas, which was the top-selling show of the 2007 Edinburgh Festival Fringe and was named the best musical production at the inaugural Music Theatre Matters awards.[4]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.