Rory McGrath
Rory was brought up in Cornwall and studied at Emmanuel College,
Cambridge, where he was firmly bitten by the showbiz bug.
Like scores of today's top comedy performers, he was a member
of the famous Footlights dramatic club, writing and starring
in several revues during the late 1970s. His co-conspirators
at this prestigious finishing school for comics included
Douglas Adams, Griff Rhys Jones, Jimmy Mulville and Clive
Anderson.
The contacts and experience Rory gained during his Footlights
years stood him in good stead. By the early 1980s, Rory
was writing for his old mate Griff Rhys Jones's show, Alas
Smith and Jones. It wasn't long before Rory got work in
front of the camera, too. In 1983, he starred alongside
Jimmy Mulville and Philip Pope in Who Dares, Wins... a satirical
sketch show on Britain's new "alternative" TV station, Channel
4. The trio stayed together for a critically acclaimed comedy
series set in Roman Britain, Chelmsford 123. Rory's trademark
scruffy hair and beard made him the obvious choice for the
part of Badvoc, a sour-tempered, rabble-rousing Celt.
Rory's best-known for his long-running stint as a regular panellist
on They Think It's All Over. Although he's best known as
a comedian, Rory has a serious side too. He has presented
the Channel 4 viewers' forum, Right to Reply, and fronted
The Holiday Show. He's fascinated by history - the gorier
the better - and jumped at the chance to present Bloody
Britain, a series examining the darker side of this country's
past. More recently, Rory has been entertaining us on Grumpy
Old Men, venting his spleen about a world gone mad. Well,
mad according to him, anyway.