词条 | Dom Joly |
释义 |
| name = Dom Joly | image = File:Dom Joly in 2011.jpg | caption = Joly in 2011 | birth_name = Dominic John Joly | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1967|11|15|df=y}} | birth_place = Beirut, Lebanon | active = 1999–present | medium = Television, books, stand-up | genre = Character comedy, Improvisational comedy, Physical comedy | notable_work = {{Plainlist}}
| spouse = }} Dominic John Romulus Joly ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|dʒ|ɒ|l|i}}; born 15 November 1967)[1] is an English television comedian and journalist, best known as the star of Trigger Happy TV, a hidden camera show that was sold to over seventy countries worldwide. Early lifeJoly was born in Beirut, Lebanon[2] to British parents and speaks French, Arabic and Czech in addition to English.[3] Joly was educated in the UK at two independent schools: The Dragon School in Oxford and Haileybury College in Hertfordshire, followed by the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London.[4] Joly claimed on British comedy panel show Would I Lie to You? that when he was in Lebanon, he attended the same school as Osama bin Laden (Brummana High School).[3] CareerTelevisionAfter being recruited to work as a producer on ITN's House to House, a political discussion programme on Channel 4, Joly went on to work for The Mark Thomas Comedy Product.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} He then created his own show for the Paramount Comedy Channel called War of the Flea. Discovering that working in comedy was both easier and more fun than his previous employment, Joly began to develop Trigger Happy TV which had a similar structure to War of the Flea.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Trigger Happy TV{{main|Trigger Happy TV}}Joly's sketches first started appearing as interstitials during advert breaks on the British Paramount Comedy Channel. In 1999, following a successful fifteen-minute pilot on the Comedy Lab, Channel 4 commissioned Joly to make a TV series. Trigger Happy TV was born; a hidden camera show that went on to be sold to over 70 countries worldwide.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Joly made two series and two Christmas specials before announcing that he wanted to do other things. Joly was nominated for three British Comedy Awards for the show, won the Silver Rose of Montreux, the BBC Two Award for Best Comedy and the Loaded/Goodfella Comedy Newcomer of the Year.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} The three DVDs for the shows were best-sellers, as were the soundtrack albums that Joly had personally selected and mixed himself.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} A spoof documentary about Joly followed, called Being Dom Joly which was produced and written by Joly himself. This was broadcast prior to screenings of Trigger Happy TV in the USA.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Bob Croft of the Los Angeles Times, calling Joly "the funniest man in Britain".{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} In 2003, a new series of Trigger Happy TV was made for an American audience with an altered format that featured a band of different comedians who performed skits without Joly. Though Joly did cameo sporadically on the show, he was very unhappy with the programme and called it "Trigger Happy by numbers - take joke, put it in slo-mo, add fluffy animals and random indie soundtrack - it was made by uncaring idiots".[5] He had a producer credit on the show, but disassociated himself from the project. 2003 BBC contractFollowing the success of Trigger Happy TV on Channel 4, Joly was secured by the BBC for a rumoured £5 million.[6] However, his first show for the BBC, This Is Dom Joly, a spoof chatshow in which Joly played a media character that some people found hard to understand whilst others understood fully, who had the same name as him, thereby confusing some of the audience as to what was real and what wasn't, did not achieve the same success as Trigger Happy TV, leading to the hidden camera format being revamped on BBC1 as World Shut Your Mouth. It featured all new material and an increased budget{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} relative to Trigger Happy, allowing for pranks to be performed in different countries. It was later released on DVD. Dom Joly's Excellent AdventureIn 2005, Joly starred in a one-off documentary as part of a series on Sky One. Dom Joly's Excellent Adventure involved him travelling back to Beirut for the first time since he left in the late 1980s and embarking on a road trip through the Syrian Desert to find a cave he had scrawled his name in as a child, and which he re-discovered after much searching.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Dom Joly's Happy HourJoly's next project for Sky1 was a critically acclaimed spoof travel series supposedly investigating attitudes to alcohol around the world, entitled Dom Joly's Happy Hour, in which Joly teamed up with his friend, Canadian digital artist Peter Wilkins. Together, they explored drinking habits around the world, travelling to the Southern United States, Russia, Australia, Europe and India. During the first documentary, the pair explored Miami drinking styles, met up with some hillbillies in the Appalachians tasting moonshine, and visited a gay cowboy bar in Atlanta before taking on the Christian right in Alabama's dry counties. They went on to visit Russia, trying 80% alcohol (by volume) homemade vodka known as Samogon. Joly explained, "(y)ou have an hour where you feel you can take on the world, then you black out. But because it's almost pure alcohol, no hangover - sadly because I can't remember it, I don’t know if it's worth doing". The pair then visited Australia, Mexico and Europe before ending the tour in India. It was described in The Guardian as "a brilliantly surreal take on the tired format that is the TV travel show."{{Cite quote|date=June 2009}} The programme included a lot more than just attempting to discover foreign drinking habits, for instance, in Russia Joly received a haircut from a nude woman and both he and Wilkins performed their own version of a morris dance before a bemused dance academy. Another instance found them catching crocodiles in Australia. "The premise of investigating alcohol is ridiculous," Joly admitted during an interview. "I wanted an excuse to travel the world, but they (Sky TV) wanted a focal point. So I said as a joke: 'Well, I quite like drinking.' And they went, 'Fantastic, that's brilliant!'"{{Cite quote|date=June 2009}} The ComplainersJoly has appeared in The Complainers for Channel 5 in the UK. The show, in Joly's words, "intends to try and get a little revenge for the ordinary Brit on the morons, bureaucrats, health and safety officers, traffic wardens, timewasters that make all our lives a daily hell."{{Cite quote|date=June 2009}} Made In BritainIn 2009, Joly fronted a show titled Made in Britain, shown on the Blighty channel in the UK.[7] In the show Joly goes on a road-trip around the UK looking at what is still made there after his house is emptied of everything not made in Britain.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Fool Britannia{{main|Fool Britannia}}In 2012, Joly began appearing in the ITV hidden camera show Fool Britannia. After two series Joly quit saying - "it's not panning out the way I wanted - once you add canned laughter, a little piece of me dies...". Other workIn 2010, Joly took part in the tenth series of I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! where he came in fourth place. Joly starred in the ITV2 reality programme Deadline with Janet Street-Porter where he had to become a paparazzo. In early 2013, Joly took part in the ITV diving show Splash!, however he did not make it to the final. Joly appears in advertisements for ferry company Stena Line. WritingJoly writes for various publications. He was thought to be the writer of a spoof column in The Independent and then "i" called "Cooper Brown: He's out there,"[8] and later confirmed in his autobiography that this was the case. [9] The column is published as the work of an American character named Cooper Brown and revolves around his putative adventures as "a garrulous American showbiz type".[10] His weekly column for the Independent on Sunday covers subjects as varied as Middle East politics and fifty-foot chickens. Joly also wrote a weekly column on the "Weird World of Sport" for The Independent Sports supplement on Mondays, but this ceased in 2010. He is also a regular travel writer for The Sunday Times. At the end of 2006, readers were asked to vote on where Joly would go every week. He travelled the globe performing various adrenaline sports while making a weekly podcast from South Africa, Spain, the Arctic Circle, Paris and Fort William. He has also written for Esquire Magazine, GQ, the Mail on Sunday, the London Evening Standard, FHM, The Observer, "i" and The Spectator. In September 2008, Joly won a Canada Media Award for "Best Travel Piece" for a piece written for the Mail on Sunday about a trip to Muskoka, Ontario, Canada. Joly wrote a spoof autobiography called Look At Me, Look At Me!, published by Bloomsbury in 2004. Joly's second book, Letters To My Golf Club, a book of humorous letters and correspondences sent to golf clubs around the world was published in 8 October 2007. In 2010, Joly published a travel book called The Dark Tourist: Sightseeing in the World's Most Unlikely Holiday Destinations, investigating dark tourism.[11] In the book Joly travels to places that witnessed great tragedy and death, including Chernobyl, which he visited on 4 May 2009; his childhood home of Lebanon; North Korea; various locations in the United States visiting places of famous assassinations; the Killing Fields of Cambodia and Iran for a skiing holiday.[12] It was published on 2 September 2010 in the UK. Joly published his second travel book, Scary Monsters and Super Creeps, in 2012. In the book, he travels the world in search of mythical monsters such as Bigfoot and the Yeti. Joly was a special correspondent for the Independent at the Beijing Olympics.[13] He says: "it's always been an ambition to be a foreign correspondent and this is as close as I'll ever get."{{citation needed|date=January 2011}} While in Beijing, he also appeared daily on the "Drive" programme on Five Live.[14] In 2012, Joly won "Funniest Tweeter of the year" at the Loaded Lafta Awards. Political careerIn the 1997 UK general election, Joly formed the Teddy Bear Alliance ("Mr Blair, where do you stand on fleas?") and changed his name to "Edward 'Teddy' Bear".{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} He stood in Kensington and Chelsea against Alan Clark. Hiring out hundreds of teddy bear costumes, he staged mock protests at Westminster and came fifth out of nine candidates, receiving 218 votes (0.6%).[15] The Alliance was not registered as a political party under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. MusicIn the early 1990s, Joly was the singer in an Indie band called Hang David. He was a goth and said that he looked more like Robert Smith than Robert Smith. Joly personally selects all the soundtracks for his TV shows. All three soundtrack albums for Trigger Happy TV were commercial hits. He has also directed a couple of music videos:
RadioIn June 2008, Joly and humorist Danny Wallace co-hosted the Cobra Pubcast, a podcast from British beer company Cobra Beer.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Joly also frequently sat in with Gabby Logan on her Sunday Five Live show.[16] Joly was also a roving reporter for Five Live at both the Beijing Olympics and Wimbledon 2009.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} Podcaston 29 June 2018, Joly released the first episode of his podcast titled Earworm,[17] titled 'Rabbits and Drugs'. The format was similar to Trigger Happy TV, with Joly making prank phone calls to unsuspecting stores and call centres to confuse them. For example, calling up a pet rabbit shop pretending to be a butcher asking to buy rabbits to cook, to the shock and offence of the store breeder, before calling back numerous times throughout the podcast as the butcher pretending to be someone else, annoying the breeder further. The podcast was accompanied by a haunting soundtrack by musician Stephen Jones (Babybird). Personal lifeJoly is married to a Canadian graphic designer. Having lived in Notting Hill before their children were born, Joly and his wife bought a property in the Cotswolds. They sold his flat to Salman Rushdie[18] and the family now live near Cirencester.{{Citation needed|date= May 2018}} References1. ^{{cite web|title=Dom Joly Biography|url=http://celebirthdays.net/profile/dom-joly|website=Celebrity Bithdays|accessdate=23 December 2016}} 2. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.charlottereather.com/DomJoly.pdf |format=PDF |title=Dom Joly : TV’s prankster and star of The Complainers has taken to country life like a duck to water. Hunting, shooting, polo? Bring it on, he says |author=Charlotte Reather |accessdate=30 May 2015 }} 3. ^1 {{cite AV media |url=http://www.channel4.com/programmes/child-genius-vs-celebrities-christmas-special |title=Child Genius vs Celebrities Christmas Special |publisher=Channel 4 Television |date=24 December 2017 |accessdate=26 December 2017 }} 4. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/theatre/article-3183026-not-as-joly-as-he-seems.do |archive-url=https://archive.is/20130505063148/http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/theatre/article-3183026-not-as-joly-as-he-seems.do |dead-url=yes |archive-date=5 May 2013 |title=Not as Joly as he seems |work=London Evening Standard |date=31 January 2003 |accessdate=30 May 2015 }} 5. ^{{cite news| url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/article405378.ece | work=The Times | location=London | title=Television The return of the king | date=2 January 2005 | accessdate=1 May 2010}} 6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.chortle.co.uk/comics/d/33180/dom_joly|title=Dom Joly Biography|publisher=Chortle.co.uk|accessdate=2015-05-30}} 7. ^ {{webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20120804145208/http://www.loveblighty.co.uk/ |date=4 August 2012 }} 8. ^{{cite news|title=The Londoner's Diary |work=The Evening Standard |date=25 October 2008 }} 9. ^Joly, Dom, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1ZSdBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT141&lpg=PT141 Here Comes The Clown: A Stumble Through Show Business], p. 141, Simon and Schuster, 2015, {{ISBN|0857207695}}, 9780857207692 10. ^{{cite news |last=Spanier |first=Gideon |title=In the air |work=The Evening Standard|date=10 January 2007 }} 11. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/dom-joly/dom-joly-at-war-in-thailand-but-keeping-my-buddha-dry-1670899.html |work=The Independent |location=London |title=Dom Joly: At war in Thailand, but keeping my Buddha dry |date=19 April 2009 |accessdate=1 May 2010}} 12. ^{{cite news |url=http://www.tuppencemagazine.co.uk/dom-joly-the-dark-tourist.html |work=Tuppence Magazine |location=London |title=Dom Joly, The Dark Tourist |date=1 March 2012 |accessdate=14 March 2012 }}{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} 13. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.thenational.ae/business/british-comedian-dom-joly-works-to-live-a-fun-life-1.192367|title=British comedian Dom Joly works to live a ‘fun’ life|last=Locke|first=Suzanne|date=22 March 2016|website=The National|language=en|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=13 February 2019}} 14. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2008/06_june/19/olympics7.shtml|title=2008 Olympics press pack: 5 live at the Olympics|last=|first=|date=19 June 2008|website=BBC|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=13 February 2019}} 15. ^{{cite news |url=http://politics.guardian.co.uk/hoc/constituency/history/0,,-1052,00.html |title=Guardian Unlimited Politics, Kensington and Chelsea |accessdate=27 September 2007 |work=The Guardian |location=London |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060625041945/http://politics.guardian.co.uk/hoc/constituency/history/0%2C%2C-1052%2C00.html |archivedate=25 June 2006 |df=dmy-all }} 16. ^{{cite web|author=|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0073dz1 |title=BBC Radio 5 live - Gabby Logan (Weekends 2007-09) |publisher=Bbc.co.uk |date=2009-10-25 |accessdate=2014-07-26}} 17. ^{{cite web |last1=Joly |first1=Dom |title=Earworm |url=https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/earworm/id1398360650?mt=2 |website=iTunes |publisher=Shady Cabal |accessdate=9/7/2018}} 18. ^Dom Joly, The Dark Tourist (Chatham, 2010), p. 11. External links
18 : 1967 births|Living people|Alumni of SOAS, University of London|English columnists|English male comedians|English male journalists|English television personalities|English television presenters|English writers|People educated at The Dragon School|People educated at Haileybury and Imperial Service College|People from Beirut|Pranksters|The Independent people|HuffPost writers and columnists|Lebanese people of British descent|20th-century English comedians|21st-century English comedians |
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