Friday, July 23, 2010
Rowan Atkinson's(Mr Bean)Biography
Jan
Rowan Atkinson was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1955. He attended Newcastle University before going to Oxford in 1975, and it was at Oxford that he met screenwriter Richard Curtis, with whom he wrote and performed comedy reviews at the Oxford Playhouse and later at the Edinburgh Fringe.
After an acclaimed review at the Hampstead Theater in 1978, Atkinson was offered starring roles in two British television series, but chose instead to join the BBC's legendary "Not The Nine O'Clock News" team, where he first performed with Tall Guy director Mel Smith. The show recorded hugely successful albums, released several best-selling books, won an International Emmy Award, and the British Academy Award for "Best Light Entertainment Program of 1980."
For his performance in "Not the Nine O'Clock News," Atkinson personally won the "British Academy Award" and was named "BBC Personality of the Year." His show at London's Globe Theater was sold-out for its entire run, and he won the Society of West End Theaters award for "Comedy Performance of the Year."
In 1983, he began working with The Tall Guy screenwriter Richard Curtis on their "situation tragedy" -- "Black Adder" -- for BBC Television. After touring the world with his own show and appearing in "The Nerd" in London's West End, Atkinson co-wrote and starred in two new seasons of the innovative series "Black Adder."
While filming The Tall Guy during the day, Atkinson could be found in the theater in the evenings starring in "The Sneeze," a collection of Checkov adaptations. Atkinson played a British counsel opposite Sean Connery in the James Bond film "Never Say Never Again," and in 1989 co-starred with Steven Wright in the Academy Award-winning short film "The Appointments of Dennis Jennings." He was most recently seen in Nocholas Roeg's "The Witches" alongside Angelica Huston, in which he is once again cast as a villian.
Rowan Atkinson has also been in ITV's "Mr. Bean", has appeared in some big films (Four Weddings and a Funeral, The Lion King), but as the typical "boring Englishman". He also has been BBC's "The Thin Blue Line", a comedy about policeman Raymond Fowler (Atkinson) who's crime-fighting methods lie 22 years, 8 months, and 6 days out of date.
He rides go-karts around his tennis courts according to Stephen Fry (his best man) "He hasn't got an ounce of show biz in him." He has an HGV license, owns various fast cars and writes for CAR, a British car magazine.
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