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Angus Deayton

Gordon Angus Deayton (/ˈdtən/; born 6 January 1956)[1] is an English actor, writer, musician, comedian and broadcaster.

Angus Deayton
Deayton in March 2007
Born
Gordon Angus Deayton

(1956-01-06) 6 January 1956 (age 67)
Banstead, Surrey, England
Alma materNew College, Oxford
Occupations
  • Television presenter
  • actor
  • writer
  • comedian
Years active1980–present
Known for
  • Television
  • Stand-up
Style
Television
Partner(s)Helen Atkinson-Wood
Stephanie de Sykes (19??–19??)
Lise Mayer
(1991–2015)
Children1

Deayton was the original presenter of the satirical panel game show Have I Got News for You (1990—2002), the host of British panel show Would I Lie to You? (2007—2008), and a regular cast member of the David Renwick sitcom One Foot in the Grave (1990—2000). He also played George Windsor in the series Waterloo Road.

Early life edit

The youngest of three sons of a Prudential insurance broker/manager English father and a home economics school teacher Scottish mother,[2][3] Deayton was brought up in Banstead, Surrey, and attended Oakhurst Grange School and Caterham School. He showed early promise as a footballer and had a trial with Crystal Palace.[4][5] He was captain of the Caterham U16 Rugby team.

Deayton read French and German at New College, Oxford,[5] where, in 1978,[2] he was recruited into the Oxford Revue, performing with them at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. This led to the creation of the parody band the Hee Bee Gee Bees in 1980, with the songs written by Richard Curtis and Philip Pope. Their best-selling single "Meaningless Songs (In Very High Voices)" (plus the B-side "Posing in the Moonlight") was a parody of the falsetto style of disco hits by the Bee Gees.

Radio and television career edit

Deayton began his career on Radio Active, a parody of British local radio stations broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 1981 and 1987, which he co-wrote and performed. It transferred to television as KYTV between 1989 and 1993. Deayton presented a tribute to Radio Active and KYTV colleague and friend (and long-time BBC producer) Geoffrey Perkins for BBC Radio 4 on 4 October 2008.

Deayton was frequently a straight man alongside Rowan Atkinson. He starred with Atkinson as a pool attendant and a man on a park bench in the Mr. Bean episode "The Curse of Mr. Bean" and appeared opposite Atkinson in the Black Adder episode "Born to Be King" (1983) as one of the Jumping Jews of Jerusalem.

From 1988 to 1991, Deayton was a featured player in all three series of the Emmy award-winning sketch comedy programme Alexei Sayle's Stuff. In 1990, Deayton was cast as the Meldrews' neighbour Patrick Trench in the British suburban sitcom One Foot in the Grave and was selected as host of Have I Got News for You. The same year, he featured on television advertising the Vauxhall Nova. Andre Ptaszynski tried to persuade him to take the lead role in Steven Moffat's sitcom Chalk, a role eventually taken by David Bamber.[6] Deayton worked with David Renwick again appearing in the miniseries If You See God, Tell Him.

In an episode of Coupling, he appears in a fantasy sequence with Mariella Frostrup. He hosted the late-1990s BBC show Before They Were Famous, which showed early and frequently embarrassing clips of TV and film stars (including Deayton himself) when they were relatively unknown. He was much in demand as a presenter of television specials including the BBC's New Year's Eve show and the BAFTA Awards. He also featured in a series of advertisements for Barclaycard and the films Savage Hearts and Elizabeth.

Have I Got News for You edit

Deayton's suave manner as host of Have I Got News for You led to his being nicknamed "TV's Mr Sex", by a Time Out listings writer.[7]

In May 2002, the British tabloid newspaper the News of the World reported he had taken cocaine and had sex with prostitutes.[8] He was ridiculed by Paul Merton and Ian Hislop in the following episode of Have I Got News for You but continued as presenter. Deayton began the episode with: "Good evening and welcome to Have I Got News for You, where this week's loser is presenting it." He added later, "There is, by the way, no need to adjust your set, my face is this red."[9]

Following more allegations in October, Deayton was dismissed after two episodes of the new series. One online poll, on the BBC's own website, showed over three-quarters of respondents wanted Deayton to stay on as the programme's host.[10] In April 2003, Stephen Fry supported Deayton by refusing to appear on the show again.[11]

Responding to Merton's "I didn't stab him in the back, I stabbed him in the front" line regarding the episode, in 2016 Deayton said: "Yes, I've heard this and [his comment] is a way of not answering the question. But it's such a tangled web to describe what happened. And Merton and Hislop probably don't know what was happening in the background."[2]

Subsequent career edit

After his stint on Have I Got News for You ended,[12] Deayton's work included a reunion of the Radio Active cast in a new episode in December 2002. In 2003, he guest-starred as Downing Street's spin doctor in an episode of the BBC comedy Absolute Power, starring Stephen Fry and John Bird. In January 2004, he starred in the BBC comedy Nighty Night. Deayton had a cameo role as a hotel receptionist in the 2004 film Fat Slags. A few months later, he presented the quiz Bognor or Bust. In January 2006, he hosted an ITV show based upon self-help videos called Help Your Self.[citation needed]

Deayton is associated with Comic Relief/Sport Relief and featured in its broadcasts. He co-presented the Sport Relief charity programme Only Fools on Horses in July 2006. Deayton appeared for the England team as a second-half substitute in the Soccer Aid match in support of UNICEF on 27 May 2006.[13] He returned as a starting player for England in a 7 September 2008 rematch.[14]

In 2007, he was in Casualty, playing an exaggerated version of himself in a Comic Relief-related story.[citation needed] In June 2007, Deayton returned to the BBC to host panel show, Would I Lie to You?. In November 2007, he was censured by the BBC for making a "pungently personal" joke about Jimmy Savile and his mother on the show.[15] Deayton quietly left the show in 2009 and was replaced by Rob Brydon.[16] On 3 September 2007,[citation needed] Deayton hosted the third series of Hell's Kitchen, but was dismissed in 2009 after arguments with chef Marco Pierre White[17] and was replaced by Claudia Winkleman.[18]

In 2008, Deayton also presented Comedy Sketchbook, a nostalgic look at classic comedy sketches, on BBC1. On 6 December 2008, he presented the 2008 British Comedy Awards, after host Jonathan Ross stepped down because of controversy surrounding The Russell Brand Show prank calls row.[19]

His feature film appearances include the mysterious, all-knowing man in That Deadwood Feeling (2009, co-starring Jack Davenport, Dexter Fletcher and David Soul), Swinging with the Finkels (2011, written and directed by Jonathan Newman, with Mandy Moore and Martin Freeman),[citation needed] and Playing the Moldovans at Tennis (2012). He returned to BBC Radio 4 in 2011 to host the panel show It's Your Round.[20]

On 12 December 2012, Deayton joined the BBC drama series Waterloo Road as a cynical teacher and for a further series as deputy head, George Windsor. He made his first appearance in episode 27 of the eighth series in 2013.[21] In December 2012, he appeared on the BBC Two programme World's Most Dangerous Roads, in which he and Mariella Frostrup were filmed driving along the east coast of Madagascar.[22] He co-starred with Anna Chancellor in the BBC sitcom Pramface (2013).[citation needed]

In August 2016, at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Deayton wrote and performed in a revival of Radio Active.[23]

From 2017 - 2022 he featured in Moray Hunter's radio sitcom Alone on BBC Radio 4 playing as Mitch, a widower and part-time therapist.[24]

Personal life edit

 
Deayton and his then-partner Lise Mayer in March 2007

At Oxford, Deayton was in a relationship with Helen Atkinson-Wood (later an actress and co-star on Radio Active and KYTV). While touring with the HeeBeeGeeBees in Australia in the 1980s, Deayton saved Atkinson-Wood's life when he rescued her after she was caught in a rip tide while swimming off Sydney's Manly Beach.[25][user-generated source]

In the 1980s, Deayton lived with singer and actress Stephanie de Sykes.[26]

From 1991 to 2015, he was in a relationship with scriptwriter Lise Mayer and they have a son together,[27] to whom Richard Wilson is godfather.[28]

Filmography edit

Year Film Role Notes
1983 The Black Adder Jumping Jew of Jerusalem Episode: "Born to be a King"
1988–1991 Alexei Sayle's Stuff Multiple characters TV series
1989–1993 KYTV Mike Channel TV series
1990–2000 One Foot in the Grave Patrick Trench TV series
1990–2002 Have I Got News for You Presenter TV series
1991 Mr. Bean Swimming pool lifeguard; man in park TV series
1991 Doctor at the Top Hospital Manager TV series
1993 If You See God, Tell Him Bank manager TV miniseries
1995 In Search of Happiness Presenter TV series
1997 The Lying Game Presenter TV series
1998 Elizabeth Chancellor of the Exchequer Film
2003 Absolute Power Colin Priestley (S01 E04, S02 E06) TV series
2004–2005 Nighty Night Don Cole TV series
2004–2007 Hell's Kitchen Presenter TV series
2005 Heartless Harry Holland Film
2006 Love and Other Disasters Himself Film
2007–2008 Would I Lie to You? Presenter TV series
2012–2014 Pramface Mr Alan Derbyshire TV series
2013–2015 Waterloo Road George Windsor TV series
2014 Epic Fails Presenter 2 TV specials
2015 The Great European Disaster Movie Charles Grenada Documentary film with fictional scenes
2016 Benidorm Travel guide TV series
2017 Bake Off: Crème de la Crème Presenter TV series
2019 Death in Paradise Martin Stow TV series
2019–2020 Gemma Collins: Diva Narrator
2023 One Foot in the Grave - 30 Years Of Laughs Himself/Patrick Trench Documentary

Bibliography edit

  • Radio Active (with Geoffrey Perkins). Sphere 1986. ISBN 0-7221-2806-1 (a book to tie in with the radio series)
  • The Uncyclopaedia of Rock (with Geoffrey Perkins and Jeremy Pascall). Ebury Press 1989. ISBN 0-85223-612-3.
  • In Search of Happiness with Angus Deayton (with Lise Mayer). Macmillan 1995. ISBN 0-333-63061-0 (Companion book for a BBC TV series)

References edit

  1. ^ Thorpe, Vanessa (18 April 2004). "The Observer Profile: Angus Deayton". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  2. ^ a b c "Angus Deayton on Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland and returning to the Fringe" – The Herald, 30 July 2016
  3. ^ Anstead, Mark (18 July 2008). . The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 18 July 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  4. ^ . debretts.com. Archived from the original on 30 August 2012.
  5. ^ a b "Book Motivational Speakers, After Dinner Speakers & Business Speakers". gordonpoole.com.
  6. ^ After the Chalk Dust Settled, featurette on Chalk Series 1 DVD, ReplayDVD.co.uk, prod. & dir. Craig Robins
  7. ^ "Angus Deayton: Answering questions for a change". BBC News. 24 May 2002. from the original on 6 December 2006. Retrieved 25 December 2006.
  8. ^ Duffy, Jonathan (24 May 2002). "Deayton in the lion's den". BBC News.
  9. ^ Duffy, Jonathan (24 May 2002). "Sex Scandal". BBC News. Retrieved 30 May 2009.
  10. ^ "BBC : Was the BBC right to sack Angus Deayton?". BBC News. 4 November 2002. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
  11. ^ "BBC : Fry boycotts 'pathetic' quiz". BBC News. 16 April 2003. from the original on 16 April 2009. Retrieved 30 May 2009.
  12. ^ "Quiz host Deayton fired by BBC". BBC News. 30 October 2002.
  13. ^ "England stars in Soccer Aid win". BBC Sport. 27 May 2006. from the original on 23 December 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2023.
  14. ^ McNair, Andrew (8 September 2008). "Soccer Aid 2008: A Real Problem For Football". Bleacher Report. from the original on 12 June 2022. Retrieved 6 February 2023.
  15. ^ Plunkett, John (5 November 2007). "Deayton rapped for 'pungently personal' Jimmy Savile gag". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 30 May 2009.
  16. ^ Parker, Robin (11 March 2009). "Brydon to host BBC1 quiz". Broadcastnow. from the original on 17 March 2009. Retrieved 11 March 2009.
  17. ^ Rollo, Sarah (22 February 2009). "Deayton 'axed' from 'Hell's Kitchen'". Digital Spy.
  18. ^ "Winkleman to be new Kitchen host". BBC News. 23 February 2009.
  19. ^ Tara Conlan (31 October 2008). "Jonathan Ross pulls out of hosting British Comedy Awards". The Guardian. London: guardian.co.uk/media. from the original on 3 November 2008. Retrieved 31 October 2008.
  20. ^ "It's Your Round". Radio 4 programmes. BBC. from the original on 4 March 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  21. ^ Paul Millar (12 December 2012). "Angus Deayton joins teaching staff of 'Waterloo Road'". Digital Spy.
  22. ^ "World's Most Dangerous Roads: Episode Guide". BBC Two. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  23. ^ Brian Logan (6 August 2016). "Radio Active at Edinburgh festival review – Angus Deayton's mild media mockery'". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  24. ^ "Moray Hunter interview – Alone". British Comedy Guide. 19 April 2018.
  25. ^ . Smarterthantheaverage.tumblr.com. Archived from the original on 30 May 2009. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  26. ^ Ironside, Virginia (28 October 1994). "Dear Stephanie de Sykes". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  27. ^ Bagwell, Matt (19 March 2015). "Angus Deayton Splits From Girlfriend Lise Mayer After 24 Years Together". HuffPost. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  28. ^ Angus Deayton Talks Performing At The Edinburgh Festival | Lorraine, retrieved 1 December 2022

External links edit

Media offices
Preceded by
N/A
Hell's Kitchen (UK) presenter
2004–07
Succeeded by
Preceded by
N/A
Host of Would I Lie to You?
2007–08
Succeeded by

angus, deayton, this, article, about, english, actor, television, presenter, economist, angus, deaton, gordon, born, january, 1956, english, actor, writer, musician, comedian, broadcaster, deayton, march, 2007borngordon, 1956, january, 1956, banstead, surrey, . This article is about the English actor and television presenter For the economist see Angus Deaton Gordon Angus Deayton ˈ d iː t en born 6 January 1956 1 is an English actor writer musician comedian and broadcaster Angus DeaytonDeayton in March 2007BornGordon Angus Deayton 1956 01 06 6 January 1956 age 67 Banstead Surrey EnglandAlma materNew College OxfordOccupationsTelevision presenter actor writer comedianYears active1980 presentKnown forTelevision Stand upStylePolitical satire Character comedyTelevisionHave I Got News for You 1990 2002 One Foot in the Grave 1990 2000 Would I Lie to You 2007 2008 Pramface 2012 2014 Waterloo Road 2013 2015 Partner s Helen Atkinson Wood Stephanie de Sykes 19 19 Lise Mayer 1991 2015 Children1Deayton was the original presenter of the satirical panel game show Have I Got News for You 1990 2002 the host of British panel show Would I Lie to You 2007 2008 and a regular cast member of the David Renwick sitcom One Foot in the Grave 1990 2000 He also played George Windsor in the series Waterloo Road Contents 1 Early life 2 Radio and television career 2 1 Have I Got News for You 2 2 Subsequent career 3 Personal life 4 Filmography 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editThe youngest of three sons of a Prudential insurance broker manager English father and a home economics school teacher Scottish mother 2 3 Deayton was brought up in Banstead Surrey and attended Oakhurst Grange School and Caterham School He showed early promise as a footballer and had a trial with Crystal Palace 4 5 He was captain of the Caterham U16 Rugby team Deayton read French and German at New College Oxford 5 where in 1978 2 he was recruited into the Oxford Revue performing with them at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe This led to the creation of the parody band the Hee Bee Gee Bees in 1980 with the songs written by Richard Curtis and Philip Pope Their best selling single Meaningless Songs In Very High Voices plus the B side Posing in the Moonlight was a parody of the falsetto style of disco hits by the Bee Gees Radio and television career editDeayton began his career on Radio Active a parody of British local radio stations broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 1981 and 1987 which he co wrote and performed It transferred to television as KYTV between 1989 and 1993 Deayton presented a tribute to Radio Active and KYTV colleague and friend and long time BBC producer Geoffrey Perkins for BBC Radio 4 on 4 October 2008 Deayton was frequently a straight man alongside Rowan Atkinson He starred with Atkinson as a pool attendant and a man on a park bench in the Mr Bean episode The Curse of Mr Bean and appeared opposite Atkinson in the Black Adder episode Born to Be King 1983 as one of the Jumping Jews of Jerusalem From 1988 to 1991 Deayton was a featured player in all three series of the Emmy award winning sketch comedy programme Alexei Sayle s Stuff In 1990 Deayton was cast as the Meldrews neighbour Patrick Trench in the British suburban sitcom One Foot in the Grave and was selected as host of Have I Got News for You The same year he featured on television advertising the Vauxhall Nova Andre Ptaszynski tried to persuade him to take the lead role in Steven Moffat s sitcom Chalk a role eventually taken by David Bamber 6 Deayton worked with David Renwick again appearing in the miniseries If You See God Tell Him In an episode of Coupling he appears in a fantasy sequence with Mariella Frostrup He hosted the late 1990s BBC show Before They Were Famous which showed early and frequently embarrassing clips of TV and film stars including Deayton himself when they were relatively unknown He was much in demand as a presenter of television specials including the BBC s New Year s Eve show and the BAFTA Awards He also featured in a series of advertisements for Barclaycard and the films Savage Hearts and Elizabeth Have I Got News for You edit Deayton s suave manner as host of Have I Got News for You led to his being nicknamed TV s Mr Sex by a Time Out listings writer 7 In May 2002 the British tabloid newspaper the News of the World reported he had taken cocaine and had sex with prostitutes 8 He was ridiculed by Paul Merton and Ian Hislop in the following episode of Have I Got News for You but continued as presenter Deayton began the episode with Good evening and welcome to Have I Got News for You where this week s loser is presenting it He added later There is by the way no need to adjust your set my face is this red 9 Following more allegations in October Deayton was dismissed after two episodes of the new series One online poll on the BBC s own website showed over three quarters of respondents wanted Deayton to stay on as the programme s host 10 In April 2003 Stephen Fry supported Deayton by refusing to appear on the show again 11 Responding to Merton s I didn t stab him in the back I stabbed him in the front line regarding the episode in 2016 Deayton said Yes I ve heard this and his comment is a way of not answering the question But it s such a tangled web to describe what happened And Merton and Hislop probably don t know what was happening in the background 2 Subsequent career edit After his stint on Have I Got News for You ended 12 Deayton s work included a reunion of the Radio Active cast in a new episode in December 2002 In 2003 he guest starred as Downing Street s spin doctor in an episode of the BBC comedy Absolute Power starring Stephen Fry and John Bird In January 2004 he starred in the BBC comedy Nighty Night Deayton had a cameo role as a hotel receptionist in the 2004 film Fat Slags A few months later he presented the quiz Bognor or Bust In January 2006 he hosted an ITV show based upon self help videos called Help Your Self citation needed Deayton is associated with Comic Relief Sport Relief and featured in its broadcasts He co presented the Sport Relief charity programme Only Fools on Horses in July 2006 Deayton appeared for the England team as a second half substitute in the Soccer Aid match in support of UNICEF on 27 May 2006 13 He returned as a starting player for England in a 7 September 2008 rematch 14 In 2007 he was in Casualty playing an exaggerated version of himself in a Comic Relief related story citation needed In June 2007 Deayton returned to the BBC to host panel show Would I Lie to You In November 2007 he was censured by the BBC for making a pungently personal joke about Jimmy Savile and his mother on the show 15 Deayton quietly left the show in 2009 and was replaced by Rob Brydon 16 On 3 September 2007 citation needed Deayton hosted the third series of Hell s Kitchen but was dismissed in 2009 after arguments with chef Marco Pierre White 17 and was replaced by Claudia Winkleman 18 In 2008 Deayton also presented Comedy Sketchbook a nostalgic look at classic comedy sketches on BBC1 On 6 December 2008 he presented the 2008 British Comedy Awards after host Jonathan Ross stepped down because of controversy surrounding The Russell Brand Show prank calls row 19 His feature film appearances include the mysterious all knowing man in That Deadwood Feeling 2009 co starring Jack Davenport Dexter Fletcher and David Soul Swinging with the Finkels 2011 written and directed by Jonathan Newman with Mandy Moore and Martin Freeman citation needed and Playing the Moldovans at Tennis 2012 He returned to BBC Radio 4 in 2011 to host the panel show It s Your Round 20 On 12 December 2012 Deayton joined the BBC drama series Waterloo Road as a cynical teacher and for a further series as deputy head George Windsor He made his first appearance in episode 27 of the eighth series in 2013 21 In December 2012 he appeared on the BBC Two programme World s Most Dangerous Roads in which he and Mariella Frostrup were filmed driving along the east coast of Madagascar 22 He co starred with Anna Chancellor in the BBC sitcom Pramface 2013 citation needed In August 2016 at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Deayton wrote and performed in a revival of Radio Active 23 From 2017 2022 he featured in Moray Hunter s radio sitcom Alone on BBC Radio 4 playing as Mitch a widower and part time therapist 24 Personal life edit nbsp Deayton and his then partner Lise Mayer in March 2007At Oxford Deayton was in a relationship with Helen Atkinson Wood later an actress and co star on Radio Active and KYTV While touring with the HeeBeeGeeBees in Australia in the 1980s Deayton saved Atkinson Wood s life when he rescued her after she was caught in a rip tide while swimming off Sydney s Manly Beach 25 user generated source In the 1980s Deayton lived with singer and actress Stephanie de Sykes 26 From 1991 to 2015 he was in a relationship with scriptwriter Lise Mayer and they have a son together 27 to whom Richard Wilson is godfather 28 Filmography editYear Film Role Notes1983 The Black Adder Jumping Jew of Jerusalem Episode Born to be a King 1988 1991 Alexei Sayle s Stuff Multiple characters TV series1989 1993 KYTV Mike Channel TV series1990 2000 One Foot in the Grave Patrick Trench TV series1990 2002 Have I Got News for You Presenter TV series1991 Mr Bean Swimming pool lifeguard man in park TV series1991 Doctor at the Top Hospital Manager TV series1993 If You See God Tell Him Bank manager TV miniseries1995 In Search of Happiness Presenter TV series1997 The Lying Game Presenter TV series1998 Elizabeth Chancellor of the Exchequer Film2003 Absolute Power Colin Priestley S01 E04 S02 E06 TV series2004 2005 Nighty Night Don Cole TV series2004 2007 Hell s Kitchen Presenter TV series2005 Heartless Harry Holland Film2006 Love and Other Disasters Himself Film2007 2008 Would I Lie to You Presenter TV series2012 2014 Pramface Mr Alan Derbyshire TV series2013 2015 Waterloo Road George Windsor TV series2014 Epic Fails Presenter 2 TV specials2015 The Great European Disaster Movie Charles Grenada Documentary film with fictional scenes2016 Benidorm Travel guide TV series2017 Bake Off Creme de la Creme Presenter TV series2019 Death in Paradise Martin Stow TV series2019 2020 Gemma Collins Diva Narrator2023 One Foot in the Grave 30 Years Of Laughs Himself Patrick Trench DocumentaryBibliography editRadio Active with Geoffrey Perkins Sphere 1986 ISBN 0 7221 2806 1 a book to tie in with the radio series The Uncyclopaedia of Rock with Geoffrey Perkins and Jeremy Pascall Ebury Press 1989 ISBN 0 85223 612 3 In Search of Happiness with Angus Deayton with Lise Mayer Macmillan 1995 ISBN 0 333 63061 0 Companion book for a BBC TV series References edit Thorpe Vanessa 18 April 2004 The Observer Profile Angus Deayton The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 January 2020 a b c Angus Deayton on Nicola Sturgeon Scotland and returning to the Fringe The Herald 30 July 2016 Anstead Mark 18 July 2008 Angus Deayton Fame and Fortune The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 18 July 2008 Retrieved 18 July 2008 Angus Deayton Authorised Biography Debrett s People of Today debretts com Archived from the original on 30 August 2012 a b Book Motivational Speakers After Dinner Speakers amp Business Speakers gordonpoole com After the Chalk Dust Settled featurette on Chalk Series 1 DVD ReplayDVD co uk prod amp dir Craig Robins Angus Deayton Answering questions for a change BBC News 24 May 2002 Archived from the original on 6 December 2006 Retrieved 25 December 2006 Duffy Jonathan 24 May 2002 Deayton in the lion s den BBC News Duffy Jonathan 24 May 2002 Sex Scandal BBC News Retrieved 30 May 2009 BBC Was the BBC right to sack Angus Deayton BBC News 4 November 2002 Retrieved 20 December 2010 BBC Fry boycotts pathetic quiz BBC News 16 April 2003 Archived from the original on 16 April 2009 Retrieved 30 May 2009 Quiz host Deayton fired by BBC BBC News 30 October 2002 England stars in Soccer Aid win BBC Sport 27 May 2006 Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2023 McNair Andrew 8 September 2008 Soccer Aid 2008 A Real Problem For Football Bleacher Report Archived from the original on 12 June 2022 Retrieved 6 February 2023 Plunkett John 5 November 2007 Deayton rapped for pungently personal Jimmy Savile gag The Guardian London Retrieved 30 May 2009 Parker Robin 11 March 2009 Brydon to host BBC1 quiz Broadcastnow Archived from the original on 17 March 2009 Retrieved 11 March 2009 Rollo Sarah 22 February 2009 Deayton axed from Hell s Kitchen Digital Spy Winkleman to be new Kitchen host BBC News 23 February 2009 Tara Conlan 31 October 2008 Jonathan Ross pulls out of hosting British Comedy Awards The Guardian London guardian co uk media Archived from the original on 3 November 2008 Retrieved 31 October 2008 It s Your Round Radio 4 programmes BBC Archived from the original on 4 March 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2011 Paul Millar 12 December 2012 Angus Deayton joins teaching staff of Waterloo Road Digital Spy World s Most Dangerous Roads Episode Guide BBC Two Retrieved 6 January 2013 Brian Logan 6 August 2016 Radio Active at Edinburgh festival review Angus Deayton s mild media mockery The Guardian Retrieved 11 August 2016 Moray Hunter interview Alone British Comedy Guide 19 April 2018 Smarter Than The Average The HeeBeeGeeBees Story in Angus Deayton s Own Meaningless Words Smarterthantheaverage tumblr com Archived from the original on 30 May 2009 Retrieved 3 May 2022 Ironside Virginia 28 October 1994 Dear Stephanie de Sykes The Independent London Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 3 May 2022 Bagwell Matt 19 March 2015 Angus Deayton Splits From Girlfriend Lise Mayer After 24 Years Together HuffPost Retrieved 12 April 2016 Angus Deayton Talks Performing At The Edinburgh Festival Lorraine retrieved 1 December 2022External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Television portal nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Comedy portalAngus Deayton at IMDb Angus Deayton at the British Film Institute Angus Deayton at British Comedy GuideMedia officesPreceded byN A Hell s Kitchen UK presenter2004 07 Succeeded byClaudia WinklemanPreceded byN A Host of Would I Lie to You 2007 08 Succeeded byRob Brydon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Angus Deayton amp oldid 1183813225, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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