Bill Bailey

Musician

Birthday January 13, 1965

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Bath, Somerset, England

Age 59 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.69 m

#13714 Most Popular

1965

Mark Robert Bailey (born 13 January 1965), known professionally as Bill Bailey, is an English musician, comedian and actor.

He is known for his role as Manny in the sitcom Black Books and for his regular appearances on the panel shows Never Mind the Buzzcocks, Have I Got News for You, and QI, as well as for his stand-up comedy work.

He plays a variety of musical instruments and incorporates music into his performances.

Mark Robert Bailey was born on 13 January 1965 in Bath, Somerset, son of Christopher and Madryn Bailey.

His father was an NHS general practitioner "who ran a little surgery in the front of the house", and his mother a hospital ward nurse.

1982

He also states he was good at sport and was the captain of the KES 2nd XI cricket team in 1982, which often surprised his teachers.

He would often combine music and sport by leading the singing on the long coach trip back from away rugby fixtures.

It was here that he was given the nickname Bill by his music teacher for being able to play the song "Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey" so well on the guitar.

Bailey started studies for an English degree at Westfield College of the University of London, but left after a year.

He received an Associate Diploma from the London College of Music.

He was also made an honorary member of the Society of Crematorium Organists.

He performed with a boy band called The Famous Five.

Acting roles included a part in a Workers' Revolutionary Party stage production called The Printers with Vanessa Redgrave and Frances de la Tour.

Bailey began touring the country with comedians such as Mark Lamarr.

1984

In 1984, he formed a double act, the Rubber Bishops, with Toby Longworth (a fellow former pupil at King Edward's, Bath).

It was there that Bailey began developing his own style, mixing in musical parodies with deconstructions of or variations on traditional jokes ("How many amoebas does it take to change a lightbulb? One, no two! No four! No eight...").

1989

Longworth left to join the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in 1989 and was replaced by Martin Stubbs.

1994

Stubbs later quit to pursue a more serious career, and in 1994 Bailey performed Rock at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe with Sean Lock, a show about an ageing rockstar and his roadie, script-edited by comedy writer Jim Miller.

It was later serialised for the Mark Radcliffe show on BBC Radio 1.

The show's attendances were not impressive and on one occasion the only person in the audience was comedian Dominic Holland.

Bailey almost gave up comedy to take up a telesales job.

He went solo the next year with the one man show Bill Bailey's Cosmic Jam.

1995

After supporting Donna McPhail in 1995 and winning a Time Out award, he returned to Edinburgh in 1996 with a show that was nominated for the Perrier Comedy Award.

Amongst the other nominees was future Black Books co-star Dylan Moran, who narrowly beat him in the closest vote in the award's history.

1996

Although he did not win the Perrier Comedy Awards in 1996, the nomination was enough to get him noticed, and in 1998 the BBC gave him his own television show, Is It Bill Bailey?.

1997

The show led to a recording at the Bloomsbury Theatre in London which was broadcast in 1997 on Channel 4 as a one-hour special called Bill Bailey Live.

1999

Bailey won the Best Live Stand-Up award at the British Comedy Awards in 1999.

2003

Bailey was listed by The Observer as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy in 2003.

2005

It was not until 2005 that this was released on DVD uncut and under its original title.

It marked the first time that Bailey had been able to tie together his music and post-modern gags with the whimsical rambling style he is now known for.

2007

In 2007, and again in 2010, he was voted the seventh greatest stand-up comic on Channel 4's 100 Greatest Stand-Ups.

2018

Until 2018, when he revealed the correct date, his birthday was wrongly recorded by the media as 24 February.

He spent most of his childhood in Keynsham, a town between Bath and Bristol.

His maternal grandparents lived in an annexe built on the side of the house by his maternal grandfather, who was a stonemason and builder.

Two rooms at the front of the family house were for his father's surgery.

Bailey was educated at King Edward's School, an independent school in Bath, where he was initially a highly academic pupil.

At about the age of 15, he started to become distracted from school work when he realised the thrill of performance as a member of a school band called Behind Closed Doors, which played mostly original work.

He is a classically trained musician and was the only pupil at his school to study A-level music, which he passed with an A grade.

2020

In 2020 Bailey won the 18th series of the televised BBC dancing competition Strictly Come Dancing with his professional partner Oti Mabuse.

At 55, he was the oldest winner in the show's history.