Hannah Gadsby

Actor

Birthday January 12, 1978

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Burnie, Tasmania, Australia

Age 46 years old

Nationality Australia

#10751 Most Popular

1978

Hannah Gadsby (born 12 January 1978) is an Australian comedian, writer, and actor.

Hannah Gadsby was born on January 12, 1978, at North West Regional Hospital in Burnie, Tasmania.

They grew up in Smithton, a small town on the remote north-west coast of Tasmania, as the youngest of five children.

1990

Gadsby attended Smithton High School from 1990 to 1995.

In year 12, Gadsby attended Launceston College, where they had a nervous breakdown.

2003

They began studying at the University of Tasmania in Hobart but later transferred to the Australian National University, where they earned a bachelor's degree in art history and curatorship in 2003.

Gadsby then worked in bookshops in Canberra and became a projectionist at an outdoor cinema in Darwin.

They then spent two years picking vegetables and planting trees along the east coast of Australia.

Gadsby became homeless, which they later attributed in part to their ADHD, and ill enough with acute pancreatitis to require hospitalisation.

2006

They began their career in Australia after winning the national final of the Raw Comedy competition for new comedians in 2006.

On a visit to their sister in Adelaide in 2006, Gadsby entered Raw Comedy in 2006, progressing through the heats to win the national prize.

As the winner, they were sent to the So You Think You're Funny? competition at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where they won second prize.

2007

Their first solo show was titled Hannah Gadsby is Wrong and Broken, and won the 2007 Best Newcomer Award at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival before they went on tour with the show in Edinburgh and New York.

2008

In 2008, they performed Meat the Musical with Amelia Jane Hunter at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival.

They continued to perform at festivals, including the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Kilkenny Comedy Festival, Montreal Just for Laughs Festival, Edinburgh Fringe Festival and New Zealand International Comedy Festival.

In September 2022, Gadsby signed a multi-title deal with Netflix.

Gadsby created the stand-up show they named Nanette partly as a response to the public debate which took place in Australia before the law was changed to allow same-sex marriage, and also after their diagnosis of autism.

Nanette explores topics such as homophobia, xenophobia, sexism, and gendered violence.

Elahe Izadi of The Washington Post states although Nanette is a comedy, Gadsby insists the audience recognize the dark truth of trauma and assault.

During the show, Gadsby says they are quitting comedy.

In a review for Time Out of their next show Douglas, Ben Neutze wrote, "Yes, it was funny, but Gadsby's main objective was to deliver a fiery and furious takedown of the heterosexual patriarchy."

2015

According to Mary Luckhurst, writing in Persona Studies, Gadsby's "stand-up has to be set against the epidemic of gender-based violence which continues to infect Australian life and which was declared a 'national crisis' by the Federal Government in 2015."

2018

In 2018, their show Nanette on Netflix won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special and a Peabody Award.

After Gadsby won the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Barry award, the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Comedy Award, and the Helpmann Award for Best Comedy Performer, Netflix released the film version of Nanette in 2018.

On Rotten Tomatoes, Nanette received an approval rating of 100% based on reviews from 49 critics.

2019

Starting in 2019, Gadsby toured internationally with their show Douglas and the recorded special was released on Netflix in 2020.

In 2021, they were awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Tasmania.

In March 2022, they published Ten Steps to Nanette: A Memoir Situation.

They appeared as a recurring cast member in season four of Netflix's Sex Education as Celia, a radio show host.

In March 2019, Gadsby previewed their new show, Douglas, in Adelaide, before touring the U.S. and Australia, where many shows were sold out in advance.

In the show, they explore new personal revelations "with empathy, wit and some extremely relatable metaphor", and create something "bigger than comedy" according to one reviewer of the preview show.

In Douglas, they discuss their autism diagnosis, aiming to help people understand neurodiversity as part of a normal variation of the human condition.

In a review of the show for Time Out, Anne-Marie Peard wrote, "Douglas will create change and help people, especially undiagnosed women, to see that they may not have the right words to describe how they experience life; it's describing that experience to those who still say or think the words that belittle and damage."

2020

In 2020, Netflix released a filmed version of the live show.

In July 2021, Gadsby started a solo show, title Body of Work in several venues in Australia, New Zealand, Europe, and the UK.

Dates were also announced in the United States.

A review of Body of Work for The Guardian by Brian Logan describes the show as "a winning return for Gadsby, to whose heavy-hitting accomplishments can now be added a flair for comedy with a light heart."

In 2022, Netflix announced its plans to release a recording from the Body of Work tour in 2023.

In April 2023, Netflix announced the television special about this tour was going to be titled Something Special.

On May 10, the show was released on Netflix.