Jimmy Mulville

Actor

Birthday January 5, 1955

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Liverpool, England

Age 69 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#57756 Most Popular

1955

James Thomas Mulville (born 5 January 1955) is an English comedian, comedy writer, producer and television presenter.

1977

He became president of Cambridge Footlights in 1977 and after graduating, went on to work for BBC Radio comedy for four years, producing shows such as Injury Time (1980–1982) and Radio Active, before moving to television in 1984 as script editor and producer of Alas Smith and Jones.

1980

He starred in the ITV sitcom That's Love in the 1980s, along with Diana Hardcastle and Tony Slattery.

They also co-wrote the radio comedy Glompus Van Der Hloed's Tales From The Crypt, which starred Andrew Sachs, Mel Smith and Griff Rhys Jones, which aired on Capital Radio in the early 1980s and subsequently released in an abridged version as an album.

He featured on the radio version, as well as the television pilot, of UK improvisation show, Whose Line Is It Anyway?, alongside Stephen Fry and Nonny Williams.

1983

He appeared in and co-wrote the cult TV show Who Dares Wins (1983–1988).

1984

He was one of the cast of the British comedy series The Steam Video Company (1984).

1986

He is best known for co-founding (in 1986) the British independent television production company Hat Trick Productions with Denise O'Donoghue and Rory McGrath (who left in 1992).

1988

He co-wrote and starred with Rory McGrath in the two series of Chelmsford 123, a comedy set in Roman Britain, broadcast on Channel 4 in 1988 and 1990.

1991

Mulville had a non-comic acting role in Alan Bleasdale's G.B.H. in 1991, playing a researcher hired by the lead character Michael Murray to trace his childhood nemesis.

1995

On radio, he appears in the BBC Radio 4 comedy series Old Harry's Game (1995–2012) as Thomas Quentin Crimp.

He and Andy Hamilton are old friends, having met at Cambridge, where they were at university with Rory McGrath, Clive Anderson and Griff Rhys Jones.

More recently, he and Jed Mercurio, via HTM Television inked a first look deal with 20th Television in an effort to expand it to the US.

He has been married three times, with the first two marriages ending in divorce.

He has four children, a step-daughter and three sons.

His second marriage was to Denise O'Donoghue, with whom he continued to work after they divorced.

1999

In 1999 Mulville and O'Donoghue jointly received the BAFTA Alan Clarke Award for their creative contribution to television.

His third wife is Karen Mulville, the co-founder of the retirement complex Auriens.

2003

In 2003, Mulville and O'Donoghue, as co-founders of Hat Trick, were listed in The Observer as two of the 50 funniest people in Britain.

Brought up in Walton, Liverpool, Mulville attended Alsop High School, a local comprehensive.

He began his career as an actor and writer for the Cambridge Footlights, whilst reading French and Classics at Jesus College, Cambridge.

At Cambridge, Mulville met Rory McGrath with whom he both performed and wrote.

2004

In 2004 he was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Liverpool.

2020

Mulville received a driving ban in 2020.

In 2023 he was found guilty by magistrates of driving whilst using his mobile phone.

He is an Everton F.C. supporter.