Lee Evans

Comedian

Popular As Lee Evans (comedian)

Birthday February 25, 1964

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Bristol, England

Age 60 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5′ 9″

#7514 Most Popular

1962

He has an older brother, Wayne (born 1962).

His father was a comedian, musician, and impressionist.

1964

Lee John Martin Evans (born 25 February 1964) is an English film voice and television actor, musician, singer, writer and stand-up comedian.

Lee John Martin Evans was born in the Avonmouth suburb of Bristol on 25 February 1964, to Irish mother Shirley Hunt and Welsh father Dave Evans (died June 2019).

1975

The family left Bristol in 1975, moving to Essex, where Evans attended The Billericay School.

After a spell as a boxer and two years at Thurrock Art College in Essex, he followed his father into entertainment.

During his teenage years, he moved to Scarborough, North Yorkshire, where he was a drummer in a punk rock band called the Forgotten Five.

1990

Evans rose to fame during the 1990s with abrasive, exciting, sweaty, energetic stage performances, and physical observational comedy.

His slapstick humour has led to comparisons with Norman Wisdom, though Evans does not regard Wisdom as an influence.

1993

In 1993, he won the Perrier Comedy Award for his work at the Edinburgh Festival.

Evans's sweat drenches him on stage.

During most of his headlining performances, he often takes an intermission, during which he has a quick shower and changes into a different suit.

He has also said that his suits are regularly thrown away after three performances, mainly because of the sweat, with dry-cleaners refusing to handle them.

1995

He made his cinema debut with the Jerry Lewis comedy Funny Bones (1995), earning the Paris Film Festival Award for Best Actor, and went on to appear in the Hollywood films The Fifth Element (1997), Mouse Hunt (1997), There's Something About Mary (1998), The Ladies Man (2000), and The Medallion (2003).

2002

He lent his voice to Zipeau the Troodon in the Emmy-nominated miniseries Dinotopia (2002) and made a notable departure from comedy with a leading role in the Irish thriller film Freeze Frame (2004).

Evans provided the voice for ZippO in the 2002 TV miniseries Dinotopia and Train in the 2005 film The Magic Roundabout.

2005

In November 2005, Evans broke the world record for a solo act performing to the biggest comedy audience, performing to 10,108 people at the Manchester Arena.

2008

In 2008, the DVD of Evans' Big – Live at the O2 show became the highest-selling Christmas DVD in the United Kingdom, only to be surpassed by his own Monsters Tour DVD in 2014.

Evans toured the UK in autumn 2008 with his stand-up act entitled "Big".

During his "Big" tour he performed in front of over 500,000 people on 59 dates.

This was scheduled to involve the first-ever performance by a comedian at the O2 Arena in London until Chris Rock announced dates that would take place at the venue prior to Evans.

The DVD was filmed at the O2 Arena, and was released on 24 November 2008.

It became the best-selling comedy DVD in the UK for Christmas 2008, selling over 1,000,000 copies.

This brought the tour up to 67 dates in 14 cities which is eight more than the record-breaking tour of 2008.

2010

Evans appeared on the Channel 4's Comedy Gala for Great Ormond Street Hospital on 30 March 2010.

He was the last act on stage and he received a comedy award and auctioned it to the audience for charity.

Tickets went on sale 15 October 2010 at 9 am.

Evans sold £7,000,000 worth of tickets the first day they went on sale.

Due to popular demand, there were a further 17 dates added to the tour in the Bournemouth International Centre, Brighton Centre, Motorpoint Arena Nottingham, Wembley Arena, the National Indoor Arena, The O2 London, Liverpool Arena, Motorpoint Arena Cardiff, Odyssey Complex Belfast and The O2 Dublin.

2011

Evans toured the UK again in 2011 with a new stand-up act entitled "Roadrunner", with 50 dates starting in Bournemouth in August, running until November in Cardiff.

He appeared at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, on 10 June to test his new material for the "Roadrunner" tour.

He then sold out Bristol's Colston Hall for three nights to perfect his routine in July.

The tour visited most of the UK's major cities, plus two nights in Dublin, and included four nights in Wembley Arena and four in the O2 Arena, meaning around 100,000 seats in London alone.

In 2011, he was honoured by the British Comedy Awards with the Channel 4 Award for Special Contribution to Comedy.

2013

He co-founded the production company Little Mo Films with Addison Cresswell, who was also his agent prior to Cresswell's death in December 2013.

Evans became one of the United Kingdom's most popular stand-up comedians, with his Roadrunner tour grossing £12.9 million.

2014

In November 2014, he announced his retirement from stand-up comedy.

In November 2014, Evans announced on The Jonathan Ross Show that he was retiring from stand-up comedy to spend more time with his wife and daughter.

Evans has made a number of film appearances, such as in Funny Bones, Mouse Hunt, There's Something About Mary (where he played an American posing as English), The Fifth Element, The Ladies Man, The Martins, The Medallion and Undertaking Betty.

2017

In 2017, he briefly came out of retirement to star in a run of William Shakespeare and Harold Pinter plays.