Peter Richardson

Director

Popular As Peter Richardson (British director)

Birthday October 15, 1951

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Newton Abbot, Devon, England

Age 72 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#41131 Most Popular

1951

Peter Richardson (born 15 October 1951) is an English director, screenwriter, actor and comedian.

He founded the Comic Strip troupe of performers, which showcased his double act with Nigel Planer and boosted the careers of French and Saunders, Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson, and Alexei Sayle.

Richardson approached Channel 4 to make a series of short, self-contained one-off comedy films with this group, which led to The Comic Strip Presents..., the majority of which featured Richardson in acting, writing and directing roles.

Richardson was born on 15 October 1951 in Newton Abbot, Devon, England and lived in a house near Denbury.

His parents ran a children's summer camp school.

The family moved to Dartmoor when Richardson was ten.

Richardson describes himself as "a Devonian, honest, cream on first every time."

Richardson would go on to set a number of his films in Devon, and found his production company there.

At one point he was a lifeguard at a Devon swimming pool, despite having failed the swimming test, "but they still hired me as they were so short staffed."

The family did not have a television, but his father had a cine camera with which they would make films.

Richardson credits this as the beginning of his interest in filmmaking.

Encouraged by his parents, he moved to London when he was seventeen, having decided he wanted to be an actor.

Richardson appeared as one of the schoolboys in Alan Bennett's Forty Years On, starring John Gielgud and Paul Eddington.

This work led to him getting an agent and performing in TV plays as an extra.

He then attended the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.

It was here in the second year he became reacquainted with Nigel Planer, who had worked at Richardson's parents' summer camp.

The pair shared an interest in rock music, and wanted to mix music with a comedy show; in Richardson's words "we felt we'd like to try something like what Frank Zappa was doing on records, which was being funny but using music as well.".

Around this time Richardson and Planer were heavily influenced by U.S. comedians Sal's Meat Market, an early duo of John Ratzenberger and Ray Hassett, as well as the group Alberto y Lost Trios Paranoias.

1971

Richardson began his career as a teenager acting in Alan Bennett's Forty Years On, before he trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School from 1971 to 1973.

He later created his own experimental theatre shows with Nigel Planer amongst others, mixing comedy and improvisation with rock music.

Two of these shows, Rank and The Wild Boys, toured nationally.

1974

With the assistance of Caroline Jay, they produced a show called "Rank", inspired by the police raid of the 1974 Windsor Free Festival, which premiered at the Roundhouse Downstairs in August 1976.

Planer and Richardson played all the characters in the play, which numbered around forty.

The play was well received and enabled the pair to get an Arts Council grant to take it on tour.

Despite the critical acclaim, at the end of the tour Richardson and Planer found themselves with no money and had to pursue other work, with Richardson squatting in London.

After Rank, Richardson toured with a band in Italy and also helped run drama courses for children at his parents' house in Devon.

One of the dramas produced from these courses became a show called The Wild Boys, based on the book by William Burroughs.

Richardson performed this show at the ICA in London as well as touring the show with the group Furious Pig.

Through this, Richardson first met Michael White, with whom he planned to take the show into the West End, although this came to nothing.

1980

Although he did not reach the same level of public recognition as some of his contemporaries, Richardson was influential on British television comedy throughout the 1980s as the driving force behind The Comic Strip Presents... films, first shown on Channel 4 in 1982.

The series was one of the first examples of alternative comedy to appear on British television.

Richardson has been involved in the production of over 40 Comic Strip films and has directed 17 of them.

1988

The series won a Rose D'Or for The Strike in 1988.

He developed the series into feature films; The Supergrass, Eat the Rich, The Pope Must Die, and Churchill: The Hollywood Years, none of which achieved great box office success.

1990

In the 1990s, Richardson introduced a new generation of performers: Doon Mackichan, Mark Caven, Phil Cornwell, Sara Stockbridge, George Yiasoumi and Gary Beadle, who appeared in his productions.

He co-wrote and directed the 1990s cult mockumentary comedy series Stella Street with Phil Cornwell and John Sessions.

2004

In 2004, Richardson co-founded, with Nick Smith, the production company Great Western Features, based in Totnes, Devon.

2005

In 2005, he directed the Comic Strip film Sex Actually.

2010

In the 2010s, Richardson wrote and directed three more Comic Strip films: 2011's The Hunt for Tony Blair, 2012's Five Go To Rehab and 2016's Red Top.

In a July 2021 interview, Richardson said he is putting together a book on The Comic Strip due to come out in 2022.