Romesh Ranganathan

Comedian

Birthday January 30, 1978

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Crawley, England

Age 46 years old

Height 1.82 m

#4510 Most Popular

1978

Jonathan Romesh Ranganathan (born 27 March 1978) is an English comedian, presenter, and actor.

His style of comedy is deadpan and often self-deprecating.

Ranganathan has made numerous appearances on television comedy panel shows and has been a regular panellist on The Apprentice: You're Fired!, Play to the Whistle, and The Museum of Curiosity.

Jonathan Romesh Ranganathan was born in Crawley on 27 March 1978, the son of Sri Lankan Tamil parents Ranga and Sivashanthini Ranganathan.

He was raised Hindu.

He suffered from an eye infection as a child that left him with a drooping eyelid and lazy eye on his right side.

1990

From 1990 to 1992, he was educated at Reigate Grammar School.

He then attended Crawley's Hazelwick School, before studying mathematics at Birkbeck, University of London.

Before beginning his comedy career, Ranganathan worked as a mathematics teacher at both Hazelwick School and The Beacon School in Banstead.

He also engaged in freestyle rap under the stage name Ranga, once reaching the finals of the UK freestyle competition.

He began performing comedy whilst still employed as a teacher.

2013

Ranganathan was a vegetarian until going vegan in 2013.

He is a supporter of Arsenal FC.

2014

Ranganathan started presenting Newsjack on Radio 4 Extra in March 2014.

He appeared on The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice in 2014, during which he presented his home-made vegan chocolate brownies.

Ranganathan has been a guest on several episodes of 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown.

2015

He also performed at the Royal Variety Performance in 2015 and presented the BBC Three series Asian Provocateur later that year, in which he travelled to Sri Lanka to explore his ancestry.

2016

He completed his first major tour, Irrational Live, in 2016; he performed in large venues such as the Hammersmith Apollo.

He co-presented It's Not Rocket Science (2016) alongside Rachel Riley and Ben Miller.

He also has appeared on Would I Lie to You?, Holby City, Soccer AM, Russell Howard's Good News, Sweat the Small Stuff, The Last Leg, Virtually Famous, Have I Got News for You, QI, and Mock the Week.

He was a contestant on the first series of Taskmaster and also appeared in the third episode of Jon Richardson Grows Up.

2018

In 2018, he joined A League of Their Own as a regular panellist.

He has presented comedy programmes Judge Romesh and The Ranganation, as well as starring in the travel programme The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan.

His autobiography, Straight Outta Crawley, was released in 2018.

He began hosting the revival of The Weakest Link in 2021.

In 2018, Ranganathan joined Season 13 of A League of Their Own and starred in his own ten-episode docu-comedy called Just Another Immigrant that premiered on Showtime June 8.

Ranganathan's autobiography, Straight Outta Crawley, was published in 2018.

2020

In 2020, Ranganathan won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Features for The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan.

In 2021, he won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Entertainment Performance for The Ranganation.

In 2020, he won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Features for The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan.

In 2021, he won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Entertainment Performance for The Ranganation.

In December 2021, he began hosting the revival of The Weakest Link, replacing Anne Robinson.

Romesh hosts a weekly radio show called For The Love of Hip-Hop on BBC Radio 2.

In 2023, it won an Audio and Radio Industry Award for Best Specialist Music Show.

From March 2024, his show will move to Saturdays (10am1pm) and replace the departing Claudia Winkleman's show.

Ranganathan continues to live in Crawley.

He met his wife, Leesa, while working at Hazelwick School; she was a drama teacher and he was a mathematics teacher.

They have three sons together.

Ranganathan has always gone by the name Romesh; he discovered on his first day of school that, as stated on his birth certificate, his first name is actually Jonathan and Romesh is his middle name.

During his live show Irrational, he recalled that his Sri Lankan immigrant parents explained to him that they did this out of concern that his name would otherwise sound too "ethnic" when applying for jobs as an adult, prompting him to point out the absurdity of such logic because his English first name would always be immediately followed by "Ranganathan".