Born in Sussex, England and educated at Worth School and the University of York (where he was a member of Derwent College), he worked for a while as a milkman, before coming to public attention after appearing on Channel 4's Saturday Live in a number of different personae created with Paul Whitehouse. These quickly entered the national consciousness. Amongst these characters was the Greek souvlaki-seller with markedly fractured English, "Stavros", and a fanatical supporter of the football club Arsenal F.C., which he demonstrated by frequently uttering the phrase "Up the ****".
His other popular character "Loadsamoney" (an obnoxious character who constantly boasted about how much money he earns) spawned a hit single in 1988 and sell out live tour. As a foil to "Loadsamoney" Enfield and Whitehouse created the Geordie "Bugger-All-Money" and in 1988 Enfield appeared as both characters during the 'Nelson Mandela Birthday Tribute Concert' at Wembley Stadium. In time Whitehouse and Enfield became disturbed that the "Loadsamoney" was being seen as a positive image and killed him off.[citation needed] In 1989 Enfield realised a personal project with the spoof of British Theatre Knights slumming in the film industry Sir Norbert Smith: A Life.
Before that he provided voices for the British satirical puppet show Spitting Image.
[edit] Career
In 1990, Enfield moved to the BBC where he developed his sketch show, Harry Enfield's Television Programme, and later Harry Enfield and Chums with fellow comedians Paul Whitehouse (later of Fast Show fame) and Kathy Burke. Eschewing the alternative comedy style prevalent at the time it was indebted to early 70s comedians such as Dick Emery and Morecambe and Wise, the show created more nationally recognised characters such as "Mr. and Mrs. Loadsamoney" (who used the catchphrase 'We are considerably richer than yow'), "Tim Nice-But-Dim", "Smashie and Nicey", "Wayne Slob" and "Annoying Kid Brother" who grew into "Kevin the Teenager". Two characters played by Enfield and Jon Glover, Mr Cholmondley-Warner and Grayson, appeared for several years both in the series' mock 1950s information film sketches (such as Women: Know Your Limits and Women: For Pity's Sake, Don't Drive), and in television commercials for the first of the privatised UK telephone companies, Mercury Communications. Enfield is a professed fan of classical opera and for Channel 4 fronted a documentary series on the subject.
His first sitcom appearance came in 1992, when he played "Dermot" in Men Behaving Badly on ITV. He left after the first series, and was replaced by Neil Morrissey, who played 'Tony' in the subsequent five series, and various one-off specials.
[edit] Appearence
In 2000 Enfield appeared in his first leading film role playing "Kevin" alongside Kathy Burke, who played the character's male friend "Perry" - roles originally created for the television series - in Kevin & Perry Go Large. The film charted the pair's attempt to become professional DJs by travelling to the nightclubs of Ibiza and pestering their idol DJ "Eyeball Paul", played by Rhys Ifans, whilst gaining love but losing virginity along the way.
Enfield's appearances in commercials have been prolific, including the 1996 run for Dime Bar. One memorable commercial in this series had Enfield as a country yokel refusing a Dime bar - smooth on the outside, crunchy on the inside - because he preferred armadilloes - smooth on the inside, crunchy on the outside. He also starred in a series of adverts alongside Paul Whitehouse as The Self-Righteous Brothers characters from Harry Enfield's Television Programme in a series of adverts in the 1990s for Hula Hoops. In 2002, he starred in a series of commercials for Burger King in the US as Dr. Angus, a character designed to promote the company's newest hamburger.
[edit] BSkyB
After a short break Enfield signed a new contract with BSkyB, but only produced one series which flopped badly. In 2002 Enfield returned to the BBC with Celeb, a new series based on the comic strip of the same name in Private Eye, as the ageing rockstar character, Gary Bloke. The timing was unfortunate for Enfield as, almost simultaneously, The Osbournes began showing on MTV, having been a sleeper hit in the United States. The Osbournes was a reality TV show depicting the dysfunctional and unconventional family life of a heavy metal singer, Black Sabbath's Ozzy Osbourne, and was thus a real life version of precisely what Enfield was trying to satirise with Celeb. The Osbournes became successful in Britain with Osbourne's wife Sharon and daughter Kelly gaining many spin-off media jobs, while Enfield's show disappeared quietly after only six episodes.
In 2002, Enfield was the first guest on BBC's Top Gear. He came in at an "achingly" slow time of 2:01 (the best time on the same track with the same car, 1:44.4, was recorded by Top Gear's Racing driver The Stig).[1]
As of 2004, Enfield provided the voice of "The Roaming Gnome" character used in Travelocity's U.S. advertising campaign.
[edit] Personal life
He has a son and two daughters with his second wife, Lucy.
[edit] Other information
Harry's father, Edward Enfield, has also made a few appearances as a television presenter on British television.
Harry Enfield has also done the narration for various TV documentaries such as the Discovery Wings channel 'Classic British Aircraft'.
In May 2006, the BBC released a statement that they were hoping to re-unite Enfield and Whitehouse for a new series, see this source.
As of January 2007, he has been appearing as the father of Tony, in the E4 series Skins.
As of March 2007, Harry is currently filming his new show, Harry Enfield's Sketch Show, with Paul Whitehouse.
2007-03-28 08:25:16
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
3⤋
ONLY ME - of course he is a comedy genius.
The slobs, loadsamoney, stavros, tim nicebutdim, smashey and Nicey.
I loved his television programme. (kathy Burke and Paul Whitehouse were great too)
2007-03-28 08:24:51
·
answer #3
·
answered by crazylady 6
·
0⤊
1⤋