| Frank Skinner
(born Christopher Graham Collins
on 27 January 1957 in West Bromwich) is an English writer and award-winning comedian, best known for the hit football song "Three Lions" with David Baddiel and The Lightning Seeds, as well as presenting, alongside Baddiel, the hit comedy show Fantasy Football League
.
He is currently a radio presenter on the Saturday morning slot on Absolute Radio.
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FRANK SKINNER TICKETS
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Career
Youth and early career (1957-1993)
He was born at
Sandwell General Hospital, and grew up at 189 Bristnall Hall Road, a council house in neighbouring
Oldbury. He was the youngest of four children born to
West Cornforth-born former semi-professional footballer John Collins and his wife Doris. He has two older brothers, Keith and Terry, as well as an older sister called Norah. His father had played for
Spennymoor United before the
Second World War, and met his mother in a local pub after Spennymoor had played
West Bromwich Albion in an
FA Cup game in 1937. He attended Moat Farm Infant School from 1961 to 1964, St. Hubert's Roman Catholic Junior School from 1964 to 1968, and then
Oldbury Technical Secondary School from September 1968.
He passed 2
O-levels in the summer of 1973 and was allowed to take
A-levels in English Language and Art, along with several O-level re-sits, at Oldbury Technical School Sixth Form. He took 4 A-levels (including English Language and Literature) at
Warley College of Technology and then graduated from
Birmingham Polytechnic (now
Birmingham City University) in 1981 with a degree in English. This was followed by a Masters degree in English Literature at the
University of Warwick, the following year. After graduating, he spent four years as a lecturer in English at
Halesowen College, whilst being a
stand-up comedian on the side, before quitting his job in 1989 to pursue his comedy career full-time. During this period a bout of
influenza made him give up drinking, and he remains one of the UK's most high-profile recovering
alcoholics.
Collins took on the pseudonym
Frank Skinner
when the actors' union
Equity told him there was already someone of the same name on their books (their rules do not permit two members with identical names). He took the name from a member of his late father's
dominoes team. Skinner had performed his first stand-up gig in 1987 and made his
television debut a year later. In 1990 he co-wrote and starred in a weakly-received
sitcom,
Packet Of Three
, on
Channel 4 but continued to see his reputation as a stand-up grow. He won the 1991
Perrier Award at the
Edinburgh Fringe, beating
Jack Dee and
Eddie Izzard. Frank Skinner announced to Question Time that he is a British Labour Party Supporter. He also said that, if Jesus were to come to earth, he thought Jesus would vote Labour.
Career peak (1994-2005)
He often works with best friend and ex-flatmate
David Baddiel, notably on the popular late night entertainment show
Fantasy Football League
, from 1994 to 2004 and on
Baddiel and Skinner Unplanned
from 2000 to 2005.
The duo also co-wrote and performed the
football song "
Three Lions" with the
Lightning Seeds and the
England national football team for
Euro 96, and re-released it for the
1998 World Cup. Both times the song reached #1 in the UK charts and it is widely regarded as the best of the English football anthems. In 2001, he released his
autobiography "Frank Skinner by Frank Skinner", which became an instant bestseller. An accompanying TV show, "Frank Skinner on Frank Skinner", in which Skinner showed where he lived as a child and interviews with Skinner, his friends and family members, was recorded and shown on
ITV in 2001. From 1995 to 1998, Skinner had his own chat show on
BBC One, it ended when the BBC refused to meet pay demands of a reported £20 million.
[1]
After a short break the show found a new home at
ITV in 1999, where it ran until late 2005. He has appeared in a number of self-written sitcoms, including
Blue Heaven
(1994) and
Shane
(2004). In 2003, he was listed in
The Observer as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy. He has lived in London since 1991, but still supports
West Bromwich Albion F.C. [2] and
Warwickshire County Cricket Club. When West Bromwich Albion won promotion to the
FA Premier League in 2004, he featured in an Express and Star article which commemorated the club's promotion.
Post ITV (2006-present)
In 2005, Skinner announced he was going to leave behind his television work in favour of returning to the stand-up comedy circuit. A second series of
Shane
has been made, but not shown. In February 2006, he received an
honorary degree from
Birmingham City University.
[3] Skinner and David Baddiel covered the
2006 FIFA World Cup by podcast for
The Times
, a British broadsheet. The podcasts received a nomination for the 2007 Sony Radio Academy Awards. In May 2006, he appeared as a guest speaker at the
Oxford Union. Skinner learned to play the banjo for a celebrity reality show,
Play It Again, which was broadcast on the BBC in March 2007. He had 3 months to learn the instrument before competing in a
bluegrass festival. Unfortunately for Frank, when it came to the festival, nerves got the better of him and he played very poorly.
In 2007, he announced a new live stand-up tour, his first for 10 years. On 1 May he performed a warm-up gig before a sell-out crowd at the
Swindon , and followed this up on 26 May at the 150 capacity Forest Arts,
New Milton. His final preview performance was at the Junction Theatre,
Cambridge on 29 July. In August Frank returned to the Edinburgh Festival for 2 weeks at The Pleasance, the venue where he won the
Perrier Award.
In the Autumn Frank returned to the live circuit performing a 69 date national tour including three sold out homecoming performances at the
National Indoor Arena in Birmingham which were recorded for a forthcoming DVD.
Skinner returned to ITV to take part in a new show,
, which on Tuesday 12 June 2007 at 10pm, chronicling his visit to an
Osho commune in Dorset.
He is also producing a
CBS pilot version of
Shane
.
[4]
In November 2008 and in the light of senior broadcasting figures such as ITV boss
Michael Grade and Sir
Terry Wogan calling for TV to clean up its act regarding use of swear words, Skinner decided to experiment with removing swear words altogether from his stand up live act although stated that it would be a shame if 'clever swearing' was lost.
[5] He also stood in for an ill
Paul Merton as a team captain on the 21 November edition of
Have I Got News For You
.
[6]
He revealed on 28 November 2008 on the BBC political show
This Week
that he earns £300,000 a year.
In February 2009 Frank began hosting 'Frank Skinner's Credit Crunch Cabaret' a series of shows at the Lyric Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue. The shows aimed to give hard-up audiences a variety of award-winning acts for a £10 ticket.
He hosted an episode of
Have I Got News For You in April 2009, having also been a guest on the previous series.
On his
Absolute Radio show, Frank said that he had (unsuccessfully) auditioned for a part playing an American in a
David E. Kelley TV show in December 2008.
In July 2009 he was a member of the
Mock the Week panel on the first episode of the new series and also appeared on the second and sixth episodes of the first series of
You Have Been Watching.
He hosts
Frank Skinner's Credit Crunch Cabaret
(a series of comedy variety shows) at the
Edinburgh Festival Fringe from 14–30 August 2009.
[7]
Absolute Radio
From March 2009 Frank started to present the Saturday Morning Breakfast Show on
Absolute Radio with his co-hosts Emily Dean and Gareth Richards, produced by
Avalon Television. After an initial 12-week stint proved very popular with the listeners, Skinner's contract was extended until summer 2010.
[8]
Videography
VHS Releases
- Frank Skinner — Live
(1992)
- Live At The Apollo
(1994)
- Fantasy Football Video
(1994)
- Just For Laughs — Highlights From The Montreal Comedy Festival
(1995)
- Live At The Palladium
(1996)
- Unseen Fantasy Football
(1996)
- Two Men And A Football — Fantasy Football 3
(1996)
- The Unseen Frank Skinner Show
(1997)
- More Unseen Fantasy Football
(1997)
- Live In Birmingham
(1998)
DVD Releases
- Baddiel and Skinner Unplanned - Live from London's West End
(2001)
- ''Fantasy Football League 2004 (2004)
- '' Flint Street Nativity (2006)
- '' Frank Skinner: Stand Up! Live At Birmingham NIA (2008)
- '' Frank Skinner: The Stand Up Collection (3 Discs) (2008)
References
- Skinner makes a sky-high demand so BBC walks out
- Celebrity fans — Frank Skinner
- Honour for comic Skinner
- http://www.sitcom.co.uk/news/news.php?story=00097
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_7732000/7732899.stm
- Merton misses 'Have I Got News' with illness
- http://edinburghfestival.list.co.uk/event/10000811-frank-skinners-credit-crunch-cabaret/
- Frank Skinner extends contract at Absolute Radio