Ashley Blaker | |
---|---|
Birth name | Ashley Blaker |
Born | London, UK |
Medium | Television, radio, stand-up |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | Oxford University, Cambridge University |
Genres | Stand-up comedy, satire, observational comedy |
Subject(s) | Human interaction, religion, Judaism, family |
Notable works and roles | Little Britain |
Ashley Blaker is a British comedian and television producer. Blaker is a writer for TV and radio and a longtime collaborator with Matt Lucas: he was producer of Little Britain [1] and Rock Profile. [2] He also co-created and wrote The Matt Lucas Awards, and appeared in one episode. Lucas, amongst others, has described Blaker as "the UK's only Orthodox comedian". [3] [4] [5]
As a stand-up comedian, Blaker’s first Off-Broadway show, Strictly Unorthodox, opened in May 2017 at The Theater Center. [6] and his second Off-Broadway show, Goy Friendly opened in February 2020, at the SoHo Playhouse. [7]
Blaker was educated at the Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, where he was four years behind Sacha Baron Cohen, [4] and a friend of Matt Lucas, with whom he went on to create Little Britain. [1] He is a graduate of both Oxford and Cambridge. [8] He embraced Orthodox Judaism in his early twenties. [1]
Blanket began working for the BBC as a trainee radio producer, after completing one of their graduate courses. In 1999, he bumped into his old school friend Matt Lucas on a London street, it proved a turning point for both of them. [9] Lucas had pitched the idea of Little Britain to the controller of BBC Two, Jane Root. [9] Blaker suggested turning it into a radio show and despite the initial reluctance of Lucas' writing partner David Walliams, they decided to press ahead. [9] The show launched in 2000, and Blaker produced two series on the radio before the show switched to TV in 2003.
With Little Britain under way, the same team collaborated on Rock Profile. The first series was broadcast in 1999, comprising of 13 episodes on digital channel Play UK, with subsequent series appearing on BBC Two.
From 2012-13, Blaker was the producer, as well as co-creator and co-writer (alongside Matt Lucas) of The Matt Lucas Awards [10] for BBC One, even appearing on-screen in one episode.
In 2017, Blaker was commissioned by the BBC to create a show called Ashley Blaker's Goyish Guide To Judaism, [11] described as "an insider's view of his religion"". [12] It was broadcast in June 2018 as part of BBC Radio Four's Stand-Up Specials series. [13] A follow-up was commissioned and broadcast in 2019. [14]
Blaker's stand-up show, Observant Jew, was part of the 2018 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. [15]
In 2019, he performed a UK tour titled Prophet Sharing alongside Muslim comedian Imran Yusuf. [16]
In August 2020, a new four-part series 6.5 Children was commissioned from Blaker by BBC Radio 4; broadcast started in July 2021. [17] [18]
His material has been described by the New York Times as being different from most other Jewish comics': "In contrast to most overtly Jewish comedy, which usually compares Jews and gentiles, most of his material juxtaposes the frum and not frum." [19] The paper's review described him as "a skilled joke-teller with none of the borscht belt timing you would expect from a Catskills comic. And since we rarely hear the perspective of the ultra-Orthodox in comedy clubs, there’s a pleasing freshness about an act that offers a look into a world often hidden from public view." [19]
Ashley Blaker | |
---|---|
Birth name | Ashley Blaker |
Born | London, UK |
Medium | Television, radio, stand-up |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | Oxford University, Cambridge University |
Genres | Stand-up comedy, satire, observational comedy |
Subject(s) | Human interaction, religion, Judaism, family |
Notable works and roles | Little Britain |
Ashley Blaker is a British comedian and television producer. Blaker is a writer for TV and radio and a longtime collaborator with Matt Lucas: he was producer of Little Britain [1] and Rock Profile. [2] He also co-created and wrote The Matt Lucas Awards, and appeared in one episode. Lucas, amongst others, has described Blaker as "the UK's only Orthodox comedian". [3] [4] [5]
As a stand-up comedian, Blaker’s first Off-Broadway show, Strictly Unorthodox, opened in May 2017 at The Theater Center. [6] and his second Off-Broadway show, Goy Friendly opened in February 2020, at the SoHo Playhouse. [7]
Blaker was educated at the Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, where he was four years behind Sacha Baron Cohen, [4] and a friend of Matt Lucas, with whom he went on to create Little Britain. [1] He is a graduate of both Oxford and Cambridge. [8] He embraced Orthodox Judaism in his early twenties. [1]
Blanket began working for the BBC as a trainee radio producer, after completing one of their graduate courses. In 1999, he bumped into his old school friend Matt Lucas on a London street, it proved a turning point for both of them. [9] Lucas had pitched the idea of Little Britain to the controller of BBC Two, Jane Root. [9] Blaker suggested turning it into a radio show and despite the initial reluctance of Lucas' writing partner David Walliams, they decided to press ahead. [9] The show launched in 2000, and Blaker produced two series on the radio before the show switched to TV in 2003.
With Little Britain under way, the same team collaborated on Rock Profile. The first series was broadcast in 1999, comprising of 13 episodes on digital channel Play UK, with subsequent series appearing on BBC Two.
From 2012-13, Blaker was the producer, as well as co-creator and co-writer (alongside Matt Lucas) of The Matt Lucas Awards [10] for BBC One, even appearing on-screen in one episode.
In 2017, Blaker was commissioned by the BBC to create a show called Ashley Blaker's Goyish Guide To Judaism, [11] described as "an insider's view of his religion"". [12] It was broadcast in June 2018 as part of BBC Radio Four's Stand-Up Specials series. [13] A follow-up was commissioned and broadcast in 2019. [14]
Blaker's stand-up show, Observant Jew, was part of the 2018 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. [15]
In 2019, he performed a UK tour titled Prophet Sharing alongside Muslim comedian Imran Yusuf. [16]
In August 2020, a new four-part series 6.5 Children was commissioned from Blaker by BBC Radio 4; broadcast started in July 2021. [17] [18]
His material has been described by the New York Times as being different from most other Jewish comics': "In contrast to most overtly Jewish comedy, which usually compares Jews and gentiles, most of his material juxtaposes the frum and not frum." [19] The paper's review described him as "a skilled joke-teller with none of the borscht belt timing you would expect from a Catskills comic. And since we rarely hear the perspective of the ultra-Orthodox in comedy clubs, there’s a pleasing freshness about an act that offers a look into a world often hidden from public view." [19]