Noel Fielding
Noel Fielding | |
---|---|
Born | 1973 (age 50–51) Westminster, London, England |
Education | Croydon College of Art Buckinghamshire New University (BA) |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1996–present |
Partner | Lliana Bird (c. 2010–present) |
Children | 2 |
Relatives | Michael Fielding (half-brother) |
Comedy career | |
Medium |
|
Genres | |
Website | noelfielding |
Noel Fielding (/ˈnəʊəl/; born 1973) is an English comedian and actor. He was part of The Mighty Boosh comedy troupe alongside Julian Barratt in the 2000s, and has been a co-presenter of The Great British Bake Off since 2017. He is known for his dark and surreal comedic style.
Fielding began performing stand-up comedy when he graduated from art school in 1995, and in 1997 he first met Mighty Boosh collaborator Barratt when they both appeared on the same comedy bill at a pub in north London. Around 1998, they performed their first comedy show together in London, which was a mix of stand-up and sketch comedy, then later in 1998 they took the show, The Mighty Boosh, to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. They returned to the festival in 1999 with Arctic Boosh, and in 2000 with Autoboosh. In 2001 The Mighty Boosh became a six-part radio show on BBC London Live, called The Boosh later transferring to BBC radio 4.
In 2004, the Mighty Boosh became a television show The Mighty Boosh, which ran for three series on BBC Three until 2007. The show generated a cult following and won awards. From February to April 2006 they went on tour around the UK with the stage show The Mighty Boosh Live and then toured the UK for a second time from September 2008 to January 2009 with The Mighty Boosh Live: Future Sailors Tour.
During the 2000s, Fielding also had smaller roles in a number of comedy shows for Channel 4 including Nathan Barley, The IT Crowd, AD/BC: A Rock Opera, and Garth Marenghi's Darkplace. After The Mighty Boosh, he wrote and starred in two series of a solo show for Channel 4 called Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy, which ran between 2012 and 2014. He has also appeared as a team captain on the BBC Two comedy panel show Never Mind the Buzzcocks, originally from 2009 to 2015, and again since 2021, and as a guest on Richard Ayoade's Travel Man series. He has also appeared in several music videos.
Fielding, along with Sergio Pizzorno from the band Kasabian, formed the band Loose Tapestries as an alternative project in 2012, to provide music for Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy. Fielding has also exhibited his artwork in London, and collaborated with Fendi for their autumn/winter 2021 menswear collection.
Early life and education
[edit]Fielding was born in the Westminster area of London in 1973,[1] the son of Royal Mail manager Ray Fielding and Yvonne Fagan. He is of French descent through his grandmother.[2][3] He grew up in Mitcham, Southwest London[4] When Fielding was three years old, his father remarried, and Fielding was mostly raised by his grandmother.[3]
His father and stepmother Diane would later become more involved in parenting during Fielding's mother's illness in the 1980s. His mother had two more children before dying in 1990 aged 37 years old, from complications caused by liver damage.[5] Fielding has commented that "My parents had lots of parties... They were hopelessly bohemian."[6]
Michael Fielding, his younger paternal half-brother, later played various characters in The Mighty Boosh TV show and live stage shows as well as Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy. His father Ray Fielding and his stepmother appeared in The Mighty Boosh TV show, with his father having several cameos as Chris de Burgh.[7]
At the age of 13[8][9] Fielding began writing comedy sketches.[8] At the age of 15, Fielding became a goth and had goth girlfriends. At this time he first tried using makeup and said he loved being dressed up by his girlfriends.[10]
Whilst studying at Croydon Art College[3][11] Fielding met Mighty Boosh collaborator Dave Brown.[3] From 1992 to 1995 Fielding studied for a BA in graphic design and advertising at Buckinghamshire College of Higher Education in High Wycombe,[12][13][11] graduating in 1995.[12]
Whilst at Buckinghamshire College both Dave Brown and Nigel Coan were studying the same course as Fielding[14] and all three shared a student house together.[14] Nigel Coan also collaborated with Fielding on the Mighty Boosh.[14] After they had lived together in student housing whilst at Buckinghamshire College, Fielding, Brown, and Coan also later lived together in a flat in Hackney, London.[15]
Career
[edit]Stand-up comedy
[edit]Fielding began performing comedy while at university[8] and he began performing stand up when he graduated in 1995.[15]
In 1997 he first met Mighty Boosh collaborator Julian Barratt when they both appeared on the same comedy bill at a pub in north London.[16] Barratt had had more experience in performing than Fielding.[17] Later, on The Jonathan Ross Show, Barratt said that they had liked each other's comedy but didn't know if a collaboration would work, but, according to Fielding, they "had quite a good chemistry straight away."[18]
On the day they met they both went back to Julian's place that night where Barratt played music on his Akai sampler while Fielding used a ping-pong ball to make an eye patch.[16] They shared an interest in music, with Fielding more into rock and roll and pop, and Barratt preferring jazz, but both enjoyed electro. Both had played in bands before meeting.[19] They also shared common interests in comedy, including Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer.[20][16]
In 2010, Fielding was supposed to perform a solo tour across the country. It was cancelled so he could concentrate on writing The Mighty Boosh film with Julian Barratt and creating an album. Fielding announced via Twitter that he was too busy to do the tour.[21] From 2014 to 2015 Fielding toured the UK and Australia with a new comedy show An Evening With Noel Fielding that included both stand-up comedy and sketch comedy and along with Fielding included performances from his brother Michael Fielding and long-term collaborator Tom Meeten. Mighty Boosh collaborator Nigel Coan created the animation for the animated sequences that occurred in the show.[14][22]
Montreal's Just For Laughs comedy festival had to be moved online, during the COVID-19 Pandemic. On 20 October 2020 Fielding and Jimmy Carr live streamed a conversation from their respective homes.[23]
The Mighty Boosh
[edit]Barratt and Fielding said that they performed together for the first time in Stuart Lee's show, Moby Dick and King Dong (at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, 1997), in which Barratt played King Dong's penis.[24]
Sometime around 1998[24] they then put on their first comedy show at Oranje Boom Boom, which "was very raw, but... hilarious", and afterwards got a gig at Hen and Chickens Theatre, a theatre bar in Islington, London. They then took The Mighty Boosh up to Edinburgh in 1998, followed by Arctic Boosh (1999) and Autoboosh (2000).[24] Fielding said about their first live show in 1998 that they had worked on their ideas together, and played "zookeepers [who] got sucked through our bosses' eyes and into a magic forest".[25] Both Michael Fielding and Richard Ayoade appeared in a performance of the Mighty Boosh at the Hen and Chickens in 2002 during a live run through of a Mighty Boosh pilot.[24] Fielding and Barratt said that they used to put potted plants all around the Hen and Chickens "to try and make it into a sort of play", but they "didn't know anything about theatre or what you did".[24] The name "Mighty Boosh" was originally a phrase used by a friend of Michael Fielding's to describe the hair that Michael had as a child.[26][27] From August 2008 to January 2009 they went on tour for a second time with a new stage show of the Mighty Boosh.[28]
In 2001 The Mighty Boosh became a six-part radio show on BBC London Live, later transferring to BBC Radio 4.[29][24]
In 2004 it became an 8-part TV show which aired on BBC Three, with a second series airing in 2005, and a third airing in 2007; 20 episodes in all. In each series the setting changes, with the first series set in a zoo operated by Bob Fossil, the second in a flat, and the third in a secondhand shop in Dalston called Nabootique.[26][30] The Mighty Boosh almost did not make it to television, until Steve Coogan's production company sold the concept to the BBC simply by saying: "If we were young, we'd want to be them".[16] The style of humour in the Mighty Boosh is often described as being surreal,[31][32][16][33][18] as well as being escapist[31][16] and new wave comedy.[32] Fielding has said "I think our show is magical and fantastical. We tell very intricate, weird stories. Vince Noir is quite modern, a bit of an indie kid; Howard Moon is... eccentric... and we rely heavily on Julian's music and my animation".[16]
Fielding said that for the first three weeks of the TV show, he did all of the paintings for the animations, but this led to lack of sleep, so Ivana Zorn, Nigel Coan's partner, started doing most of the painting, with Fielding just designing the main characters.[34] Fielding formed "Secret Peter Productions"[35] with Nigel Coan who, along with Fielding and Zorn, helped to animate series 1 and 2 of the Mighty Boosh TV show, An evening with Noel Fielding and Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy.[14] Coan also directed Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy as well as helping to write it along with Fielding.[14] Dave Brown also contributed to graphics for the Mighty Boosh.[12] Barratt composed all the music.[36][16] Other regular Boosh collaborators included Michael Fielding, Rich Fulcher, Dave Brown,[14] Richard Ayoade, and Matt Berry[24] The Mighty Boosh won the Shockwaves NME Best TV Award three times in 2007, 2008, and 2010.[37]
In 2006 Fielding and Barratt went on tour with a new theatre show The Mighty Boosh Live.[29][38] Fielding later said "We always thought we'd make one show and that'd be the end of it. But after we won the Perrier, everyone was telling us that we had to do another, which we did and brought it to Melbourne and won the Barry, and then we made a radio show that won the Douglas Adams Award... It went on and on".[25]
Fielding has said several times that he talked about writing a film with Barratt,[39] and he would have loved to do so, but they never got around to it.[38][28] They wrote two film scripts which did not make it to production. One was a "Rocky Horror Picture Show type thing", according to Fielding, in which Barratt played a character who has woken up believing himself to be the last man on earth. The other was an Arctic adventure – "because we always liked the Arctic".[28]
Other television appearances
[edit]At Bill Bailey's request, Fielding stood in as a team captain for three episodes during series 21 of Never Mind the Buzzcocks. He also achieved a record for the highest team score ever on the show. When Bailey returned, presenter Simon Amstell made various jokes about Fielding's departure. In 2009, Bailey left the show and Fielding became one of the regular team captains.[citation needed]
Between 2006 and 2017 Fielding appeared thirteen times on the quiz show The Big Fat Quiz of the Year[40][41] as well as its spin-off shows The Big Fat Anniversary Quiz, The Big Fat Quiz of the Decade[42] and the The Big Fat Quiz of Everything. He appeared on the quiz show three times with Russell Brand,[43][44][45] nine times with Richard Ayoade[46] and once with Eddie Izzard.[47]
In 2011, he took part in Catherine Tate's TV movie Laughing at the Noughties in which he and other British comedians discussed the comedy highlights of the noughties.[48]
Fielding produced his first solo series for Channel 4 network's E4 channel in 2011,[49] as the broadcaster invested an additional £5 million in its comedy budget following the cancellation of reality show Big Brother.[50] Fielding said of the project, tentatively titled Noel Fielding: Boopus: "I want to make something in the spirit of Spike Milligan or the Kenny Everett Show but using modern techniques. Blending filmed comedy with animation. Television needs a madman! I want the show to be psychedelic and beautiful but have charm and personality. If Dalí made a show hopefully it would look like this."[49][51] The show began broadcasting in January 2012, titled Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy. The show's second series, titled Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy 2: Tales From Painted Hawaii, was first broadcast on E4 in 2014.[52]
Also in 2011, Fielding performed Kate Bush's "Wuthering Heights" dance routine for Series 3 of Let's Dance for Comic Relief, and reached the grand final.[53][54]
In 2010 and 2014, he took part in Channel 4's Comedy Gala, a benefit show held in aid of Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital.[55]
In March 2017, it was revealed that Fielding would co-host the upcoming series of The Great British Bake Off alongside Sandi Toksvig.[56]
Fielding appeared as a contestant on Series 4 of the Dave comedy panel game Taskmaster in 2017, hosted by Greg Davies and Alex Horne: he was the overall series winner.[57][58]
In January 2018, he was a panellist on QI alongside Russell Brand and Aisling Bea.[59]
In 2024, Fielding played Dick Turpin in an Apple TV+ comedy series, The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin.[60][61]
According to Neil Gaiman's blog, Fielding was scheduled to appear in the 2007 film Stardust, but had to drop out due to ill health.[62]
Radio
[edit]In November 2007, Fielding starred in five episodes of BBC Radio 2 show Vic Reeves' House Arrest as a local vagrant who knocks on Reeves' door once a week to ask for work.[65]
Music
[edit]Fielding has appeared in several music videos, including Mint Royale's "Blue Song", alongside Julian Barratt, Nick Frost and Michael Smiley. The video was directed by Edgar Wright and served as the inspiration for the opening sequence of his film Baby Driver (2017).[66] He also made a brief appearance in the video for Razorlight's "In the Morning". He appeared in music videos for the Robots in Disguise songs "Girl" (alongside Chris Corner who was, at the time, boyfriend to Sue Denim), "The Tears", and "Turn It Up". In 2009, Noel was involved in the Kasabian video "Vlad the Impaler", in which he plays the titular character,[67] and reprised the role at the 2014 Glastonbury Festival.[68]
The music video was directed by Richard Ayoade. He was referenced in Kasabian's "La Fée Verte", a track on their Velociraptor! album (his friend Sergio Pizzorno said "The line, 'I met Dalí in the street.' Dalí is Noel Fielding. And he is the modern-day Dalí"). Fielding also makes a brief appearance as Vlad in the video for another Kasabian song, "Re-Wired", riding a five-seater bicycle with the band, and appears as a patient in a psychiatric hospital in "You're In Love With a Psycho", in which he re-enacts the broken mirror routine from the Marx Brothers film Duck Soup with Pizzorno and Tom Meighan.[69] He has also appeared in Kate Bush's music video "Deeper Understanding" as a means of thanks for the Let's Dance For Comic Relief performance.[70]
Fielding paired up with Sergio Pizzorno (Kasabian) to form a band, Loose Tapestries, formed to provide music for Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy.[71][72][35] Loose Tapestries released two albums and a Christmas single.[73][74]
Art
[edit]Boosh has exhibited his paintings in London.[75][11][3] He held his first exhibition of his paintings, entitled Psychedelic Dreams of the Jelly Fox,[11] in a gallery above the patisserie Maison Bertaux,[76][11] in Greek Street, Soho in December 2007.[11] There Fielding listed some of his inspirations as Henri Rousseau, René Magritte, Willem de Kooning, Roy Lichtenstein, Dexter Dalwood, a former tutor of his from the Croydon School of Art[76] and Fielding has also cited Salvador Dalí as an inspiration.[76] A second exhibition of his paintings entitled Bryan Ferry vs the Jelly Fox also took place at Maison Bertaux, from 5 July 2010 through to 5 January 2011.[76][77]
In October 2011, Fielding released an art book called Scribblings of a Madcap Shambleton, which he produced along with The Mighty Boosh cast member Dave Brown. It features many of his old and new paintings, drawings and photography.[78]
Fielding's video installation of The Jelly Fox was shown at the Saatchi Gallery, and in 2012 he created a unique piece inspired by The Beatles for Liverpool Love at the Museum of Liverpool. In March 2015, his exhibition He Wore Dreams Around Unkind Faces was shown at the Royal Albert Hall.[79]
In January 2021, the luxury fashion house Fendi unveiled a collection featuring abstract takes on the brand's logo, created by Fielding.[80]
Recognition and honours
[edit]On 6 September 2011, Fielding received an honorary master's degree from his alma mater, now called Buckinghamshire New University, for his ongoing interest in the graphics area and support for many art organisations.[12][13]
In 2015, Fielding was named one of GQ magazine's 50 best-dressed British men.[81]
Personal life
[edit]Fielding was formerly in a relationship with Robots in Disguise lead vocalist Dee Plume, who made minor appearances in The Mighty Boosh and in its live adaptations.[3] In 2007, it was reported that Fielding, then 33 and a close friend of Russell Brand, had been seen in nightclubs, kissing the then-16 Pixie Geldof after reportedly dating her year-older sister the year prior.[82][83] The next month, Plume ended the relationship as a result of the coverage of his relationship with the schoolgirl.[84]
He began dating radio DJ Lliana Bird sometime around 2010. Their first child, a daughter named Dali (after artist Salvador Dalí), was born in 2018. They were living in the Highgate area of London at the time.[85][86] The couple's second daughter, Iggy (after Iggy Pop), was born in 2020.[87]
During his time at art college, Fielding developed alcohol-induced hepatitis.[6][15] Nigel Coan, who studied the same course as Fielding at art college[14] and also shared a flat with him during this time, helped Fielding during this period.[15] Fielding was ill and exhausted for a year, and was unable to consume alcohol for five years afterwards.[10]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | Plunkett & Macleane | Brothel Gent | |
2001 | Sweet | Pete Sweet | Short |
2009 | Bunny and the Bull | Javier | |
2010 | Come on Eileen | Rex | |
2011 | Horrid Henry: The Movie | Ed Banger | |
2015 | Aaaaaaaah! | Carl | |
Set the Thames on Fire | Dickie | ||
2016 | Brakes | Daniel | |
The Wonderful World of Death | Jones | ||
2018 | The Festival | Hammerhead | |
2019 | The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part[88] | Balthazar | Voice |
Television
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1997–1998 | Gas | Himself | Episodes: Series 1 (8), Series 2 (2, 4, 6) | |
1998 | Unnatural Acts | Various | ||
Alexei Sayle's Merry-Go-Round | Various | Episode #1.2 | ||
1999 | Comedy Cafe | Himself | Episode #1.7 | |
2000 | The Big Schmooze | Himself – Arctic Boosh | Episode #1.4 | |
2002 | Surrealissimo: The Scandalous Success of Salvador Dali | Bauer | TV movie | |
Brain Candy | Himself | TV movie | ||
2003 | Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala | Himself | TV movie | |
2004 | The British Comedy Awards 2004 | Himself | TV special | |
Garth Marenghi's Darkplace | Monkey Man | |||
AD/BC: A Rock Opera | Shepherd | TV movie | ||
2004–2007 | The Mighty Boosh | Vince Noir / Various | ||
2005 | Nathan Barley | Jones | ||
28 Acts in 28 Minutes | Himself | TV special | ||
Breakfast | Himself | |||
2006 | The Secret Policeman's Ball | Himself / Vince Noir | ||
The British Comedy Awards 2006 Live | Himself | TV special | ||
2006–2008 | Friday Night with Jonathan Ross | Himself | Three Episodes | |
2006–2013 | The IT Crowd | Richmond | ||
2006–2019 | The Big Fat Quiz of the Year | Himself | Annual TV Special – Seven episodes[43][89] | |
2007 | Dawn French's Boys Who Do Comedy | Himself | Episodes #1, #2, #3 | |
Comic Relief 2007: The Big One | Himself / Various | TV special | ||
Deadline | Himself | Episode #1.2 | ||
The Charlotte Church Show | Himself | Episode #2.2 | ||
Never Mind the Buzzcocks | Himself | Guest panellist, 3 episodes | ||
2008 | Shooting Stars: The Inside Story | Himself | TV movie | |
2009 | Shockwaves NME Awards 2009 | Himself | TV special | |
Comic Relief 2009 | Himself | TV special | ||
Comic-Con '09 Live | Himself | TV movie | ||
Shooting Stars | Himself | Episode #6.5 | ||
2009–2010 | Late Night with Jimmy Fallon | Himself | Two Episodes | |
2009–2014 | Alan Carr: Chatty Man | Himself | Two Episodes | |
2009–2015 | Never Mind the Buzzcocks | Himself | Team Captain | |
2010 | How Not to Live Your Life | Marcus | Episode "Don's New Job" | |
Shockwaves NME Awards 2010 | Himself | TV special | ||
Teenage Cancer Trust Concerts 2010 | Himself | TV movie | ||
Channel 4's Comedy Gala | Himself | TV special | ||
Just for Laughs | Himself | Episode "Cheech & Chong" | ||
Michael McIntyre's Comedy Roadshow | Himself | Episode "Bristol" | ||
2011 | Let's Dance for Sport Relief | Himself | Two Episodes | |
24 Hour Panel People | Himself | Episode #1.5 | ||
Dynamo: Magician Impossible | Himself | Episode "England" | ||
Horrid Henry's Movie Mayhem | Himself | TV movie | ||
Catherine Tate: Laughing at the Noughties | Himself | TV movie | ||
The Rob Brydon Show | Himself | Episode #2.8 | ||
2012 | The Jonathan Ross Show | Himself | Episode #2.3 | |
The Secret Policeman's Ball | Himself | TV special | ||
Perspectives | Himself | Episode "John Sergeant: Sergeant on Spike" | ||
The Project | Himself | |||
The Big Fat Quiz of the Decade | Himself | TV Special | ||
2012–2014 | Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy | Himself / Various | ||
2013 | Doll & Em | Noel | Episode "Six" | |
Brand X with Russell Brand | Himself | Episode #2.1 | ||
Gadget Man | Himself | Episode "Summer Holiday" | ||
Staying in with Greg and Russell | Himself | |||
2013–2018 | QI | Himself | Eight episodes | |
2014 | Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled | Himself | Episode "Cupped by a Shammy Hand" | |
The Last Leg | Himself | Episode #5.2 | ||
2015 | The Big Fat Anniversary Quiz | Himself | TV special | |
Backchat | Himself | Episode #2.2 | ||
Live at the Apollo | Himself | Episode #11.3 | ||
2016 | Trailer Park Boys: Out of the Park | Lord Pumpwhistle / Himself | Episode "Europe – London" | |
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon | Himself | |||
The Entire Universe | Einstein | TV movie | ||
Travel Man | Himself | Episode "48 Hours in Copenhagen" | ||
Conan | Himself | |||
Room 101 | Himself | |||
@midnight | Himself | |||
2017 | Taskmaster | Himself | Series Four, Champion of Champions (special) | |
8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown | Himself | Episode #12.1 | ||
The One Show | Himself | |||
Upstart Crow | Thomas Morley | Episode #2.4 "Food of Love" | ||
2016–2017 | The Big Fat Quiz of Everything | Himself | Four Episodes[47] | |
2017–present | The Great British Bake Off | Co-presenter | Alongside Alison Hammond (2023–present) and formerly Matt Lucas (2020–2022) and Sandi Toksvig (2017–2020), replacing Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins | |
2018 | Urban Myths | Alice Cooper | Episode "The Dali and the Cooper" | |
2018–2023 | Disenchantment | Stan the Executioner | Voice | |
2019 | Twelve Forever | Guy Pleasant | Voice | |
2020 | Close Enough | Snail | Voice | |
2021–present | Never Mind the Buzzcocks | Himself | Team Captain | |
2024 | The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin | Dick Turpin | Main role. TV series | |
2024–present | Word Race | Himself |
Music videos
[edit]Year | Artist | Song Title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Midfield General | "Midfielding" | |
2003 | Mint Royale | "Blue Song" | |
2006 | Razorlight | "In the Morning" | |
2007 | Robots in Disguise | "Girl" | |
2008 | Robots in Disguise | "The Tears" | |
2009 | Kasabian | "Vlad the Impaler" | Played the titular character |
2011 | Kate Bush | "Deeper Understanding"[90] | Played a computer junkie |
Kasabian | "Re-Wired" | Played the aforementioned Vlad the Impaler. | |
2016 | The Claypool Lennon Delirium | "Bubbles Burst" | |
2017 | Kasabian | "You're in Love with a Psycho" |
References
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- ^ Palmer, Jim (20 October 2015). "Noel Fielding talks about his love for south London and the pressures of writing a new stand-up tour". News Shopper.
- ^ Watts, Halina (25 March 2017). "Great British Bake Off's Noel Fielding family heartache". Daily Mirror.
- ^ a b Rumbelow, Helen (28 November 2009). "The Mighty Boosh's Noel Fielding says that 'Kids are frightened of me'". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
- ^ a b c "Friday Night with Jonathan Ross". Youtube. 30 November 2007. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
Barratt: "My dad and mum are both in it... ...Cos my dad was in the last series and she said why dont you put me in it? So um, i said OK and i put her in it but I dressed her up as a sort of yellow aubergine..."
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- ^ a b c d e "Mighty Boosh stars back at university to receive honorary master's degrees". Bucks New University. Archived from the original on 11 September 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
- ^ a b "Well-known TV stars to be among honorary graduates at Buckinghamshire New University". Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
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- ^ a b c d "Interview Part 1: Noel Fielding on turning 40". Youtube. VelvetOnionOfficial. 21 May 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
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- ^ "Just for Laughs – October 9–10, 2020 Online". The Montrealer. 3 October 2020. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
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- ^ a b "How The Mighty Boosh got its name – Exclusive Mike Fielding Interview – BBC". 25 June 2009. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ "The History of The Mighty Boosh". Youtube. Absolute Jokes. 24 September 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2024.
Jonathan Ross:"Where did the name the Mighty Boosh originate and does it mean anything?" Fielding: "My brother whos in the green room who plays... ...Naboo he had sort of curly hair when he was little... ...and he had a little friend who... ..used to go "you've got a Mighty Boosh".
- ^ a b c Trueman, Matt (8 January 2014). "Noel Fielding debunks rumours of Mighty Boosh tour and movie". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
- ^ a b "The Mighty Boosh". BBC. 24 October 2007. Retrieved 4 September 2024.
- ^ Menhinnitt, Daniel (4 January 2006). "Mighty Boosh star is Fielding our questions". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 10 September 2024. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
- ^ a b Raphael, Amy (14 September 2013). "Interview: A new view of the Mighty Boosh". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
- ^ a b van Tricht, Isla (5 March 2012). "New Wave Comedy: Post-funny?". The Yorker. Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
- ^ Gallagher, Sophie (22 April 2015). "Getting Surreal with Noel Fielding". Honi Soit. Retrieved 3 September 2024.
- ^ "I am Noel Fielding comedian, actor, artist and musician, one half of The Mighty Boosh ! I take many forms". reddit. 2015. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
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- ^ "The Mighty Boosh wins Best TV show at Shockwaves NME Awards – NME". NME. 1 March 2007. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
- ^ a b "Interview 5: Noel Fielding on The Mighty Boosh". Youtube. VelvetOnionOfficial. 26 June 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
- ^ Milman, Oliver (12 April 2015). "Noel Fielding on going solo and The Mighty Boosh: 'I'd love to do a film'". The Guardian.
- ^ "Noel Fielding's new show : News 2010 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". Chortle. 29 October 2010. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
- ^ "Big Fat Quiz 2017". Comedy King.
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Jonathan Ross:"And this is all your artwork in'it?" (Refferring to the DVD cover of the 2006 Mighty Boosh Live stage show) Noel Fielding: "Well actually, um, Bollo did that. He's a graphic designer."
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The pair collaborated on Noel Fielding's Luxury Comedy on Channel 4, as the band The Loose Tapestries.
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The news is also likely to come as a shock for Peaches, who claimed she was dating Fielding a year ago
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Fielding has embraced stardom, socialising with Courtney Love and Pixie Geldof.
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Noel, 33-year-old star of hit show The Mighty Boosh, has been seeing the 16-year-old daughter of Sir Bob for several weeks.
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- ^ The seven episodes aired in 2006, 2007, 2010, 2013, 2017–2019
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External links
[edit]- 1973 births
- Living people
- 20th-century English comedians
- 20th-century English male actors
- 21st-century English comedians
- 21st-century English male actors
- Alumni of Buckinghamshire New University
- Alumni of Croydon College
- British surrealist artists
- Comedians from the City of Westminster
- English comedy writers
- English male comedians
- English male film actors
- English male stage actors
- English male television actors
- English male voice actors
- English people of French descent
- English satirists
- English television presenters
- Writers from Westminster
- NME Awards winners
- Actors from the City of Westminster