Kieran Hodgson
Kieran Hodgson is a British actor and character comedian. He was brought up in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire and educated at the University of Oxford.
Kieran Hodgson | |
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Nationality | British |
Occupation | Actor |
His first solo show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe was French Exchange which was nominated by The Times as one of the "Top five of the Free Fringe 2014".[1] It retold the story of a GCSE French exchange trip in a comedy storytelling style.
That year, he also appeared as an aspiring detective called Ridley in a 2014 episode of Jonathan Creek, entitled "The Letters of Septimus Noone".
In 2015, his show Lance, a similarly biographical storytelling piece about his childhood hero, Lance Armstrong,[2] was nominated for the Edinburgh Comedy Award. He received the nomination again in 2016 for his show Maestro,[3] which used his interest in classical music and attempt to write a symphony as a metaphor for his life.[4] In 2018 Hodgson launched a new show 75 at the Fringe. It used the 1975 referendum on Europe as a means of exploring the contemporary Brexit debate, with Hodgson impersonating many famous UK politicians from the 1970s.[5] He was nominated for the Comedy Award for a third time, before taking the show on the road from January 2019. This formed the basis for his Channel 4 comedy documentary How Europe Stole My Mum.
He appeared as Ian Lavender in the one-off BBC Two drama We're Doomed! The Dad's Army Story.[6] Hodgson also starred in The Lentil Sorters on BBC Radio 4, presented Kieran Hodgson's Earworms for Radio 4 in August 2017 and made appearances in Siblings on BBC Three, Count Arthur Strong on BBC Two and the film Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa.[1]
In 2017 Hodgson first appeared as Gordon, the new boyfriend of Ian, in the BBC Scotland television comedy series Two Doors Down, a role that he reprised in the 2019 series.
Outside of his comedy career Kieran is a keen musician (an accomplished amateur violinist) and railway enthusiast.
References
- "Kieran Hodgson: Lance". Chortle. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
- Peacock, Robert (14 August 2015). "Kieran Hodgson: Lance". The Wee Review. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- Logan, Brian (24 August 2016). "Edinburgh comedy awards 2016: the nominees in full". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
- Ibbotson-Wight, Kevin (12 August 2016). "Kieran Hodgson: Maestro". The Wee Review. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- Sweet, Jonny (5 August 2018). "Kieran Hodgson: '75". The Wee Review. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- "Kieran Hodgson". United Artists. Retrieved 1 March 2016.