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
NationalityBritish
OccupationActor

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

  1. "Kieran Hodgson: Lance". Chortle. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  2. Peacock, Robert (14 August 2015). "Kieran Hodgson: Lance". The Wee Review. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  3. Logan, Brian (24 August 2016). "Edinburgh comedy awards 2016: the nominees in full". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  4. Ibbotson-Wight, Kevin (12 August 2016). "Kieran Hodgson: Maestro". The Wee Review. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  5. Sweet, Jonny (5 August 2018). "Kieran Hodgson: '75". The Wee Review. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  6. "Kieran Hodgson". United Artists. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
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