Monday, 9 June 2014

Comedian and actor Rik Mayall dies

This is terrible. Wafully sad news. He was one of my favourites.

Rik Mayall

Rik Mayall's hit comedies included The Young Ones and Bottom
British comedian and actor Rik Mayall has died aged 56, according to his management team.

He played the obnoxious, poetry-writing anarchist Rick in The Young Ones alongside his friend Adrian Edmondson before the duo later went on to star in their sitcom Bottom.

Mayall also appeared in shows including Blackadder and The New Statesman.

He was left seriously ill after a quad bike accident in 1998 which left him in a coma for several days.

Mayall's film roles included the comedies Drop Dead Fred and Guest House Paradiso.
The Young Ones Mayall famously starred in The Young Ones
 
His big break came at The Comic Strip Club, performing with comedy partner Adrian Edmondson as 20th Century Coyote in the 1980s which led to cult television hit The Comic Strip Presents.

He co-wrote The Young Ones with Lise Mayer and Ben Elton, which shared cult status and schoolboy humour with later sitcom Bottom.

Mayall and Edmondson's slapstick comedy often involved fires, explosions, and hefty blows to the head with a frying pan.

He also famously played the loud-mouthed and lecherous Lord Flashheart in BBC comedy series Blackadder, starring Rowan Atkinson.

Mayall appeared in the second and fourth series, shouting catchphrases such as "woof!" and "let's do-oo-oo it!".

But his early, anarchic characters gave way to the smooth, scheming Conservative politician Alan B'Stard in The New Statesman, which ran on ITV from 1986 to 1992.

A statement from Mayall's management, Brunskill, said: "We are deeply saddened to announce the death of Rik Mayall who passed away this morning.

"We will be issuing a further statement in the fullness of time."
Rik Mayall and Ade Edmonson  
 
 
The sitcom Bottom was one of the fruits of Mayall and Edmonson's long comedy partnership
Blackadder producer and writer John Lloyd told the BBC: "It's really a dreadful piece of news."
"He was the most extraordinarily good actor as well as being an amazing stand-up comics. Apart from being great company, he was a great professional," said Lloyd


2 comments:

  1. It's really a sad day. I still remember the Flasheart episode of Blackadder to this day - Mayall, with his small moustache half hanging off, sweeping Blackadder's brideoff to his pirate ship...wonderful. It's surprising, really, that despite his very dark and cynical humour, the world will be a more depressing place without him.

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