User:JAYFAX/Peter Baynham

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Peter Baynham
Occupations
  • Screenwriter
  • performer
Years active1987–present
Naval career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Merchant Navy

Peter Baynham is a Welsh screenwriter and performer. He is a contributor for comedy in radio, television, and feature film. His work represents collaborations with comedy figures such as Armando Iannucci, Sarah Smith, Lee and Herring, Steve Coogan, Chris Morris, and Sacha Baron Cohen.

Early life[edit]

Baynham was born and raised in Cardiff as the second of four children. He attended St Mary's primary school in Canton, then Lady Mary RC High School in Cyncoed. Baynham said he found school difficult, finding himself shy, "weedy", and unpopular. He found himself too unathletic to enjoy rugby, despite expectations from his father.[1] He left school with eight O-Levels, four with an "A" grade, and joined the Merchant Navy at age 16 with a desire to travel the world.[1][2][3] Baynham described his experience in the Merchant Navy as unsuited to his character, he said "I was with men who drank beer for breakfast. A lot of them were fascist, and I mean really fascist. They say travel should broaden the mind but these blokes would have been kicked out of the Ku Klux Klan for being too extreme".[1] Duties included performing operations on a chemical tanker while wearing a hazmat suit. He reflected, "I'm small and would basically float around inside the suit like a confused foetus, trying to pick up spanners and operate a walkie-talkie".[4] Baynham is qualified to navigate a supertanker.[5] After five years, he was made redundant due to government cuts in defence. He went on to serve as second mate on a private yacht in Monte Carlo as a summer job.[1]

Career[edit]

1987-2004: radio and television[edit]

In 1987 he moved to London with his brother and worked selling advertising space in The Guardian newspaper. He began attending a comedy workshop, The Comedy Store.[1][2] He became a stand-up comedian, and created the character Mr Buckstead, a psychotic teacher and poet.[5] Baynham said the act consisted of "[talking] about the terrible things he did to his pupils". During this period he financially supported himself with self-employment income under the Enterprise Allowance Scheme, his redundancy cheque from Merchant Navy, and a bank loan that was nominally meant for buying a car. He earned around £20 (GBP) per gig, and made £4,500 in his first year. To additionally support himself, he wrote sketches for the topical radio comedy Week Ending. He earned £18 for each minute of material, and contributed around two minutes of material each week. After four years he felt his stand-up career was not progressing, and decided to commit to radio.[1] He became cast for the comedy sketch radio series Fist of Fun.[6][7]

Aiming to break into television, Baynham wrote one-liner jokes for a Friday night show presented by Terry Wogan. He was unimpressed by Wogan's delivery of the jokes.[1] Baynham, working at the BBC offices, encountered Armando Iannucci while looking for photocopier paper. Iannucci would introduce him to Chris Morris, who was creating the news satire The Day Today. Although Morris was not interested in accepting more writers for the project, he was made a writer after Morris was impressed by a sketch he wrote that involved horses infesting the London Underground.[2] He also appears in a sketch as a reporter named Colin Poppshed who presented "Gay News", where he farcically announces the gayness of various "roads, periodic table elements, cars, and walls".[8] He also became a guest and contributor for the radio series The Chris Morris Music Show; he was suspended by the BBC for two weeks for conceiving a joke where Morris falsely implies on air that Michael Heseltine had died. Baynham stated that Morris technically did not announce his death, and had only said "if there is any news of Michael Heseltine's death in the next hour, we'll let you know".[2] Other radio work included being cast for Lee and Herring.[5]

Baynham became a writer for the satirical television chat show Knowing Me, Knowing You with Alan Partridge, a spin-off of the comedy character Alan Partridge as performed by Steve Coogan in The Day Today, an incompetent sports reporter progressed as a tactless and self-satisfied television personality. He thought that Alan Partridge was underdeveloped because the format of The Day Today made him "bracketed and contained within presenting to [the] camera". He continued as writer for the follow-on sitcom I'm Alan Partridge, where he would realise Alan Partridge as a "three-dimensional" character. The writing team applied worldbuilding, such as establishing the geography of Alan Partridge's residence of "Linton Travel Tavern".[9] Coogan credited Baynham for making Alan Partridge more human and sympathetic.[2] Baynham described his work on I'm Alan Partridge as a highly productive and enjoyable period of his career, saying "It's my happiest, most fun writing experience ever really, it was just so exciting".[9]

In the same period, Fist of Fun transferred to television where Baynham makes an on-screen appearance of his character "Peter", a "stinking 32-year-old Welsh virgin".[3][10] He also served as writer and host of the topical news comedy The Friday Night Armistice.[1][3][11] Baynham created and performed the character "Terry from Pontypridd" in a popular television advertising campaign for Pot Noodle, promoted with the catchphrase "they're too gorgeous". The campaign propelled him to unexpected fame; he reported that strangers would shout "gorgeous" at him in public, and that a university student threw a Pot Noodle at him on stage while touring with Lee and Herring.[1][12][13][14] Other television work include Brass Eye with Morris, notably as writer for the controversial special "Paedogeddon!" that attracted widespread media attention for its comedic portrayal of paedophilia.[2][15] Other credits include writer for episodes of Bob and Margaret,[16] and wrote additional material for the sketch show Big Train.[17] He served as writer for the radio series Blue Jam, which transferred to television as Jam.[5] He also became a guest for the radio comedy game show The 99p Challenge.[5]

He became writer for the animated sketch comedy Monkey Dust.[5][16] He created the animated black comedy I am Not an Animal, which follows a group of intelligent talking animals who escape a vivisection laboratory.[5][16]

2005-present: feature film[edit]

After creating I am Not an Animal, Baynham felt uncertain about his future in television after it was poorly received by BBC executives, one of whom told him, "I won’t be paying a return visit to this". Meanwhile, he received a phone call from Sacha Baron Cohen who asked if he could help continue a feature film project he had been working on. Baynham replied that he was not interested because he was working on creating his own sitcom. He changed his mind after being persuaded by his friend, and phoned Baron Cohen later that day expressing interest. He became writer for Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan.[2]

Reputation[edit]

Baynham is largely unknown for his writing credits. James Rampton writing for The Independent described him as "an anonymous foot-soldier in Armando Iannucci's all-conquering comedy army".[3] Baynham himself reflected, "It feels quite cool, in a mad way, to be someone who skulks about in the shadows".[15]

Personal life[edit]

Baynham moved to Los Angeles in 2006, after completing Borat.[2]

Filmography[edit]

As writer:

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Risoli, Mario (March 3, 1997). "Peter's long and winding road to comedy success Peter's long and winding road to comedy success". SOTCAA. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Gilbey, Ryan (June 15, 2021). "'We did our bit to get Biden elected': Peter Baynham on writing for Borat, Brass Eye and Alan Partridge". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d Rampton, James (June 13, 1996). "Television: Taking pot luck". The Independent. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Peter Baynham: 'In my wedding photos I look like a failed Jacobean fop'". The Guardian. September 17, 2021. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Peter Baynham". BBC Comedy. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  6. ^ Barnett, Laura (August 5, 2014). "Stewart Lee and Richard Herring: how we made Fist of Fun". Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  7. ^ "RADIO". Mail on Sunday. November 10, 2013. ProQuest 1449535450. Previously aired in 1993, Lee And Herring's Fist Of Fun (Radio 4 Extra,11.30pm) was a mix of topical stand-up and sketches. This first episode features future stars Alistair McGowan, Rebecca Front and Peter Baynham.
  8. ^ Fordy, Tom (January 18, 2019). "The Day Today: 10 sketches they wouldn't get away with in 2019, and the stories behind them". Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b Craig, David (March 25, 2021). "Peter Baynham on the making of I'm Alan Partridge: "It's like building a plane as it's plummeting to Earth"". Radio Times. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  10. ^ Sweet, Matthew (16 February 1999). "The Joys Of Modern Life: 33. Pot Noodles". The Independent. ProQuest 312822765.
  11. ^ William, Kathryn (October 23, 2021). "The Welshman you might have never heard of who helped create Alan Partridge and Borat". WalesOnline. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  12. ^ Stump, Paul (29 September 1997). "The last gag show comes to a weak ending Paul Stump says the final fade-out of Week Ending is a very bad joke indeed". The Guardian. ProQuest 245177896.
  13. ^ Bevan, Nathan (August 10, 2013). "Welsh writer Pete Baynham tells how Alan Partridge made it to the big screen". Wales Online. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  14. ^ Jury, Louise (November 4, 1995). "Commercials turn quick snack into student cult". The Independent. ProQuest 312410578.
  15. ^ a b Gilbert, Gerard (May 26, 2004). "Peter Baynham: The man's an animal". The Independent. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  16. ^ a b c Ball, Ryan (October 5, 2005). "Television Sundance Hopes for Animal Magnetism". Animation Magazine. Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  17. ^ Macksey, Serena (November 10, 1998). "Television Review: Big Train". The Independent. Retrieved 9 July 2022.