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Johnny English Rowan Atkinson Full Movie

English language actor, comedian, and screenwriter

Rowan Atkinson
CBE
Rowan Atkinson 2011 2 cropped.jpg

Atkinson at the premiere for Johnny English Reborn in September 2011

Birth name Rowan Sebastian Atkinson
Born (1955-01-06) vi Jan 1955 (age 67)
Consett, County Durham, England
Medium
  • Stand up-up
  • television
  • film
Alma mater
  • Newcastle University (BSc)
  • The Queen's Higher, Oxford (MSc)
Years active 1978–present
Spouse

Sunetra Sastry

(yard. 1990; div. 2015)

Partner(s) Louise Ford (2014–present) [1]
Relative(s) Rodney Atkinson (blood brother)
Signature Signature of Rowan Atkinson.svg

Rowan Sebastian Atkinson CBE (born half dozen January 1955) is an English language actor, comedian and author. He played the title roles on the sitcoms Blackadder (1983–1989) and Mr. Edible bean (1990–1995), and the film serial Johnny English language (2003–2018). Atkinson beginning came to prominence in the BBC sketch comedy show Not the Nine O'Clock News (1979–1982), receiving the 1981 BAFTA for Best Entertainment Functioning, and via his participation in The Surreptitious Policeman's Ball (1979). His other work includes the James Bail picture show Never Say Never Once again (1983), playing a bumbling vicar in Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), voicing the red-billed hornbill Zazu in The Panthera leo King (1994), and playing jewellery salesman Rufus in Beloved Actually (2003). Atkinson also featured in the BBC sitcom The Sparse Blueish Line (1995–1996). His piece of work in theatre includes the office of Fagin in the 2009 West End revival of the musical Oliver!.

Atkinson was listed in The Observer as one of the fifty funniest actors in British comedy in 2007,[3] and among the top fifty comedians always, in a 2005 poll of fellow comedians.[4] Throughout his career, he has collaborated with screenwriter Richard Curtis and composer Howard Goodall, both of whom he met at the Oxford University Dramatic Society during the 1970s. In addition to his 1981 BAFTA, Atkinson received an Olivier Accolade for his 1981 West End theatre performance in Rowan Atkinson in Revue. He has had cinematic success with his performances in the Mr. Bean film adaptations Bean (1997) and Mr. Edible bean'southward Holiday (2007), and as well in the Johnny English film serial (2003–2018). He also appeared as the titular character in Maigret (2016–2017). Atkinson was appointed a CBE in the 2013 Birthday Honours for services to drama and charity.

Early life

Atkinson was born in Consett, Canton Durham, England, on vi January 1955.[v] [6] [seven] The youngest of four boys, his parents were Eric Atkinson, a farmer and company director, and Ella May (née Bainbridge), who married on 29 June 1945.[7] His 3 older brothers are Paul, who died as an infant; Rodney, a Eurosceptic economist who narrowly lost the UK Independence Party leadership election in 2000; and Rupert.[8] [9]

Atkinson was brought up Anglican,[10] and was educated at Durham Choristers School, a preparatory school, and then at St Bees School. Rodney, Rowan and their older brother Rupert were brought up in Consett and went to schoolhouse with the future Prime Minister, Tony Blair, at Durham Choristers.[11] After receiving top grades in science A levels,[12] he secured a place at Newcastle University, where he received a degree in Electrical and Electronic Engineering.[13] In 1975, he connected for the degree of MSc in Electrical Technology at The Queen'southward College, Oxford, the same college where his father matriculated in 1935,[14] and which made Atkinson an Honorary Beau in 2006.[15] His MSc thesis, published in 1978, considered the awarding of cocky-tuning control.[16]

Atkinson briefly embarked in doctoral work earlier devoting his full attending to acting.[17] Start winning national attention in The Oxford Revue at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August 1976,[13] he had already written and performed sketches for shows in Oxford by the Etceteras – the revue grouping of the Experimental Theatre Club (ETC) – and for the Oxford University Dramatic Guild (OUDS), coming together author Richard Curtis,[13] and composer Howard Goodall, with whom he would continue to interact during his career.

Career

Radio

Atkinson starred in a series of comedy shows for BBC Radio 3 in 1979 called The Atkinson People. It consisted of a series of satirical interviews with fictional great men, who were played by Atkinson himself. The series was written by Atkinson and Richard Curtis, and produced by Griff Rhys Jones.[18]

Television

After university, Atkinson did a ane-off pilot for London Weekend Boob tube in 1979 called Canned Laughter. He gained further national attention when he performed on the third The Hugger-mugger Policeman's Ball in June 1979 which was broadcast on the BBC, and since then he has appeared on televised skits with various performers including Elton John, John Cleese ("Beekeeping") and Kate Bush-league, the latter with whom he performed the humorous song "Practise Bears... ?" for the British charity event Comic Relief in 1986.[19] Solo skits on television (and without dialogue) have included playing an invisible drum kit and an invisible piano.[20] In October 1979, Atkinson start appeared on Non the Nine O'Clock News for the BBC, produced past his friend John Lloyd. He featured in the show with Pamela Stephenson, Griff Rhys Jones and Mel Smith, and was one of the main sketch writers.[21]

The success of Non the Nine O'Clock News led to him taking the atomic number 82 office of Edmund Blackadder in Blackadder. The offset series The Black Adder (1983), was set in the medieval period. Atkinson co-wrote it with Richard Curtis. After a three-year gap, in role due to budgetary concerns, a second series was broadcast, written by Curtis and Ben Elton. Blackadder Ii (1986) followed the fortunes of ane of the descendants of Atkinson'southward original character, this time in the Elizabethan era. The same blueprint was repeated in the two sequels Blackadder the Third (1987), fix in the Regency era, and Blackadder Goes Along (1989), set up in World State of war I. The Blackadder series became one of the most successful of all BBC situation comedies, spawning television specials including Blackadder's Christmas Carol (1988), Blackadder: The Condescending Years (1988), and afterwards Blackadder: Back & Forth (1999), which was ready at the turn of the Millennium. The final scene of "Blackadder Goes Forth" (when Blackadder and his men go "over the top" and charge into No-Homo'due south-Land) has been described as "assuming and highly poignant".[22] Possessing an acerbic wit and armed with numerous quick put-downs (which are oft wasted on those at whom they are directed), Edmund Blackadder was ranked third (behind Homer Simpson from The Simpsons and Basil Fawlty from Fawlty Towers) on a 2001 Channel four poll of the 100 Greatest TV Characters.[23] [24] During the 2014 centennial of the start of Globe War I, Conservative Political party pol Michael Gove and state of war historian Max Hastings complained about the so-called "Blackadder version of history".[25] [26] [27]

Atkinson in 1997, promoting Bean. In 2014, young adults from away named Mr. Bean amidst a group of people they most associated with British civilisation.[28]

Atkinson'southward other creation, the hapless Mr. Bean, first appeared on New year's day in 1990 in a half-hour special for Thames Goggle box. The grapheme of Mr. Bean has been likened to a modern-day Buster Keaton,[29] simply Atkinson himself has stated that Jacques Tati's character Monsieur Hulot was the master inspiration.[30] Atkinson states, "The essence of Mr Bean is that he's entirely selfish and cocky-centred and doesn't actually admit the outside globe. He'due south a child in a man'southward torso. Which is what most visual comedians are about: Stan Laurel, Chaplin, Benny Hill."[31]

Several sequels to Mr. Bean appeared on television until 1995, and the character afterwards appeared in a feature picture. Bean (1997) was directed by Mel Smith, Atkinson's colleague in Not the Nine O'Clock News. A 2nd film, Mr. Bean'south Holiday, was released in 2007. Atkinson portrayed Inspector Raymond Fowler in The Thin Blue Line (1995–96), a television sitcom written past Ben Elton, which takes identify in a police station located in fictitious Gasforth.

Atkinson has fronted campaigns for Kronenbourg,[32] Fujifilm, and Give Claret. He appeared as a hapless and error-prone espionage amanuensis named Richard Lathum in a long-running series of adverts for Barclaycard, on which character his title function in Johnny English, Johnny English Reborn and Johnny English Strikes Once more was based. In 1999, he played the Doctor in The Expletive of Fatal Death, a special Doctor Who series produced for the charity telethon Comic Relief.[33] Atkinson appeared as the Star in a Reasonably Priced Automobile on the BBC's Summit Gear in July 2011, driving the Kia Cee'd around the runway in ane:42.2. Placing him at the top of the leaderboard, his lap fourth dimension was significantly quicker than the previous loftier-contour record holder Tom Cruise, whose time was a 1:44.2.[34]

Atkinson appeared at the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in London equally Mr. Bean in a comedy sketch during a performance of "Chariots of Fire", playing a repeated unmarried note on synthesizer.[35] He so lapsed into a dream sequence in which he joined the runners from the picture of the same proper name (well-nigh the 1924 Summer Olympics), beating them in their iconic run forth Westward Sands at St. Andrews, by riding in a minicab and tripping the front end runner.[36] Atkinson starred equally Jules Maigret in Maigret, a serial of television films from ITV.[37]

In Nov 2012, it emerged that Atkinson intended to retire Mr. Bean. "The stuff that has been well-nigh commercially successful for me – basically quite physical, quite childish – I increasingly feel I'm going to do a lot less of," Atkinson told The Daily Telegraph 's Review. "Autonomously from the fact that your physical ability starts to pass up, I likewise think someone in their 50s being childlike becomes a trivial sad. You've got to be careful."[38] He has also said that the role typecast him to a degree.[39] Despite these comments, Atkinson said in 2016 that he would never retire the character of Mr. Bean.[xl]

In Oct 2014, Atkinson also appeared as Mr. Bean in a TV advert for Snickers.[41] In 2015, he starred alongside Ben Miller and Rebecca Front in a sketch for BBC Red Nose Day in which Mr. Bean attends a funeral.[42]

In 2017, Atkinson appeared as Mr. Edible bean in the Chinese film Huan Le Xi Ju Ren.[43] In October 2018, Atkinson (as Mr. Bean) received YouTube's Diamond Play Push button for his aqueduct surpassing 10 million subscribers on the video platform. Among the most-watched channels in the globe, in 2018 it had more than 6.5 billion views.[44] [45] Mr. Bean is likewise among the near-followed Facebook pages with 94 1000000 followers in July 2020, "more than than the likes of Rihanna, Manchester United or Harry Potter".[45]

Animated Mr. Bean

In January 2014, ITV announced a new animated series featuring Mr. Bean with Rowan Atkinson returning to the role. It was expected to exist released online as a Web-series later in 2014, as a television broadcast followed before long after.[46]

On 6 Feb 2018, Regular Upper-case letter announced that there would exist a fifth series of Mr. Bean: The Animated Series in 2019 (voiced by Atkinson). Consisting of 26 episodes, the kickoff two segments, "Game Over" and "Special Delivery", aired on 29 April 2019 on CITV in the United kingdom too as on Turner channels worldwide.[47] [48] All five series (104 episodes) were also sold to Chinese children's aqueduct CCTV-14 in February 2019.[45]

Picture

Atkinson'southward film career began with a supporting role in the "unofficial" James Bond film Never Say Never Again (1983) and a leading role in Dead on Time (also 1983) with Nigel Hawthorne. He was in the 1988 Oscar-winning curt film The Appointments of Dennis Jennings. He appeared in Mel Smith's directorial debut The Tall Guy (1989) and appeared alongside Anjelica Huston and Mai Zetterling in The Witches (1990), a picture accommodation of the Roald Dahl children's novel. He played the part of Dexter Hayman in Hot Shots! Office Deux (1993), a parody of Rambo III, starring Charlie Sheen.

Atkinson gained further recognition every bit a verbally bumbling vicar in Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994, written and directed by his long fourth dimension collaborator Richard Curtis), and featured in Disney's The Panthera leo King (besides 1994) as the vocalism of Zazu the cherry-red-billed hornbill. He as well sang the song "I Just Can't Wait to Exist King" in The King of beasts King. Atkinson continued to appear in supporting roles in comedies, including Rat Race (2001), Scooby-Doo (2002), jewellery salesman Rufus in another Richard Curtis British-prepare romantic comedy, Love Actually (2003), and the crime comedy Keeping Mum (2005), which likewise starred Kristin Scott Thomas, Maggie Smith, and Patrick Swayze.

In add-on to his supporting roles, Atkinson has also had success as a leading man. His goggle box graphic symbol Mr. Bean debuted on the big screen with Bean (1997) to international success. A sequel, Mr. Bean'southward Holiday (2007), (again inspired to some extent past Jacques Tati in his flick Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot), also became an international success. He has also starred in the James Bond parody Johnny English film series (2003–2018).[49]

Theatre

Rowan Atkinson performed live on-stage skits – also actualization with members of Monty Python – in The Cloak-and-dagger Policeman's Brawl (1979) in London for Immunity International.[50] Atkinson undertook a four-month tour of the UK in 1980. A recording of the stage performance was later released as Live in Belfast.

In 1984, Atkinson appeared in a West Terminate version of the comedy play The Nerd alongside a ten-twelvemonth-quondam Christian Bale.[51] The Sneeze and Other Stories, seven short Anton Chekhov plays, translated and adjusted by Michael Frayn, were performed past Rowan Atkinson, Timothy Due west and Cheryl Campbell at the Aldwych Theatre, London in 1988 and early on 1989.[52]

Oliver! billboard at the Due west End's Drury Lane in 2009.

In 2009, during the West End revival of the musical Oliver! based on Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist, Atkinson played the role of Fagin.[53] His portrayal and singing of Fagin at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London gained favourable reviews and he was nominated for an Olivier Award for best actor in a musical or entertainment.[54]

On 28 November 2012, Rowan Atkinson reprised the role of Blackadder at the "Nosotros are Well-nigh Amused" one-act gala for The Prince's Trust at the Royal Albert Hall in London. He was joined by Tony Robinson as Baldrick. The sketch involved the first new Blackadder material for 10 years, with Blackadder as CEO of Melchett, Melchett and Darling bank facing an enquiry over the banking crisis.[55]

In Feb 2013, Atkinson took on the titular role in a 12-week production (directed by Richard Eyre) of the Simon Gray play Quartermaine's Terms at Wyndham's Theatre in London with costars Conleth Hill (Game of Thrones) and Felicity Montagu (I'm Alan Partridge).[56] In December 2013, he revived his schoolmaster sketch for Royal Free Hospital's Rocks with Laughter at the Adelphi Theatre.[57] A few days prior, he performed a choice of sketches in a modest coffee venue in front of only thirty people.[58]

Comic style

All-time known for his apply of physical one-act in his Mr. Bean persona, Atkinson's other characters rely more than on language. Atkinson oft plays authority figures (especially priests or vicars) speaking cool lines with a completely deadpan delivery.

One of his better-known comic devices is over-articulation of the "B" audio, such equally his pronunciation of "Bob" in the Blackadder Two episode "Bells". Atkinson has a stammer,[59] [60] and the over-articulation is a technique to overcome problematic consonants.[61]

Atkinson'due south often visually based style, which has been compared to that of Buster Keaton,[29] sets him autonomously from most modern television and picture comics, who rely heavily on dialogue, as well every bit stand up-up comedy which is mostly based on monologues. This talent for visual comedy has led to Atkinson being called "the man with the rubber confront"; comedic reference was made to this in an episode of Blackadder the Third ("Sense and Senility"), in which Baldrick (Tony Robinson) refers to his master, Mr. E. Blackadder, as a "lazy, big-nosed, rubber-faced bastard".[62]

Influences

Atkinson'south early one-act influences were the sketch one-act troupe Beyond the Fringe, made upwards of Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Jonathan Miller and Alan Bennett, major figures of the 1960s British satire boom, so Monty Python. Atkinson states, "I remember watching them avidly as students at university."[63] He connected to exist influenced by the piece of work of John Cleese following his Monty Python days, regarding Cleese as being "a major, major inspiration", adding, "I call up that he and I are quite different in our style and our approach, merely certainly it was comedy I liked to lookout man. He was very physical. Yes, very physical and very angry."[63] He was also influenced past Peter Sellers, whose characters Hrundi Bakshi from The Party (1968) and Inspector Clouseau from The Pinkish Panther films influenced Atkinson's characters Mr. Bean and Johnny English.[64]

On Barry Humphries' Dame Edna Everage, he states, "I loved that graphic symbol – again, it's the veneer of respectability disguising suburban prejudice of a really quite vicious and dismissive nature."[63] Of visual comedians, Atkinson regards Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd equally influential.[63] He was also inspired past French comedian Jacques Tati, stating, "Mr. Hulot's Holiday I remember seeing when I was 17 – that was a major inspiration. He opened a window to a world that I'd never looked out on before, and I thought, "God, that's interesting," how a comic state of affairs can exist developed as purely visual and however it's not nether-cranked, information technology'south not speeded-up, information technology'due south more than deliberate; it takes its time. And I enjoyed that."[63]

Personal life

Marriage and children

Atkinson met makeup artist Sunetra Sastry in the late 1980s when she was working for the BBC, and they married in February 1990.[65] They had two children together,[66] and lived in Apethorpe.[67] In 2013, at the age of 58, Atkinson began an matter with 32-year-sometime comedian Louise Ford after they met while performing in a play together.[1] Ford ended her relationship with comedian James Acaster in society to be with Atkinson,[one] who in turn separated from his married woman in 2014 and divorced her in 2015.[68]

Political activism

In June 2005, Atkinson led a coalition of the United Kingdom's nigh prominent actors and writers, including Nicholas Hytner, Stephen Fry, and Ian McEwan, to the British Parliament in an effort to force a review of the controversial Racial and Religious Hatred Bill, which they felt would give overwhelming power to religious groups to impose censorship on the arts.[69] In 2009, he criticized homophobic oral communication legislation, saying that the House of Lords must vote against a regime attempt to remove a free-speech clause in an anti–gay hate law.[70] Atkinson opposed the Serious Organised Crime and Police Deed 2005 to outlaw inciting religious hatred, arguing that, "freedom to criticise ideas – whatsoever ideas even if they are sincerely held beliefs – is one of the fundamental freedoms of society. And the police which attempts to say you tin criticise or ridicule ideas as long equally they are not religious ideas is a very peculiar law indeed."[71] [72]

In October 2012, he voiced his support for the Reform Department 5 campaign,[73] which aims to reform or repeal Section v of the Public Order Act 1986, particularly its statement that an insult tin exist grounds for arrest and punishment. It is a reaction to several recent high-contour arrests, which Atkinson sees equally a restriction of freedom of expression.[74] In February 2014, Parliament passed a redaction of the statute which removed the word "insulting" following pressure from citizens.[75] [76]

In 2018, Atkinson dedicated comments made by Boris Johnson over wearing the burqa. Atkinson wrote to The Times stating, "as a lifelong casher of the freedom to make jokes about organized religion, I exercise recollect that Boris Johnson's joke about wearers of the burka resembling letterboxes is a pretty good i."[77] [78]

In August 2020, Atkinson added his signature to a letter coordinated by Humanist Society Scotland along with twenty other public figures including novelist Val McDermid, playwright Alan Bissett and activist Peter Tatchell which expressed business organization about the Scottish National Political party'due south proposed Detest Crime and Public Society Bills. The letter argued the bill would "gamble stifling freedom of expression."[79] [eighty] [81]

In January 2021, Atkinson criticised the ascent of cancel civilisation. He said, "It's important that we're exposed to a wide spectrum of opinion, simply what we take at present is the digital equivalent of the medieval mob, roaming the streets looking for someone to burn. The problem we have online is that an algorithm decides what we desire to come across, which ends upward creating a simplistic, binary view of society. It becomes a case of either you're with usa or against us. And if y'all're against us, you deserve to be 'cancelled'."[82]

Atkinson has also supported the Free Spoken language Matrimony and gave a keynote spoken language at a coming together of the grouping.[83]

Cars

Atkinson holds a category C+E (formerly "Course 1") lorry driving licence, gained in 1981, considering lorries held a fascination for him, and to ensure employment as a young player. He has also used this skill when filming comedy material. In 1991, he starred in the self-penned The Driven Man, a series of sketches featuring Atkinson driving effectually London trying to solve his obsession with cars, and discussing information technology with taxi drivers, policemen, used-automobile salesmen and psychotherapists.[84] A lover of and participant in machine racing, he appeared every bit racing driver Henry Birkin in the television play Total Throttle in 1995.

Atkinson has raced in other cars, including a Renault 5 GT Turbo for two seasons for its ane make series. From 1997 to 2015, he owned a rare McLaren F1, which was involved in an accident in Cabus, most Garstang, Lancashire, with an Austin Metro in October 1999.[85] It was damaged once again in a serious crash in Baronial 2011 when it caught fire after Atkinson reportedly lost command and hitting a tree.[86] [87] That accident caused meaning damage to the vehicle, taking over a year to exist repaired and leading to the largest insurance payout in Britain, at £910,000.[88] He has previously owned a Honda NSX,[89] an Audi A8,[90] a Å koda Superb, and a Honda Borough Hybrid.[91]

The Conservative Party politician Alan Clark, a devotee of classic motor cars, recorded in his published Diaries a take a chance meeting with a man he afterwards realized was Atkinson while driving through Oxfordshire in May 1984: "Just after leaving the motorway at Thame I noticed a dark cherry DBS V8 Aston Martin on the slip route with the bonnet upward, a human being unhappily bending over it. I told Jane to pull in and walked back. A DV8 in trouble is ever good for a celebrate." Clark writes that he gave Atkinson a lift in his Rolls-Royce to the nearest telephone box, but was disappointed in his bland reaction to being recognised, noting that: "he didn't sparkle, was rather disappointing and chétif."[92]

In July 2001, Atkinson crashed an Aston Martin V8 Zagato at an enthusiasts' meeting, just walked away hale. This was while he was competing in the Aston Martin Owners Order result, at the Croft Racing Circuit, Darlington.[93]

One motorcar Atkinson has said he volition non own is a Porsche: "I have a problem with Porsches. They're wonderful cars, but I know I could never live with one. Somehow, the typical Porsche people – and I wish them no ill – are not, I feel, my kind of people."[91] [94]

In July 2011, Atkinson appeared equally the "Star in a Reasonably Priced Car" on Top Gear, driving the Kia Cee'd around the track in 1:42.2, which at the fourth dimension granted him first place on the leaderboard; afterwards, only Matt LeBlanc set a faster fourth dimension.[89]

Honours

Atkinson was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2013 Birthday Honours for services to drama and charity.[95] [96]

Plane incident

In March 2001, while Atkinson was on vacation in Kenya, the pilot of his private plane fainted; Atkinson managed to maintain the aeroplane in the air until the airplane pilot recovered and was able to land the plane at Wilson Airport in Nairobi.[97]

Filmography

  • 1979–1982: Not the Nine O'Clock News
  • 1983–1989: Blackadder
  • 1983: Never Say Never Again
  • 1988: The Appointments of Dennis Jennings
  • 1989: The Tall Guy
  • 1990–1995: Mr. Bean
  • 1995–1996: The Thin Blue Line
  • 1990: The Witches
  • 1993: Hot Shots! Part Deux
  • 1994: Four Weddings and a Funeral
  • 1994: The Lion Rex
  • 1997: Bean
  • 2000: Perhaps Baby
  • 2001: Rat Race
  • 2002: Scooby-Doo
  • 2003: Johnny English
  • 2003: Dear Really
  • 2005: Keeping Mum
  • 2007: Mr. Bean's Holiday
  • 2011: Johnny English Reborn
  • 2017: Huan Le Eleven Ju Ren
  • 2018: Johnny English Strikes Again
  • 2022: Man vs. Bee
  • 2023: Wonka

Phase

Twelvemonth Title Function Notes
1981 Rowan Atkinson in Revue Various roles As well writer
Globe Theatre
Rowan Atkinson in New Revue Various roles
1984 The Nerd Willum Cubbert Aldwych Theatre
1986 Rowan Atkinson at the Atkinson Various roles Also writer
Brooks Atkinson Theatre
1988 The Sneeze Various roles Aldwych Theatre
2009 Oliver! Fagin Drury Lane
2013 Quartermaine'due south Terms St. John Quartermaine Wyndham's Theatre

See also

  • Mr. Bean
  • Johnny English

References

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External links

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rowan_Atkinson

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