James Bachman

Last updated

James Bachman
James Bachman and David Soul 2008.jpg
James Bachman recording the BBC Radio 4 comedy pilot Zoom, 6 May 2008.
Born
James Hamilton Bachman [1]

(1972-02-24) 24 February 1972 (age 52)
Cuckfield, Sussex, England
Alma mater Emmanuel College, Cambridge
Occupation(s)Comedian, actor, writer
Years active1996–present

James Hamilton Bachman (born 24 February 1972) is an English comedian, actor and writer. He has written for and acted in many British television and radio programmes, including That Mitchell and Webb Look , Saxondale , Bleak Expectations and Sorry, I've Got No Head . In 2014, he had a small role in the film Transformers: Age of Extinction .

Contents

Early life

Bachman was born in Cuckfield, West Sussex to American father Thomas Edwin Bachman, of Meadow House, Battle, East Sussex, and English mother Carolyn, daughter of Major-General Godfrey John Hamilton, CBE, DSO, of The Old House, Hailsham, Sussex, who was married to the writer Mary Margaret Kaye, daughter of Lt-Col Sir Cecil Kaye, an officer in the British Indian Army and minister of Tonk State, India. [2]

Bachman attended Radley College and studied Natural Sciences at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, focusing on Physics and Mathematics. He joined Footlights, having been a Monty Python and Fry and Laurie fan as a youngster. [3] It was while in Footlights that he first met David Mitchell and Robert Webb, whom he would collaborate with for their shows, and also future writing partner Mark Evans. His other student comedy contemporaries included the writer and director Dan Mazer and the TV scriptwriter Robert Thorogood.

He became co-vice-president of Footlights in 1993 and appeared in and wrote for the 1994 Footlights revue The Barracuda Jazz Option. He returned after graduation to direct the subsequent revue Fall From Grace, which included amongst its cast Mitchell, Webb, and Matthew Holness. [4] That same year he also directed a production of the Keith Waterhouse play Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell 2, starring Mitchell as Jeffrey Bernard and Webb in multiple roles.

By the time Bachman finished university he had lost interest in his area of study and chose to go into comedy instead.

Career

Shortly after graduating, Bachman began a short-lived sketch double-act with fellow Cambridge comedian Matthew Holness. Bachman & Holness performed their first sketch show Rummage in the Pleasance Attic at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1996. Their second show Shoes debuted at the ADC Theatre in Cambridge the following year and is notable for including one of the first ever performances of Holness' character Garth Marenghi.

Bachman then went on to spend the early part of his career earning a living mainly as a comedy writer, starting as a solo writer for radio shows such as Week Ending, and then forming a writing partnership with Mark Evans. As a pair they contributed material to a huge number of sketch and entertainment shows for radio and television including The Very World of Milton Jones , The Jack Docherty Show , The 11 O'Clock Show , The Priory, The Richard Blackwood Show , Rhona , Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway , Popetown , Ed Stone Is Dead , That Mitchell and Webb Sound , and That Mitchell and Webb Look . As writers on That Mitchell and Webb Look, Bachman and Evans created several of their much-loved sketches including 'Numberwang', 'David's Chiropractor', 'Glucozade Port' and 'Bed & Booze'.

During this period he made a few appearances on TV in shows he was writing on as well as occasional roles in shows such as 15 Storeys High , The Robinsons and Comedy Nation .

Frustrated at the lack of outlets for sketch and character performers on the London comedy circuit, Bachman, along with Evans and Robert Thorogood, set up the sketch comedy club TBA-2 at the Latchmere Theatre (now Theatre503). (The name was a reference to London's 'first ever sketch comedy club' TBA set up by Henry Naylor and Andy Parsons in the mid-Nineties.) Regular performers included their university contemporaries Mitchell, Webb, Holness and Jonathan Dryden Taylor as well as The Four Horseman, The Trap, Stuart & Quigley, John Reed, Ben & Arn, Nick Doody, Andy Bodle, Spencer Brown and Georgie Morgan.

In early 2001 Bachman and Evans began a weekly live residency at the Etcetera Theatre in London, developing a free-form live sketch-sitcom under the title Work In Progress. Material from this residency became their first Edinburgh Fringe show Hmm... which ran at the Assembly Rooms. Bachman and Evans returned to Edinburgh in 2002 with their second show The Bachman and Evans Special Edition, which attempted to add DVD-style commentary and 'extra scenes' to their normal live-sitcom-adventure format. In 2001 and 2002 and 2002 Bachman also directed Edinburgh Fringe shows for Mitchell and Webb: The Mitchell and Webb Story and The Mitchell and Webb Clones.

At the end of 2001 Bachman joined Lucy Montgomery and Barunka O'Shaughnessy to form the clown comedy trio Population: 3. Their first show Gladiatrix was devised with director Cal McCrystal and performed at the Soho Theatre in London and subsequently at the 2002 Edinburgh Fringe Festival where it achieved some success. Continuing the theme of taking Hollywood films and reversing the sex of the main character, Population: 3 returned to the Fringe in 2003 with their most successful show The Wicker Woman (which was seen by Robin Hardy the director of the original The Wicker Man ), and its 2004 follow-up The Elephant Woman, both devised with director David Sant. [3]

Bachman was then invited to become part of the regular team behind Ealing Live! , a weekly live comedy show at Ealing Studios inspired by the format of the American show Saturday Night Live and the 1980s British comedy shows Saturday Live and Friday Night Live . He also became a regular fixture on the live character and sketch circuit in London, performing as Oscar Wilde, The James Bachman International Orchestra and Papa Christmas at comedy nights including Oram and Meeten's Club Fantastico, The Book Club, and The Pros From Dover.

In 2008 he and Evans recorded a pilot for Radio 4 based on the style of their Edinburgh shows comedy. The show, called Zoom, was written by and starred Bachman and Evans, and co-starred David Soul and Carla Mendonça with Jon Glover as Melvyn Bragg. It also featured a special guest appearance by Nicholas Parsons as himself. The show had originally been developed as a TV series with Absolutely Productions and was not picked up for a series by Radio 4.

Bachman has since appeared in regular and cameo roles in Saxondale , The Mighty Boosh , The IT Crowd , "Jonathan Creek", Hyperdrive, Miranda, Peep Show, Rev. and Mount Pleasant as well as a number of other television and radio programmes. From 2008 to 2010 he co-wrote and starred in three series of the CBBC sketch show Sorry, I've Got No Head, appearing as some of the shows most popular characters including Ross, the only student at the North Barrasay school, Mark, the record breaker, Prudith, who with her friend Jasmine thinks everything costs a thousand pounds, and the beekeeper who thinks maybe his bees can help.

He was a regular member of the cast of both That Mitchell and Webb Look and That Mitchell and Webb Sound and in the winter of 2006 he toured with David Mitchell and Robert Webb as part of their live show The Two Faces of Mitchell and Webb .

Bachman was in all five series of the BBC 4 radio comedy Bleak Expectations , which ran from 2007 to 2012.

His film credits include the shorts Stiffy and Monsters and Rabbits as well as a cameo appearance in the Bain and Armstrong film Magicians. In 2013 he was cast in Michael Bay's Transformers: Age of Extinction as Gill Wembley, head scientist to the character of Joshua Joyce played by Stanley Tucci. The film was released in 2014 and became the first film that year to take one billion dollars at the worldwide box office.

In 2014, he played Tony McDonald in the first series of Millie Inbetween. The role was recast to Richard Lumsden in series 2, due to Bachman focusing on his music career.

Filmography

Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
2004 15 Storeys High Erection Man2 Episodes
'Car Boot and Pigeon Shit'
'Vince The Shirker'
2005 The Mighty Boosh ColinSeries 2
'The Legend of Old Gregg'
2006 That Mitchell and Webb Look Various RolesAll 4 Series
Also writer
Saxondale AlistairTommy Saxondale's anger management therapist
Opened every episode of both series
2007 The IT Crowd Jeff/Dominator1 Episode
'Moss and the German'
Peep Show Role-playing Guy1 Episodes
'Mark's Women'
Unrecognisable under a large mask
2008–2011 Sorry, I've Got No Head Various RolesAll 4 Series
Also Writer
2009 Miranda Quentin1 Episode
'Excuse'
2011 Mount Pleasant Richard2 Episodes
Rev. Tim1 Episode
2014 Jonathan Creek Rev. Hugh Chater2 Episodes
Crackanory Raymond Morris1 Episode
'The Surprise & The Crisis Plan'
Millie Inbetween TonyMain role
Series 1
2015 Fried Gareth1 Episode
'The Chicken Awards'
2017 GLOW Bruce1 Episode
'Money's In The Chase'
Ryan Hansen Solves Crimes on Television Famous Writer1 Episode
'Eight Is the New Se7en'
2018 Me, Myself & I Jeremy1 Episode
'There She Goes'
2020HouseboundStan1 Episode

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2005 Stiffy Other Corpse
2009Monsters and RabbitsKenny
2014Heart of LightnessMax Buchanan
Transformers: Age of Extinction Gill Wembley
Paddington Sixth Geographer
2019 The Mortuary Collection Ralph Wilkes

Video games

YearTitleRoleNotes
2013 Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Stede BonnetVoice

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Graeme Garden</span> British comedian and actor

David Graeme Garden OBE is a Scottish comedian, actor, author, artist and television presenter, best known as a member of the Goodies and a regular panellist on I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Footlights</span> Amateur theatre and comedy group at the University of Cambridge, England

The Cambridge Footlights, commonly referred to simply as Footlights, is a student sketch comedy troupe located in Cambridge, England. Footlights was founded in 1883, and is one of Britain's oldest student sketch comedy troupes. The comedy society is run by the students of Cambridge University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Mitchell (comedian)</span> British comedian and actor (born 1974)

David James Stuart Mitchell is a British comedian, actor and writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mitchell and Webb</span> British comedy duo

Mitchell and Webb are a British comedy double act composed of David Mitchell and Robert Webb. They are best known for starring in the Channel 4 sitcom Peep Show and their radio and TV sketch shows That Mitchell and Webb Sound and That Mitchell and Webb Look. The duo first met at the Footlights in 1993 and collaborated on the 1995 revue while at Cambridge.

<i>That Mitchell and Webb Sound</i> BBC Radio 4 Sketch Show

That Mitchell and Webb Sound is a comedy sketch show on BBC Radio 4 which started on 28 August 2003. A second series was broadcast in 2005 with a third starting on 24 May 2007. The series became adapted for television as That Mitchell and Webb Look in 2006. The series is seen in some ways as a follow-up to The Mitchell and Webb Situation, a sketch show shown on Play UK in 2001. That Mitchell and Webb Sound returned to BBC Radio 4 for a fourth series in 2009, the first episode broadcasting on 25 August 2009. A fifth series was announced in September 2013, and began transmission on 26 November 2013.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Matthew Holness</span> British comedian

Matthew James Holness is an English comedian, director, author, plus actor. He created and played the fictional horror author Garth Marenghi.

Bruiser is a British comedy sketch television show that was produced for BBC Two. It premiered on 28 February 2000 and ran for six episodes, ending on 15 March 2000. The principal writers were David Mitchell and Robert Webb. Additional writers included Richard Ayoade and Ricky Gervais.

<i>That Mitchell and Webb Look</i> British sketch comedy show

That Mitchell and Webb Look is a British sketch comedy television show starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb that ran from 2006 to 2010. Many of its characters and sketches were first featured in the duo's radio show That Mitchell and Webb Sound.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tim Key</span> English comedian and poet (born 1976)

Timothy Key is an English poet, comedian, actor and screenwriter. He has performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, both as a solo act and as part of the comedy group Cowards, and plays Alan Partridge's sidekick Simon in film and television. In 2009, he won the Edinburgh Comedy Award and was nominated for the Malcolm Hardee Award for Comic Originality.

Mark Evans is a Welsh comedy writer, director and actor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jo Neary</span> British comedian, writer and actress

Joanna Neary is a British comedian, writer and actress. Her solo, character-based stage shows include Youth Club and Joanna Neary Is Not Feeling Herself, which received a Perrier Best Newcomer award nomination in 2004. She has also appeared in the TV shows Time Trumpet, Angelo's, That Mitchell and Webb Look, Skins, Dogface, Man Down and Ideal. Radio credits include acting as an ensemble member of the cast in the first series of the Count Arthur Strong Radio Show, as well as appearing in numerous series of the Radio 4 show Out to Lunch.

Barunka Sarah G. O'Shaughnessy is a British actress, writer and producer. She is best known for playing Sacha Merrion on Bo! in the USA and for her appearances in The Mighty Boosh.

Thomas William Basden is an English actor, writer and comedian. He is best known for co-creating and starring in Plebs, which won the Royal Television Society award for Best Scripted Comedy in 2014. He was nominated for Best Newcomer at the 2007 Edinburgh Comedy Awards and is a member of the sketch group Cowards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joe Thomas (actor)</span> English actor and comedian (born 1983)

Joseph Owen Thomas is an English actor and comedian. He played Simon Cooper in the E4 sitcom The Inbetweeners (2008–2010) and its two film adaptations, The Inbetweeners Movie (2011) and The Inbetweeners 2 (2014).

Colin Hoult is an English actor and writer in television, radio, and theatre. He studied at Manchester Metropolitan School of Theatre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Finnemore</span> British comedy writer and actor (born 1977)

John David Finnemore is a British comedy writer and actor. He wrote and performed in the radio series Cabin Pressure, John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme, and John Finnemore's Double Acts, and frequently features in other BBC Radio 4 comedy shows such as The Now Show. Finnemore has won more Comedy.co.uk awards than any other writer, and two of his shows appear in the top ten of the Radio Times' list of greatest ever radio comedies.

Desmond O'Connor is an English ukulele-playing cabaret host and musical comedy performer. He is a composer and lyricist and musical director/co-creator for the Twice Shy Theatre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cariad Lloyd</span> British comedian, actress, writer and podcaster

Katie Cariad Lloyd is a British comedian, actress, writer, and podcaster. She is a member of the improvisational comedy group Austentatious, the host and creator of Griefcast, and an improv teacher.

Jason Forbes is an English actor, writer, comedian, impressionist, and TV presenter. He is best known for the CITV series Horrible Science; The Mash Report on BBC Two; as PC Peasey in the Professor Branestawm television films on BBC One; and as a member of the award-winning sketch trio 'Daphne'.

Daphne is a British comedy trio made up of comedians Jason Forbes, Phil Wang and George Fouracres.

References

  1. Burke's Irish Family Records, 1976, ed. Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd, Burke's Peerage Ltd, p. 553
  2. Burke's Irish Family Records, 1976, ed. Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd, Burke's Peerage Ltd, p. 552-553
  3. 1 2 "Comedy Interview: James Bachman". Londonist. 31 October 2006.
  4. "The Cambridge Footlights Alumni". Footlights Official Website.