Tony Hendra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tony Hendra (born 1941) is an English satirist and writer, who has worked mostly in the United States. Educated at St Albans School and Cambridge University, where he was a member of the Cambridge University Footlights revue in 1962, alongside the likes of John Cleese, Graham Chapman and Tim Brooke-Taylor, he moved to America a few years later, where he became one of the founding editors of National Lampoon magazine in 1970. In the early 1980s Hendra helped create the British television puppet show Spitting Image. Hendra also edited Spy Magazine for a period in the 1990s. His most notable acting role was in This Is Spinal Tap, as the band's manager, Ian Faith.

Hendra received acclaim for his 2004 memoir Father Joe: The Man Who Saved My Soul. His novel The Messiah Of Morris Avenue, published in April 2006, depicts the second coming of Christ in a future United States ruled by the religious right.

Hendra's daughter, Jessica Hendra (wife of Kurt Fuller), has written a book (How to Cook Your Daughter) in which she describes being sexually abused by Hendra when she was a young girl. Hendra has denied those allegations.

[edit] Books

[edit] External links

In other languages