Neil Fitzmaurice

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neil Fitzmaurice
Born (1969-08-20) 20 August 1969
Liverpool, England[1]
Occupation Actor, writer, producer, comedian
Awards 1996 Liverpool Echo Comedian of the Year[1]

Neil Simon Fitzmaurice (born 20 August 1969 in Liverpool[2]) is an English actor, comedian and writer. He is best known for his role as Mark's love rival, Jeff, in the Channel 4 sitcom, Peep Show.

Career

Writing

Fitzmaurice's writing projects include That Peter Kay Thing, for which he received a British Comedy Award, and the critically acclaimed Phoenix Nights, in which he also appeared as "Ray-Von".[3] He has also written two feature films: Going Off Big Time, in 1999, which was nominated for four BIFA awards and is part of Film Four's Best of British, and more recently Charlie Noades R.I.P.

Acting

As an actor, Fitzmaurice has appeared in Going off Big Time (which he also wrote), played Jeff in the Channel 4 comedy series Peep Show, and starred in the prison drama series Buried. He appeared on the first episode of The Office as the applicant whom David Brent interviews for the warehouse position. He plays the same character in the sixth episode, only this time Brent is giving him a redundancy notice.[3] Fitzmaurice has also performed alongside Paul O'Grady in the BBC comedy Eyes Down, had guest roles in the long-running police drama The Bill and on the Casualty spin-off Holby City.

In 2007, he played a lead role in the ITV drama Mobile, as an ex-telecoms worker suffering from a terminal brain tumour. Since 2000 he has been working on the film Charlie Noades RIP with his brother Tony. The film was in development hell due to funding not being available. Work finally began in 2007, despite the full budget not being in place.[1] The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2009.[3]

Around the time of the premiere, Fitzmaurice returned to the stage for the first time in ten years, playing Shaun in On the Ledge at the Royal Court Theatre.[3]

Fitzmaurice played "Les" in an episode of BBC One miniseries Moving On, "Dress To Impress", as well as the film Fifteen Minutes That Shook The World as the Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez. He recently starred in the hit play 'one night in istanbul' at The Liverpool Empire and Dublin's Grand Canal Theatre.

In 2011, Fitzmaurice starred in British school drama Waterloo Road as Dave Dowling, who is a parent with very strong views towards people not of British origin. In 2011 he also starred in the fourth series of Benidorm as Lucky Kev who lived in the same caravan campsite as Madge Harvey. He later appeared in the fifth episode of the series reprising the role of Lucky Kev who works at a bar in Benidorm which Madge Harvey was interested in buying.[4]

Fitzmaurice is currently starring in the Sky comedy-drama Mount Pleasant, playing the part of office manager Fergus. He is also working on two separate comedy scripts and is resident MC at the Laughterhouse comedy club in Liverpool. In 2013, he appeared in one episode of Truckers.

In 2014 he starred as Dad in the BBC Comedy Series Hank Ziper based on books

Other

On 16 February 2009, Fitzmaurice started presenting the Drivetime show on Radio City 96.7[5] in Liverpool. However, due to extensive film and television commitments, he left this position on 4 March 2011.

Fitzmaurice is a Hillsborough survivor and was featured in the Sky documentary Hillsborough Remembered, on 15 April 2009, the 20th anniversary of the tragedy.[6]

Personal

Fitzmaurice and his wife Angela have four children: Joshua, Tony, Daniel and Connor.[citation needed]

Selected Filmography And Television

  • Going Off Big Time Mark Clayton (2000)
  • Pierrepoint Cliff The Scouser (2005)
  • Nativity Oakmoor Parent (2009)
  • Will (2011)

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.