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Armando Iannucci named as Oxford's next Broadcast Media Professor
1 November 2005
Comedy writer and producer Armando Iannucci has been
appointed as Oxford University's next News International Visiting Professor
of Broadcast Media. Armando's lecture series, entitled 'British TV Comedy:
Dead or Alive?' will begin on 24 January 2006.
The Visiting Professorship is associated with the English
Faculty and Green College. Armando will hold the Chair for the academic year
2005-06.
Scottish-born Armando Iannucci is a comic writer, performer,
director and producer. He wrote and produced On The Hour; Knowing
Me, Knowing You and The Day Today, and wrote and directed I'm
Alan Partridge. He wrote and presented the Friday and Saturday Night
Armistice shows on BBC2, The Armando Iannucci Shows on Channel 4,
and Armando Iannucci's Charm Offensive on BBC Radio 4. He has just
finished making the second series of his acclaimed satirical comedy on politics
and spin, The Thick of It, which started on 20 October on BBC4. The
first series will be aired on BBC2 during January and February 2006.
Armando gained his degree at University College, Oxford, and
began his career working for BBC Radio Scotland before moving to BBC Radio 1 as
a producer on shows such as The Mary Whitehouse Experience in the
eighties. He has been a key figure in British radio and television comedy
throughout the nineties and to the present day. He has won two Sony Radio
Awards and three British Comedy Awards, one of which was a special award for
his contribution to television comedy. He and Chris Morris were jointly awarded
a 1992 Writers' Guild award for On the Hour.
Discussing the theme of his lecture series, which will be
given in Oxford during January and February 2006, Armando said: 'If British
TV has a heritage, then comedy is its most precious commodity. Most people's
lists of the best television from the past forty years invariably have great
moments of comedy at the top. Today, though, British Television Comedy is at a
crossroads. Just as it get more daring and varied in format and technique, and
just as audiences get more and more sophisticated in the breadth of comedy
they're willing to watch, viewing figures for comedy shows are in decline.
Less comedy is being made for the mass audience channels BBC1 and ITV, while
the commissioning of comedy shows is increasingly in the hands of TV
professionals from outside comedy production, under pressure from advertisers
and schedulers not to take risks. And reality TV has recently shown that mass
audiences can be won over by programmes far cheaper to make than the average
comedy show. Over the next five years, TV comedy has the chance either to
reclaim the mass-appeal, large viewing-figure slots that were previously theirs
by right, or become a fragmented web of innovative, interesting but niche
programmes. These lectures will outline precisely how British TV comedy arrived
at this crossroads, and the possible routes it can take.'
As the eighth News International Visiting Professor of
Broadcast Media, Armando will give four lectures at Oxford, starting on 24
January 2006.
For further information, contact
the University Press Office on 01865 280532
Notes to Editors:
- The lectures will be
given on 24 January 2006, 31 January 2006, 7 February 2006, and 14 February
2006.
- The News International
benefaction given in 1993 by Rupert Murdoch, a graduate of Worcester College,
has endowed the Visiting Professorship of Broadcast Media, has endowed the
Professorship of Language and Communication (currently held by Professor
Deborah Cameron), has funded three lectureships and a major research grant, and
has enabled the English Faculty to run courses in film studies and other areas
relating to language and communication.
- Previous Visiting
Professors were: David Elstein, Chief Executive of Channel 5 Broadcasting
(1998-99); Roger Graef, filmmaker, broadcaster, writer, and criminologist,
who is hailed as introducing the fly-on-the-wall documentary technique to
Britain (1999-2000); Kristin Thompson, film historian and author (2000-01);
Jenny Abramsky, Director of BBC Radio and Music (2001-02); Barry Cox, digital
'Tsar' and Deputy Director of Channel Four (2002-03); Hugh Whitemore,
award-winning screenwriter for film and television (2003-04); and Stewart
Purvis, acclaimed news journalist, producer and former Editor-in-Chief and
Chief Executive of Independent Television News (2004-05).
- Armando has been
involved in the following British radio and television programmes:On The
Hour (BBC Radio 4, as creator, co-writer, and producer); No' The
Archie McPherson Show (BBC Radio Scotland, as presenter, writer, and
producer); Armando Iannucci (BBC Radio 1, as writer, presenter, and
producer); The News Quiz (BBC Radio 4, as producer, also appeared as
guest); Quote Unquote (BBC Radio 4, as producer); Loose Talk
(BBC Radio 1, as producer); The Mary Whitehouse Experience (BBC2, as
producer); The Day Today (BBC2, as creator, co-writer, and producer,
plus occasional appearances); Saturday Night Armistice, later The
Friday Night Armistice (BBC2, as writer, producer, and presenter);
Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge (BBC Radio 4 and BBC2,
as co-writer, producer, and creator); I'm Alan Partridge (BBC2, as
co-writer, producer, and director); The Armando Iannucci Shows
(Channel 4, as writer, performer, director and producer); Clinton: His
Struggle with Dirt (BBC2, as writer and director); Gash (Channel
4, as writer and presenter); Have I Got News For You (BBC2, as a
panellist); The 99p Challenge (BBC Radio 4, as a regular panellist);
Armando Iannucci's Charm Offensive (BBC Radio 4, as writer and
presenter); The Thick of It (BBC3, as writer); and 2004: The
Stupid Version (BBC3, as presenter, co-writer, and producer).
- End -
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