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Chris Morris Filmography
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Chris Morris (born September 5, 1965) is a controversial, reclusive and highly regarded British satirist.
Born in Cambridgeshire, UK, Morris' parents are both doctors. He was educated at Stonyhurst College, a Roman Catholic boys boarding school in Lancashire, and then read zoology at Bristol University.
On graduating, Morris took up a traineeship with BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, where he took advantage of the free access to editing and recording equipment to create elaborate spoofs and parodies. On leaving Radio Cambridgeshire, he worked at BBC Radio Bristol, and Greater London Radio (GLR). Both stations fired him for on-air pranks, and for a time was even banned from entering the BBC site at Bristol.
In 1991, Morris gave up work as a mainstream disc-jockey, and devoted himself wholly to comedy with his next radio project, On the Hour. Working with Armando Iannucci, Patrick Marber, Richard Herring, Stewart Lee,
Steve Coogan and others, he created a highly original spoof news show which was broadcast on BBC Radio 4. In 1994, a television version of
On the Hour was broadcast under the name The Day Today
. So convincing was the artifice of this current affairs parody that many viewers complained to the BBC. Morris characteristically dismissed their protests as "boneheaded". The Day Today made a star of Morris, and helped to launch the careers of Patrick Marber and
Steve Coogan. 1994 proved to be Morris' most critically successful year, presenting a BBC Radio 1 series similar in content to, but sharper than, the Greater London Radio broadcasts, and teaming up with comedy legend Peter Cook, as Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling, in a series of improvised conversations for Radio Three, entitled
Why Bother. Morris followed this with Blue Jam
, a late-night ambient music and sketch show broadcast on Radio 1, which was reworked for television as Channel 4's Jam.
The "sick comedy" which had bubbled under in
On the Hour and The Day Today found full release, however, with Brass Eye, another spoof current affairs television documentary show, this time shown on Channel 4. The station remit allowed for more shocking material, and Morris took full advantage of this freedom, exploring such taboos as infant mortality, incest, buggery, rape, suicide, sadomasochism, and more. A recent (2001) one-off reprise of the
Brass Eye format on the subject of paedophilia led to record numbers of viewer complaints, and a great deal of hysterical discussion in the press. Many complainants, some of whom admitted to not having seen the programme, felt the satire was directed at the victims of paedophilia, which Morris denies. Most critics, however, felt that the programme's target was actually media coverage of the subject.
Morris has also covered other controversial subjects. He made a false claim on the radio that Conservative MP Michael Heseltine had died of a heart attack; had a show yanked mid-broadcast when he played a scurrilous cut-up of the Archbishop of Canterbury's funeral oration for Diana, Princess of Wales; and performed a song in the style of Pulp lead singer
Jarvis Cocker about notorious child-murderer Myra Hindley with the following lyrics: "Every time I see your picture, Myra/I have to phone my latest girlfriend up and fire her/And find a prostitute who looks like you and hire her/Oh, me oh Myra."
In 2002, Morris ventured into film with the short My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117
, a version of Blue Jam sketch about a man looking after a sinister talking dog. It was the first film project of Warp Films, a branch of Warp Records. In 2003, this won the BAFTA for best short film.
In 2003, he was listed in The Observer as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy. In 2004, Channel 4 aired a show called The Comedian's Comedian in which foremost writers and performers of comedy ranked their 50 favourite acts. Chris Morris was at Number Eleven, above such favourites as Victoria Wood, Harry Hill,
Eddie Izzard,
Eric Idle and Peter Kay.
Morris is widely regarded as someone reluctant to discuss his work, although he has given interviews, albeit relatively rarely. His output since 2001 has contained little new material, consisting mainly of recycled material (dating back to 1994) reconfigured in a "darker" style. He is currently said to be eager to return to radio - news welcomed by a large part of his considerable fanbase.
Morris' latest project is a sitcom entitled Nathan Barley, based on the character created by Charlie Brooker for his website TVGoHome. Co-written by Brooker and Morris, the show's first episode was broadcast in February 2005.
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