Adam Riches

Adam Geoffrey Christopher Riches (born 29 March 1973) is a British comedian, and 2011 winner of the Foster's Edinburgh Comedy Award.[1]

Adam Riches
Born
Adam Geoffrey Christopher Riches

(1973-03-29) 29 March 1973
NationalityBritish
OccupationActor
Years active1998–present

Early life

He was born in Cambridge, England, but raised in Glasgow and London, where he attended Sutton Grammar School for Boys. Following a brief spell working at Disneyland Paris, he studied media and performance at Salford University.[2] He worked as a bit-part actor on TV before doing his first show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2003. Riches is a fan of Liverpool F.C.[3]

Comic style

His performances involve audience participation, including getting audience members to play Swingball and race on skateboards.[2]

TV appearances

Riches has appeared in Dictionary Corner on 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown on four occasions, in October 2016, June 2017, September 2019 and August 2020. For his appearances he was entirely in character as an exaggerated comic parody of the actor Sean Bean. He was introduced as "Sean Bean" by the announcer at the beginning of each episode, and addressed as "Sean" by presenter Jimmy Carr throughout.[4]

He played the character of Tony, the boyfriend of Lance's ex-wife Maggie, in the first series of the BBC television series Detectorists.[5]

Edinburgh Fringe shows

  • Plat du Nuit - The Comeback Special (2003). Riches and Jim Johnson played a lounge music act attempting a comeback.[6]
  • Victor (2007). Riches played Victor Legit, a surveillance officer combatting copyright violation. The Scotsman gave it 3 stars out of five.[7]
  • Alpha Males (2008). Riches played various characters, including the return of Victor. One night while performing this show, Riches slipped on some yogurt and broke his leg; he returned five days later, performing in a wheelchair.[2] The show got 4 stars from the Scotsman.[8]
  • Bring Me the Head of Adam Riches (2011). His Edinburgh Comedy Award-winning show, also receiving 5 stars from the Telegraph[9] and Independent.[10] It later transferred to the Soho Theatre, London, in 2012.[11]

References

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